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poster of The Quest
Rating: 6.151/10 by 710 users

The Quest (1996)

Ghang-gheng, the ancient winner-take-all competition in which the deadliest fighters from around the world employ the most spectacular feats of martial arts skills ever displayed in order to win the prized Golden Dragon. But fighting prowess alone will not be enough for Chris to triumph over such daunting foes.

Directing:
  • Jean-Claude Van Damme
  • Peter MacDonald
Writing:
  • Steve Klein
  • Paul Mones
  • Jean-Claude Van Damme
  • Frank Dux
Stars:
Release Date: Fri, Apr 19, 1996

Rating: 6.151/10 by 710 users

Alternative Title:
The quest (En busca de la ciudad perdida) - ES
Souboj cti - CZ

Country:
Canada
United States of America
Language:
English
Runtime: 01 hour 35 minutes
Budget: $30,000,000
Revenue: $57,400,547

Plot Keyword: new york city, island, martial arts, himalaya mountain range, bare knuckle boxing, thailand, street artist, muay thai, kick boxing, period drama, underground fighting, action hero, straightforward

Jean-Claude Van Damme
Christopher Dubois
Roger Moore
Lord Edgar Dobbs
James Remar
Maxie Devine
Jack McGee
Harry Smythe
Ryan Cutrona
Officer O'Keefe
Ze'ev Revach
Turk Captain
Janet Gunn
Carrie Newton
Abdel Qissi
Khan (Mongolian Fighter)
Peter Malota
Spanish Fighter
Brick Bronsky
Russian Fighter
Nils Allen Stewart
Turkish Pirate
Alex Yip Choi-Nam
Korean Fighter
Wong Ming-Kin
Chinese Fighter
Jen Sung
Phang (Siamese Fighter)
Habby Heske
German Fighter
Ong Soo Han
Korean Fighter (Tall)
Winston Ellis
African Fighter
Mike Lambert
Scottish Fighter

DonGable

Bloodsport light. "The Quest" suffers from a problem that many of these flicks did back in the '90s. They never truly build up the character relations, which is a recurring theme from really propelling these films upwards. They could easily have used 20 minutes more and really made you care more about the characters. We are not even treated with a proper training sequence, which would've established a connection between Van Damme's character and those training him. Instead, they're just people you saw for a couple of seconds followed by a "6 months later..."-screen. Both Roger Moore and James Remar are great additions, making the most of their screen time, although it's a shame that the latter never gets a true mentor role. Janet Gunn is just sort of there, and they do nothing worthwhile with her role. The main villain in the ring is just a discount Tong Po (from Kickboxer). He's nowhere near as menacing as either Tong Po or Chong Li (from Bloodsport), and does not have the same screen presence either. One thing that was really cool is all the different fighting styles represented in the competition. I would've liked some of the fights to be a bit longer and truly showcase the styles. One glaring mistake they made is that during many of the fights, they use slow motion. However, they did not film it with high framerate cameras, they just took 24 fps footage and slowed it down, which makes it look really choppy. Such a wasted opportunity. It's really a shame because there is a genuine good motion picture under the surface. And it is by no means a bad directional debut by Van Damme. With better writers, I believe he could have been quite decent. (It's a bit lazy how they re-used the photo of Van Damme from "Timecop" for the poster...)


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