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At the apex of 1980's action excess, Jean-Claude Van Damme carved out a niche for himself in this low budget martial arts film. Bloodsport was a moderate success at the box office, but grew a much bigger following through home video and basic cable broadcasts. Its most prominent features include amateurishly hammy acting, choppy cinematography, and Van Damme's penchant for silly gesticulations, humorously odd facial contortions, and finding any pretext he can to do a split. Ryan and Rachel touch upon each of these points in their deconstruction of Bloodsport, but they also discuss its drawn-out production, gloriously cheesy soundtrack, surprising level of (intentional) humor, and the chemistry-free "romance" scenes with Van Damme's token love interest.
By Ryan Valentine5
44 ratings
At the apex of 1980's action excess, Jean-Claude Van Damme carved out a niche for himself in this low budget martial arts film. Bloodsport was a moderate success at the box office, but grew a much bigger following through home video and basic cable broadcasts. Its most prominent features include amateurishly hammy acting, choppy cinematography, and Van Damme's penchant for silly gesticulations, humorously odd facial contortions, and finding any pretext he can to do a split. Ryan and Rachel touch upon each of these points in their deconstruction of Bloodsport, but they also discuss its drawn-out production, gloriously cheesy soundtrack, surprising level of (intentional) humor, and the chemistry-free "romance" scenes with Van Damme's token love interest.