🎬 Out for Blood (1992) – “Karate Man, Legal Man, Sad Man”
Out for Blood is the kind of movie that feels like it was greenlit during a hangover. You can almost picture a producer saying, “Okay, so what if Death Wish had roundhouse kicks?” Then they tossed a few bucks at Don “The Dragon” Wilson and said, “Be sad. And then kick people.”
And that’s the plot. Don plays John Decker, a criminal defense attorney who loses his family to drug dealers, gets bonked on the head, and wakes up with full-blown PTSD and a sudden urge to deliver justice with his feet. You know, like all great lawyers do.
🥋 The Good
To its credit, Out for Blood doesn’t waste time. It dives right into vigilante territory with all the subtlety of a beer bottle to the face. The fight scenes are competent—Don Wilson knows how to move, and you get enough spin-kicks and goons crashing through furniture to keep your inner 13-year-old satisfied.
And then, like an oasis in the desert of generic henchmen and half-lit parking lots, we get Mindy Clarke. She plays Laura, and although the role isn’t meaty, she brings a spark that the rest of the cast frankly lacks. She has that cool, detached confidence that makes you think, “Wait, why isn’t she the one out for blood?” In a better world, she’d be the one taking revenge, and Don would just be her mildly helpful paralegal.
🍂 The Bad
Now let’s talk about what doesn’t work. And that’s… well, almost everything else.
The script reads like it was copy-pasted from every revenge movie ever made, except it lost a few pages along the way. Decker’s transition from grieving dad to murder-machine is rushed, and emotionally hollow. He goes from passing out subpoenas to snapping necks like it’s just another day at the office.
The villains? Think “discount store drug lords.” They wear leather jackets, scowl a lot, and say things like “take him out” without a hint of irony. You’ve seen scarier guys managing the returns desk at Best Buy.
The dialogue is mostly grunts and exposition. Nobody has a personality. Everyone either delivers legal jargon like a robot or gets kicked through a plate glass window. Which, admittedly, does offer a certain charm if you’re in the mood for cinematic junk food.
🧨 Final Thoughts
Out for Blood isn’t great, but it isn’t painful either. It sits in that weird in-between zone: too competent to be truly awful, too generic to be genuinely good. It’s a movie that punches in, does its job, and leaves without saying goodbye.
But if there’s one reason to watch it, it’s Mindy Clarke. She’s underused, sure, but her charisma is undeniable. You get the feeling she wandered in from a much better movie, looked around, and thought, “Well, guess I’ll elevate the vibe for a few scenes before this thing collapses.”
🎯 Verdict:
2.5 out of 5 flying fists
It’s a halfway-decent, half-asleep vigilante flick. If you’ve got 90 minutes to kill and nothing better on, go ahead. Just don’t expect justice. Or plot. Or acting. But hey—there’s always Clarke.