To the Death (1993 film)

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To the Death
Directed byDarrell Roodt
Written byGreg Latter
Produced byAnant Singh
Starring
  • John Barrett
  • Michel Qissi
  • Robert Whitehead
  • Michelle Bestbier
  • Greg Latter
CinematographyMark Vicente
Edited byRenee Engelbrecht
Music byFrank Becker
Production
company
Distant Horizon
Distributed byCannon Films
Release date
  • October 13, 1993 (1993-10-13) (United States)
Running time
95 minutes
Countries
  • South Africa
  • United States
LanguageEnglish

To the Death is a 1993 South African martial arts film directed by Darrell Roodt and starring John Barrett, Michel Qissi, and Robert Whitehead. It is the official sequel to the 1991 film American Kickboxer.

Plot[]

Professional kickboxing champion Rick Quinn has announced his retirement from the sport. Willard, the one time reporter he could not stand, has now become good friends with him and Quinn plans to live quietly with his pregnant wife Carol. However, one person unhappy with the retirement is Jacques Denard, who has wanted revenge on Quinn from their previous fight in which Quinn defeated him. Denard wanted to fight Quinn for the championship and now he finds that chance gone as Quinn has retired. When Denard shows up at Quinn's house to confront him, he is forced to leave at gunpoint by Carol.

Meanwhile, Quinn has attracted the attention of Dominique Le Braque, a rich businessman and lover of fights. However, as a fight promoter, he stages underground fights in which the loser finds himself shot in the head by the referee after the match is over. When Le Braque attempts to woo Quinn to fight for him, Quinn refuses as he tells him he is done as a professional. To ensure Quinn does join him, Le Braque hires some men to plant a car bomb, killing Carol and their unborn child. The incident has really destroyed Quinn mentally to the point where despite help from Willard, Quinn has turned to alcoholism. He thinks Denard was the one who is responsible for killing Carol and in a drunken rage, confronts him and serves a three-month jail sentence for drunken assault. Le Braque bails Quinn out.

Deciding with nothing left to lose, Quinn takes up Le Braque's offer and is forced to stay at his mansion and land, where he begins to train. He also gets attention from Le Braque's wife Angelica, who slowly begins to tire of her husband's business overshadowing their marriage. When Quinn has his first fight and wins, he learns the horrid truth about what happens to the losers and he demands to leave. However, knowing he has been trapped, Quinn has no choice but to continue winning to keep himself alive. Eventually, he begins an affair with Angelica, which much to Le Braque's chagrin, gives the businessman a good idea. Quinn soon finds he has a familiar face as an opponent, Denard. Quinn attempts to snap some sense into Denard about what happens to the loser. Finally realizing it himself, Denard helps Quinn and together, they begin to take on Le Braque's men. When Le Braque points his gun at Quinn, Angelica shoots Le Braque, killing him.

Cast[]

  • John Barrett as Rick Quinn
  • Michel Qissi as Jacques Denard
  • Robert Whitehead as Dominique Le Braque
  • Michele Bestbier as Angelica Le Braque
  • Ted Le Plat as Willard
  • Greg Latter as Roger
  • Norman Antsey as Tony
  • Claudia Udy-Harris as Carol Quinn
  • Nick Lorentz as Compere
  • Charles Comyn as Bob
  • Danny Keough as Hank
  • Len Sparrowhawk as Solly
  • Tyrone Stevenson as Legansi
  • Leonard Nketsi as Sobah
  • Kiki Architto as Trokowsky
  • Dudley Du Plessis as Sang Lo & Sayan
  • Neville Thomas as Englishman
  • Grant Sammons as American Kickboxer
  • Lazlo Fagyas as Thai Kickboxer
  • Rudi Strydom as Denard's Spar Partner
  • Graham Press as The Prince
  • Annabella Forbes as Roger's Girlfriend
  • Barbora Tellinger as Manageress
  • Vanessa Cooke as Whore

Production[]

The film was shot in South Africa in 1992. The film has been considered an unusual production for director Roodt, who before this film had just earned major credentials after directing the film Sarafina![1]

Release[]

The now defunct Cannon Video released the film on VHS on October 13, 1993.

References[]

  1. ^ "Martial-Arts Movies Find a Home In South Africa". The New York Times. 23 February 1992.

External links[]

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