![]() Music Video of the Day: Far From Over by Frank Stallone (1983, dir by ?).Music Video of the Day: Going Down South by The Black Keys (2021, dir by Ryan Nadzam).Music Video of the Day: Waking Up In Vegas by Katy Perry (2009, directed by Joseph Kahn).Music Video of the Day: Rumors by Lindsay Lohan (2004, dir by ?).Music Video of the Day: Betrayed by The Erinyes (2022, dir by ?).Music Video of the Day: Around The World by Daft Punk (1997, dir by Michel Gondry).Music Video of the Day: Days Go By by Dirty Vegas (2001, dir by ?).Artwork of the Day: Hellraiser (by Chris Kuchta).Artwork of the Day: Hanging (by Bernie Wrightson).Artwork of the Day: Unmasked (by Michael Whelan).Selfie From Hell, Review by Case Wright.Smiling Woman(s)? Review by Case Wright.Horror Review: The Walking Dead Season Two.Horror Review: Yahtzee Croshaw’s Chzo Mythos Part 1 – 5 Days a Stranger.Horror Review: Yahtzee Croshaw’s Chzo Mythos Part 2 – 7 Days a Skeptic.Sci-Fi Review – Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones (dir.Delta Force 2 never comes close to matching the original but at least it’s got Chuck Norris doing what he does best. Chuck gets a few good one-liners and you’ve got to love the film’s final shot. It’s typical of the movies that he made for Cannon but the fight scenes are well-directed by Chuck’s brother and Billy Drago is a loathsome drug lord who gets what he deserves. ![]() ![]() If you can see past the absence of Lee Marvin, Delta Force 2 is an okay Chuck Norris action movie. This is a Chuck In The Jungle movie, with drug dealers replacing the usual Vietnamese POW camp commandants. Norris is as tough as always but the film still has a Lee Marvin-size hole in the middle of it and, without Marvin glaring at the bad guys and barking at the Washington pencil pushers who think they know how to keep America safe, Delta Force 2 could just as easily be a sequel to one of Norris’s Missing In Action films. What made the first Delta Force so memorable was the mix of Marvin’s cool authority and Chuck Norris’s general badassery. Ryan (as General Taylor) and Richard Jaeckel both seem to be attempting to channel Marvin’s grim, no-nonsense spirit in their performances, it’s just not the same. Unfortunately, Lee Marvin died shortly after the release of the first Delta Force. Only Chuck Norris returns for this sequel to the greatest movie ever made. McCoy and the rest of the Delta Force to seek vengeance for their fallen comrade. Having taken advantage of America’s own legal system, Ramon murders Chavez and returns to San Carlos, leaving Col. Unfortunately, arresting Ramon in America means that you run the risk of a liberal, Carter-appointed judge setting a low-enough bail that Ramon can go free. McCoy is able to catch up to Ramon and grab him before he plummets all the way to the Earth. Being an experienced skydiver (not to mention that he’s also Chuck Norris), Col. As soon as Ramon’s flight enters American air space, they burst out of coach, knock out Ramon’s bodyguards, and then toss Ramon out of the plane. Chavez (Paul Perri), aren’t intimidated by that curtain separating first class from the rest of the plane. However, what Ramon didn’t count on, was Delta Force’s Col. A frequent flyer, Ramon always buys every seat in first class so that he and his bodyguards can have privacy. Ramon is untouchable as long as he stays in San Carlos but occasionally he does have to leave the country so he can conduct business. When Ramon drives through his home country of San Carlos, he kills the peasants, rapes their women, and murders their babies, just because he can. Cocaine is flooding the United States and only one man is to blame! Ramon Cota (Billy Drago) is so evil that, after killing a group of DEA agents, he appears on closed-circuit television just so he can taunt their superior, John Page (Richard Jaeckel).
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