Back in 1988 a budding martial artist from Belgium was searching for his big break having been unceremoniously dumped from his previous movie, Predator (which is a story unto itself). His name was Jean-Claude Van Damme and, as fate would have it, he was about to be cast in one of the biggest underground successes to ever emerge out of Hollywood.
Screenwriter Sheldon Lettich had known Frank Dux for several months before he came up with the idea for Bloodsport. A martial arts instructor who claimed to have been enlisted as a black Ops specialist by the CIA, Dux had told Lettich tales of a secret underground fighting competition called the Kumite. Dux’s story was quickly turned into script, co-written by Lettich, but something was missing – they needed a star to play the fictionalised version of Frank. Step forward Van Damme who, according to producer Mark Di Salle, had the necessary appeal to both men and women.
The rest, as they say, is history, with Bloodsport making $65 million off a budget of $2.3 million. Now more than 30 years old, here are 11 things you didn’t know about the Van Damme classic.