Road House 2 | |
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Official release poster | |
Directed by | Scott Ziehl |
Screenplay by |
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Story by | Miles Chapman |
Produced by | Yoram Pelman |
Starring |
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Cinematography | Thomas L. Callaway |
Edited by | Edgar Burcksen |
Music by | Amotz Plessner |
Production companies |
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Distributed by | Sony Pictures Home Entertainment |
Release date |
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Running time | 86 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Road House 2 is a 2006 American direct-to-video action film, the sequel to Road House and second movie overall in the titular franchise. Directed by Scott Ziehl from a script collaboratively written by Miles Chapman, Johnathon Schaech, and Richard Chizmar which was based on an original story by Chapman; the events of the plot explore the career of James Dalton's son. Johnathon Schaech stars as a D.E.A. Agent named Shane Tanner, who must protect a Louisiana bar from criminals.
Plot
D.E.A. agent Shane Tanner is the son of a legendary cooler named James Dalton (played by Patrick Swayze in the original film). Nate Tanner is Shane's uncle, and the owner of the Black Pelican, a bar located in Nate's new permanent home of Tyree, Louisiana. Nate gets a call from his rival, who is nicknamed "Wild Bill", the former Black Pelican cooler who has been trying to steal it from Nate. Wild Bill asks Nate to meet him at a pier, supposedly to discuss a truce. Nate goes to the pier and is ambushed and beaten badly by Wild Bill.
Meanwhile, in New York City, Shane, along with other agents, bust drug dealers in a night club. Shane later gets a phone call about his uncle being in the hospital and getting badly beaten. Shane gets his uncle's location and leaves for Tyree. Shane takes off for local authorities to find out who ambushed Nate. Shane decides to stay in Nate's house and run the Black Pelican in Nate's absence, much to the dismay of Wild Bill. The location is best for drug-running, as the Black Pelican is close to the border. However, like his uncle, Shane refuses to sell the bar and damages the numerous thugs that Wild Bill sends his way.
A small subplot involves Shane still looking for the murderer who killed his father, the legendary Dalton, many years ago when Shane arrived home from work (Shane was a rookie Louisiana state trooper). After Dalton's murder, Shane left town and joined the DEA as a field agent. Now, Wild Bill's boss, Miami crime syndicate kingpin Victor Cross, decides that it is time to handle matters personally, since Wild Bill's men have not been doing a good job of taking care of Shane. Shane is soon faced with impossible odds and a low number of staff members at the Black Pelican.
To rid Louisiana of Victor, Wild Bill, and their organization, Shane teams up with local school teacher Beau Hampton and Wild Bill's cousin, who has a military background. Soon, Beau and Shane take down Wild Bill and Victor. In the end, Victor is badly beaten and left at Beau's house and Wild Bill is impaled by the symbolic black pelican at the bar.
It is revealed that Victor had wanted Shane dead for a drug bust he did on Victor long ago as a state trooper. Victor had hired Wild Bill, then a cooler at the bar, to kill Dalton. Shane decides to stay in town since he can finally be at peace after finding his father's murderers and exacting justice from them.
Cast
- Johnathon Schaech as DEA Agent Shane Tanner
- Ellen Hollman as Beau Hampton
- Richard Norton as Victor Cross
- Jake Busey as Bill "Wild Bill" Decarie
- Will Patton as Nate Tanner
- Marisa Quinn as Nadja
- Crystal Mantecón as Sherri
Reception
Critical response
Scott Weinberg of DVD Talk rated it 2.5/5 stars and called it a predictably "mindless, silly mess" that was made to capitalize on the first film's fandom. In a review of both films, Cam Lindsay of Exclaim! wrote that it was better to ignore the sequel and simply rewatch the original instead.
See also
- Road House, 2024 remake of preceding 1989 film directed by Doug Liman
References
- Weinberg, Scott (2006-07-18). "Road House 2". DVD Talk. Retrieved 2016-10-01.
- Lindsay, Cam (2006-01-01). "Road House / Road House 2: Last Call". Exclaim!. Retrieved 2016-10-01.
External links
Films directed by Scott Ziehl | |
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- 2006 films
- 2006 direct-to-video films
- Direct-to-video sequel films
- 2006 action thriller films
- Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer direct-to-video films
- Sony Pictures direct-to-video films
- Films set in drinking establishments
- Films set in Louisiana
- Films set in New York City
- 2000s English-language films
- Films directed by Scott Ziehl
- English-language action thriller films