A Secret Service agent (Wilson) battles an arms dealer who is creating a cyborg army.A Secret Service agent (Wilson) battles an arms dealer who is creating a cyborg army.A Secret Service agent (Wilson) battles an arms dealer who is creating a cyborg army.
Don Wilson
- Eric
- (as Don 'The Dragon' Wilson)
Anthony De Longis
- Paris Morgan
- (as Anthony DeLongis)
Peter Kent
- SuperTracker
- (as Peter H. Kent)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- Crazy creditsEric's house system is called Agnes 5000 but Peggy McIntaggart (Voice/Hologram) is credited as Agnes 3000.
- Alternate versionsThe 1995 UK Imperial video was cut by 1 second by the BBFC to remove a neck break. This was restored in the Prism DVD release.
- ConnectionsEdited into Hologram Man (1995)
Featured review
The 1994 movie "Cyber-Tracker" from director Richard Pepin and writer Jacobsen Hart wasn't exactly a stellar movie, and I only opted to watch the 1995 sequel because it was readily available, but I harbored no expectations to the movie.
And with good cause, because writer Richard Preston Jr. Didn't exactly conjure up a compelling or interesting script and storyline. Throughout the course of the movie, I sat at the screen with an overwhelming sense of 'why?' and 'just because you can make a sequel, doesn't mean you should'. Yeah, this movie was not well-written or thought-through. And it showed on the screen, as it was a lackluster script and mediocre plot.
I was only familiar with Don Wilson on the cast list, and he even seemed not to be particularly engaged in this movie. Something that I just didn't understand was why the movie makers opted to have 'World Kickboxing Champion' included after Don "The Dragon" Wilson's name on the screen. It was the first time I've seen someone's title in a movie, what's next? The Gardener? Flyfishing Runner-Up? The acting performances in the movie were mediocre.
Visually, then I will say that the movie was a tad better than the 1994 prequel, but without a proper script and storyline, it hardly mattered.
Not a particularly memorable or entertaining movie, if I have to be honest.
My rating of "Cyber-Tracker 2", from director Richard Pepin, lands on a four out of ten stars.
And with good cause, because writer Richard Preston Jr. Didn't exactly conjure up a compelling or interesting script and storyline. Throughout the course of the movie, I sat at the screen with an overwhelming sense of 'why?' and 'just because you can make a sequel, doesn't mean you should'. Yeah, this movie was not well-written or thought-through. And it showed on the screen, as it was a lackluster script and mediocre plot.
I was only familiar with Don Wilson on the cast list, and he even seemed not to be particularly engaged in this movie. Something that I just didn't understand was why the movie makers opted to have 'World Kickboxing Champion' included after Don "The Dragon" Wilson's name on the screen. It was the first time I've seen someone's title in a movie, what's next? The Gardener? Flyfishing Runner-Up? The acting performances in the movie were mediocre.
Visually, then I will say that the movie was a tad better than the 1994 prequel, but without a proper script and storyline, it hardly mattered.
Not a particularly memorable or entertaining movie, if I have to be honest.
My rating of "Cyber-Tracker 2", from director Richard Pepin, lands on a four out of ten stars.
- paul_haakonsen
- Oct 30, 2024
- Permalink
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