Karate Tiger VI – Entscheidung in Rio (1992)
63KKarate Tiger VI – Entscheidung in Rio: Directed by Rick King. With Sasha Mitchell, Dennis Chan, Richard Comar, Noah Verduzco. David Sloan travels to Rio for a kick-box exhibition. There he saves two youngsters and stops a white slaver.
“David Sloan and his trainer Xian arrives in Buenos Aires for a kickboxing tournament. Once there they befriend a young boy and his sister living on the streets. When the promoter of Davidu0026#39;s championship rival turns out to be a pimp the boyu0026#39;s sister is stolen away due to the value of virgins. David is held captive by the pimp, Lane and is forced to do heavy work weakening his body. Can David stay focused in order to free the girl and win his fight? This should be called u0026quot;Kickboxer 3 – so very lameu0026quot;. It should never be a series anyway! Clue to a poor series of films – if Jean Claude Van Damme bails after the first one! The plot here is lazy – it paints itu0026#39;s bad guys big and tries to set up a fight every so often to make it interesting. Thereu0026#39;s no characters and itu0026#39;s even hard to care about the children. You donu0026#39;t believe that any of the good guys could get hurt, so you donu0026#39;t care what they get into.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe performances are pretty bad, the street boy is good but Sasha Mitchell acts like a spoilt kid from LA. With his clothes and tattoos he looks a bit like a clean-cut Eminem. Dennis Chan is supposed to give comic relief as Xian, however he misses the mark most of the time and comes off looking like a low-rent Mr Miyagi from the Karate Kid series. Comar is a terrible bad guy – unbelievable and unsympathetic to the end, while Sloanu0026#39;s championship challenger is your standard mad, bad guy fare.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe fights are ok I guess – standard kickboxing stuff, but they are what the film is all about, and as such they should be great! They not – which I guess means the film fails on the most basic level. Overall a pretty poor film that doesnu0026#39;t even reach the low standard it set for itself.”