Snake Eater II: The Drug Buster

Last updated
Snake Eater II: The Drug Buster
Snake eater 2 movie poster.jpg
Directed byGeorge Erschbamer
Written by Don Carmody
John Dunning
Michael Paseornek
Produced by John Dunning
Irene Litinksy
Jeffrey Barmash (associate)
André Link (executive)
Starring Lorenzo Lamas
Larry B. Scott
Michele Scarabelli
Cinematography Glen MacPherson
Edited byJacqueline Carmody
Music by John Massari
Production
company
Distributed byCinépix/Famous Players Distribution
Release dates
January 25, 1991 (Canada)
April 11, 1991 (U.S.)
Running time
93 minutes
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish
BudgetCAD$2,367,754 [1]

Snake Eater II: The Drug Buster, also known as Snake Eater's Revenge, [2] is a 1990 action film directed by George Erschbamer, starring Lorenzo Lamas, Larry B. Scott and Michele Scarabelli. It is the sequel to 1989's Snake Eater . Lamas returns as ex-Marine Jack "Soldier" Kelly, who teams with new sidekick "Speedboat" (Larry B. Scott) to protect an inner city neighborhood from drug traffickers.

Contents

Plot

After several inner city youths die from overdose after consuming drugs cut with rat poison, police officer Jack "Soldier" Kelly arms himself with weapons he saved from his Marine days, and busts into a local drug house from which the substance was sold, killing four dealers in the process. His renegade efforts lead to his arrest, but he is saved from jail thanks to his lawyer's insanity plea, and sent to an insane asylum under the supervision of Dr. Pierce. There, he meets many "crazy" characters such as a neurotic computer programmer, a sex addicted former televangelist, and the pyromaniac known as "Torchy" which he busted himself in the previous film. This cast of oddball characters both assist and hinder Soldier's attempts to leave the facility to continue his vendetta against the drug cartel. After finding a secret way out of the institution, Kelly reconnects with an inner city acquaintance, the fast-talking speedboat, and enlists his aid to commit further attacks on local drug dealers, which make use of his weapon crafting skills. The trail leads them to a mansion housing the cartel's headquarters, and the two men do away with the crime bosses, poisoning them with their own tainted supply. Back at the asylum, Kelly is informed by Dr. Pierce that he has been found not guilty of the murders that originally led to his psychiatric internment by reason of temporary insanity, as the motley crew of patients he bonded with during his stay rejoices.

Cast

Production

The second installment was greenlit and announced right after the original had wrapped filming, and well before it was released. Its provisional title was Kelly's Crazies: The Snake Eater's Revenge. [3] Cinépix exercised their option on Lamas' services for a sequel on December 13, 1988, two months after the end of the first shoot. [4] The script for Snake Eater II was adapted from an unsold script by Carmody, which predated the first Snake Eater. [5]

In early February 1989, a casting call was issued for the role of new sidekick "Speedboat", described as "a young Eddie Murphy type, with a mile-a-minute mouth", with a salary projected to be in the range of CAD$10,000 to 15,000 for about four weeks of work. [6] A tryout was organized on March 19 for people of color, in order to cast the parts of other inner city inhabitants. [7] Lamas also arranged for his new wife, Kathleen Kinmont, who supposedly had strict rules regarding his contacts with other actresses, to have a role in the film. [8]

Principal photography was originally scheduled to last seven weeks from March 27 to May 12, 1989. [4] However, the shoot was shortened and delayed to April 9, [6] and eventually began on April 11. It was scheduled to continue until May 7. Filming took place in Cinépix's hometown of Montreal. [9] The company's archive lists the final budget as CAD$2,367,754. [1]

Release

While the film was meant to be released quickly after the first one, its arrival in major territories was delayed by legal proceedings involving Quebec film support fund SOGIC. Due to the script's authors being Americans (albeit based in Canada), and it originating as a standalone intellectual property, SOGIC deemed that the project was an American picture that had been abusively repackaged as Canadian to exploit the provincial tax incentive program, potentially exposing Cinépix and its backers to financial penalties. The producers eventually prevailed, but the proceedings lasted about one year. [5] International sales were handled by Pierre David's Image Organization. [2]

Theatrical

In its native Canada, Snake Eater II received a theatrical release in Quebec and Ontario, opening on January 25, 1991, in both provinces via Cinépix/Famous Players Distribution. [10] [11]

Home media

In Canada, the film was released on home video in the fourth week of April 1991. [12] Unlike the first one, Snake Eater II was released straight-to-video in the U.S., premiering on VHS on April 11, 1991. [13] The tape was distributed by Paramount Home Video in the U.S. and Cinépix affiliate C/FP Video in Canada. [14] In the U.K., the film appeared in February 1991 on the 20:20 Vision label. [15] These were all predated by the film's Australian release courtesy of Palace Entertainment in the spring of 1990, which cracked the Top 20 rental charts published by Melbourne's The Age and the Sydney Morning Herald . [16] [17]

Reception

Snake Eater received mostly negative reviews, albeit not as poor as the original. Blockbuster Video's Guide to Movies and Videos deemed the picture to be a marginal improvement, finding that it offered "more action" and "a touch more story than the first". [18] Ballantine Books' Video Movie Guide, which had lambasted its predecessor, was not as harsh towards the film but still knocked Lamas' character for perceived similarities to Mel Gibson in Lethal Weapon , dismissing it as a "rip-off action flick". [19]

In his book Dispatches from the Edge: A Memoir of War, Disasters, and Survival, journalist Anderson Cooper briefly recalls seeing the film in a Nairobi, Kenya, theater while working in the country, and contrasting the lead character's style with the comparably understated demeanor of actual "snake eaters" he met in operations a few weeks later. [20]

Further sequels

Lamas returned for one more sequel, Snake Eater III: His Law (1992). A fourth movie, Hawk's Vengeance , which starred Gary Daniels rather than Lamas, followed in 1997.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lorenzo Lamas</span> American actor (born 1958)

Lorenzo Fernando Lamas is an American actor. He is widely known for his role of Lance Cumson, the irresponsible grandson of Angela Channing—played by Jane Wyman—in the soap opera Falcon Crest (1981–1990), for which he received a Golden Globe Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor – Series, Miniseries or Television Film.

<i>Shivers</i> (1975 film) 1975 body horror film by David Cronenberg

Shivers, also known as The Parasite Murders and They Came from Within, and, for Canadian distribution in French, Frissons, is a 1975 Canadian science fiction body horror film written and directed by David Cronenberg and starring Paul Hampton, Lynn Lowry, and Barbara Steele.

<i>Abraxas, Guardian of the Universe</i> 1991 film

Abraxas, Guardian of the Universe is a 1991 science fiction film written and directed by Damian Lee, starring Jesse Ventura, Sven-Ole Thorsen and Marjorie Bransfield. Ventura plays an extraterrestrial cop seeking to protect a child prodigy from his father, a fellow alien who has virginally conceived him with a human woman to solve the advanced equation that will grant him absolute powers. Jim Belushi has a cameo in the film.

<i>Eye of the Tiger</i> (film) 1986 film by Richard C. Sarafian

Eye of the Tiger is a 1986 American action film directed by Richard C. Sarafian, and stars Gary Busey, Yaphet Kotto, Denise Galik, Seymour Cassel, William Smith, and Judith Barsi. Busey plays a wrongfully incarcerated ex-convict who fights back against the biker gang harassing his hometown and the crooked sheriff protecting them. The film marked the beginning of the actor's transition to the action roles that would epitomize his career for much of the late 1980s and 1990s.

Kathleen Kinmont is an American actress who starred in film and on television. Kinmont is best known for playing Kelly Meeker in Halloween 4. She is also known for playing Cheyenne Phillips in the TV series Renegade (1992-96) starring Lorenzo Lamas.

<i>No Exit</i> (1995 film) Canadian film

No Exit is a 1995 Canadian action film directed by Damian Lee, starring Jeff Wincott, Sven-Ole Thorsen, Richard Fitzpatrick, Joseph Di Mambro and Guylaine St-Onge. Wincott stars as an anti-violence academic who ends up killing a man responsible for the loss of his unborn child, and is abducted by a millionaire to star in his illegal, fight-to-the-death TV program. In the U.S., the film was re-titled Fatal Combat.

<i>Snake Eater</i> (film) 1989 film by George Erschbamer

Snake Eater is an action thriller film directed by George Erschbamer, starring Lorenzo Lamas, Josie Bell, Robert Scott and Ronnie Hawkins. Released on March 10, 1989, it was Lamas' first action film, and Cinépix's attempt at the type of action vehicle that was popular at the time. Harkening back to the Canadian company's grindhouse roots, it infused the veteran vigilante storyline found in many contemporary films with "hicksploitation" elements, which many reviewers found distasteful but did not prevent its commercial success. Three more installments followed between 1991 and 1997.

Lionsgate Films is a Canadian-American film production and film distribution studio founded in Canada, now a division of Lionsgate Entertainment headquartered in Santa Monica. It is the largest and most successful mini-major film studio in North America.

Les Films Séville was a Canadian film distributor company. First based on Saint-André Boulevard in 1983, it moved its operations in 1993 to Saint Laurent Boulevard, as the Canadian branch of Republic Pictures Home Video and Turner Home Entertainment, distributing releases from the two companies into Canada. The company distributed Entertainment One’s movies in Quebec.

<i>Deadly Heroes</i> 1994 film by Menahem Golan

Deadly Heroes is a 1993 Israeli–Canadian action film directed by Menahem Golan, starring Michael Paré, Jan-Michael Vincent and Billy Drago. Paré stars as a former Navy SEAL trying to rescue his wife from a terrorist group who fled with her to North Africa after he attempted to thwart their attack on a Greek airport. Available date listings suggest that Deadly Heroes was the last 21st Century Film Corporation production released during the company's existence, although Crime and Punishment was belatedly released in 2002 by another entity.

<i>Buster & Chaunceys Silent Night</i> 1998 American film

Buster & Chauncey's Silent Night is a 1998 American direct-to-video animated feature film, inspired by the tale of the creation of the Christmas carol "Silent Night". It was directed by Buzz Potamkin and stars the voices of Phil Hartman, Jim Cummings, Marie Osmond, Tom Arnold and Lea Michele, and the songs were written by Lynn Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty. Buster & Chauncey's Silent Night marks the final film role of Hartman, who was murdered by his wife five months before the film's release.

<i>The Killing Machine</i> (1994 film) 1994 Canadian film

The Killing Machine, also known as The Killing Man, is a 1995 Canadian psychological thriller film written and directed by David Mitchell, starring Jeff Wincott and Michael Ironside. In it, an amnesiac contract killer seeking to escape the clutches of a shadowy government agency allies with a whistleblower, who may have uncovered a conspiracy regarding the human engineering of the AIDS epidemic.

<i>Whispers</i> (1990 film) 1990 Canadian film

Whispers is a 1990 Canadian horror film directed by Douglas Jackson and starring Victoria Tennant, Jean LeClerc, Chris Sarandon, Peter MacNeill, and Linda Sorenson. It follows a writer who, after killing her stalker, finds that he seems to have returned from beyond the grave. It is based on the 1980 novel by American suspense author Dean Koontz.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rose & Ruby Productions</span> Canadian sports promotion and film production company

Rose & Ruby Productions, also known as Rose and Ruby Pictures, was a Canadian sports promotion and film production company founded in 1977. It was one of the country's notable producers of televised sports programming before establishing itself as a purveyor of genre movies in the 1980s and early 1990s. For much of its history, the company was anchored by directors Damian Lee and David Mitchell.

<i>Hawks Vengeance</i> 1996 film by Marc F. Voizard

Hawk's Vengeance is a 1996 Canadian action film directed by Marc F. Voizard, starring Gary Daniels, Jayne Heitmeyer, Cass Magda and George Chiang. The fourth installment of the Snake Eater franchise, it introduces "Hawk" Kelly, the British-raised stepbrother of the previous films' "Soldier" Kelly, who investigates his sibling's mysterious death amidst a gang war between ethnic Chinese and white skinheads. The series' usual star Lorenzo Lamas does not appear, and his role is recast with another actor during a brief expository scene.

<i>Snake Eater III: His Law</i> 1992 film by George Erschbamer

Snake Eater III: His Law is an action thriller film directed by George Erschbamer, starring Lorenzo Lamas, Minor Mustain, Tracey Cook and Scott "Bam Bam" Bigelow. It is the third and penultimate installment of the Snake Eater franchise, after 1989's Snake Eater and 1990's Snake Eater II: The Drug Buster. Lamas, in his last series appearance, returns as Vietnam veteran Jack "Soldier" Kelly, who attempts to save a dropout student from sex trafficking biker gangs.

<i>Law of the Jungle</i> (1995 film) 1996 film by Damian Lee

Law of the Jungle, also known as Jungle Law, is a 1995 Canadian martial arts film film written, produced and directed by Damian Lee, starring Jeff Wincott, Paco Christian Prieto and Christina Cox. Wincott stars as a lawyer who has fallen on hard times, and must fight in underground tournaments organized by a mobster (Prieto) who was once his childhood friend. The film was retitled Street Law for its U.S. release.

<i>The Swordsman</i> (1992 film) 1992 film by Michael Kennedy

The Swordsman is a 1992 Canadian fantasy action film directed by Michael Kennedy, starring Lorenzo Lamas, Claire Stansfield and Michael Champion. Lamas stars as a police detective tasked with finding a stolen sword said to have once belonged to Alexander the Great, while coming to grips with the fact that he may well be the reincarnation of said ancient monarch.

<i>Gladiator Cop</i> 1994 film by Nick Rotundo

Gladiator Cop, also known as Gladiator Cop: The Swordsman II, is a 1994 Canadian fantasy action film directed by Nick Rotundo, starring Lorenzo Lamas, James Hong, George Touliatos and Claire Stansfield. While branded as a sequel in some territories, it is a reboot of 1992's The Swordsman, and reuses a significant amount of footage from that film.

<i>Undercurrent</i> (1998 film) 1998 film directed by Frank Kerr

Undercurrent is a 1998 American–Puerto Rican neo-noir crime film directed by Frank Kerr, starring Lorenzo Lamas, Brenda Strong and Frank Vincent. Lamas stars as a down-on-his-luck American living in Puerto Rico, who gets paid to frame a woman for adultery and finds himself dragged into a murder intrigue.

References

  1. 1 2 "Snake Eater II, The Drug Buster". cinepix.ca. Retrieved May 29, 2023.
  2. 1 2 Ryan, James (1 March 1990). "Just another wacko day at the film market". Fresno Bee. BPI. p. F5   via newspapers.com (subscription required).
  3. Kane, Joe (November 16, 1988). "Phantom of the Movies". The Daily News. New York. p. 37   via newspapers.com (subscription required).
  4. 1 2 Dunning, John (December 13, 1988), Snake Eater II Option letter for Lorenzo Lamas (PDF) (written correspondence), Cinépix
  5. 1 2 Dunning, John; Brownstein, Bill (2014). You're Not Dead Until You're Forgotten: A Memoir. Montreal; Kingston: McGill–Queen's University Press. p. 147. ISBN   9780773544024.
  6. 1 2 Schnurmacher, Thomas (February 6, 1989). "Fictitious rock star resurrected for movie sequel". The Gazette. Montreal. p. B-10   via newspapers.com (subscription required).
  7. Schnurmacher, Thomas (March 18, 1989). "Even The Eagle has landed as celebs pack St. Sauveur". The Gazette. Montreal. p. B-10   via newspapers.com (subscription required).
  8. Lamas, Lorenzo; Lensburg, Jeff (2014). Renegade at heart: An Autobiography. Dallas: BenBella. p. 158. ISBN   9781940363394.
  9. Levesque, Jim (April–May 1989). "On Location". Cinema Canada. No. 162. Montreal: Cinema Canada Magazine Foundation. p. 35.
  10. "L'Indomptable II: L'Anti Drogue advertisement". La Presse (in French). Montreal. January 25, 1991. p. E4.
  11. "Snake Eater II: The Drug Buster advertisement". The Toronto Star. January 25, 1991. p. D2   via newspapers.com (subscription required).
  12. "Video: This week's releases". The Toronto Star. April 21, 1991. p. C2   via newspapers.com (subscription required).
  13. "List of video release dates". Anderson Independent-Mail. Tribune Media Service. April 10, 1991. p. 4E   via newspapers.com (subscription required).
  14. "Snake Eater II: The Drug Buster". vhscollector.com. Retrieved April 2, 2023.
  15. Speed, F. Maurice; Cameron-Wilson, James (1992). "Video releases". Film review 1991–2 (including video releases). London: Virgin Books. p. 142. ISBN   9781852273187.
  16. "Top Videos". The Age. Melbourne. April 19, 1990. p. Green Guide 12   via newspapers.com (subscription required).
  17. "Top 20". Sydney Morning Herald/The Guide. May 7, 1990. p. 5S   via newspapers.com (subscription required).
  18. Castell, J. Ronald, ed. (September 1996) [1994, 1995]. Blockbuster Entertainment Guide to Movies and Videos 1997. New York: The Philip Lief Group; Island Books. pp. –. ISBN   0440222753.
  19. Martin, Mick; Porter, Marsha (November 1992). Video Guide Movie 1993. New York: Ballantine Books. p. 116. ISBN   0345379446.
  20. Anderson, Cooper (2007). Dispatches from the Edge: A Memoir of War, Disasters, and Survival. New York: Harper. p. 91. ISBN   9780061136689.