No Retreat, No Surrender
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No Retreat, No Surrender | |
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Film poster for No Retreat, No Surrender |
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Directed by | Corey Yuen |
Produced by | See-Yuen Ng |
Written by | See-Yuen Ng Keith W. Strangberg Corey Yuen |
Starring | Kurt McKinney Jean-Claude Van Damme J.W. Fails Kathie Sileno Kent Lipham |
Distributed by | New World Pictures |
Release date(s) | May 2, 1986 (United States) |
Running time | 85 min / UK:94 min (DVD version) / UK:79 min (1986 video release) |
Language | English |
Followed by | No Retreat, No Surrender 2 |
IMDb profile |
No Retreat, No Surrender (also known as Karate Tiger) is a 1986 film directed by Corey Yuen and starring Kurt Mckinney as Jason Stillwell and features Jean Claude van Damme as Ivan Krushensky.
Jason Stillwell is a young Karate student who trains in his father's Los Angeles dojo. One night after training has finished, the dojo is visited by members of an organised crime syndicate. Jason's father is attacked and has his leg broken by Ivan Krushensky, the hired thug of the boss. The family moves to start a new life in Seattle. Jason has a hard time adjusting and is picked on by the local bullies. One night after being beaten, he is visited by the ghost of Bruce Lee. After being trained by the ghost, Jason goes from a below average fighter to near invincibility. Local fighters organise a fight in an arena between themselves and fighters from the crime syndicate. This sets the scene for Jason to meet up with Ivan to settle it once and for all.
This movie was a box office hit, grossing $5 million shortly after its release. Some people have called this movie bad cinema and some also claim it borrows a lot from the theme of the The Karate Kid (1984) and Rocky (1976) films. By others it is considered a cult classic, especially among buffs of martial arts films or nostalgia fans. Hong Kong film expert Bey Logan has stated in the audio commentary to another Corey Yuen film, (Ninja In the Dragons Den), that Corey had watched Karate Kid, liked the movie, but thought that the fight sequences could have been a lot better.
There are two versions of the movie, an American version and a roughly re-edited British VHS version that is widely considered to be almost demo-like in a lot of aspects. Both contain completely different theme songs; "Hold On To That Vision" and "Stand On Your Own", the latter sounding a lot like it could have been a demo track for the other. The musical scores are also greatly different, the British version featuring slow generic studio stock music while the full uncut and complete versions featured typical Hong Kong stock music "borrowed" from various other Hong Kong films, such as Yes Madam, Project A and a few of the action/comedy Lucky Stars films.
In 1987 a film called No Retreat, No Surrender 2 was issued, but neither McKinney or Van Damme (or any of the other cast) appeared in the movie. There were approximately 5 sequals to NRNS, each sharing great Hong Kong fight choreography, although none of them were related in story at all.