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  • Snake Eater II: The Drug Buster (1989) Lorenzo Lamas Strikes Again… Unfortunately

Snake Eater II: The Drug Buster (1989) Lorenzo Lamas Strikes Again… Unfortunately

Posted on June 28, 2025 By admin No Comments on Snake Eater II: The Drug Buster (1989) Lorenzo Lamas Strikes Again… Unfortunately
Reviews

If you’ve ever wondered what would happen if someone watched Death Wish, drank a gallon of expired NyQuil, and then tried to remake it with the charisma of a damp sponge — Snake Eater II: The Drug Buster is your answer. This is the kind of sequel that doesn’t just fail to justify its own existence — it retroactively makes the first film worse by association. And the first one was already hanging by a thread.

Lorenzo Lamas returns as Jack “Soldier” Kelly, a vigilante cop with the emotional depth of a cereal box and the wardrobe of a divorced man living out of his Camaro. He’s got a mullet, he’s got a sneer, and he’s got one speed: “smoldering mannequin.”

The title promises drug busting, right? You might imagine gritty street-level action, maybe some undercover work, maybe some tension. Nope. What you get instead is a plot that plays out like a rejected pilot for an ‘80s cable series that even Cinemax wouldn’t touch. Jack gets framed for murder after gunning down a bunch of drug dealers in a restaurant — because why not conduct your vigilante justice in broad daylight, in public, in front of witnesses?

Instead of getting fired, suspended, or tried in a court of law, Jack is sent to a psych ward. Not jail. Not a disciplinary board. An actual, full-blown loony bin where he meets a ragtag group of mental patients that somehow become his sidekicks in the most condescending, tone-deaf portrayal of mental illness since One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest got lobotomized.

Let’s talk about this psych ward for a second. It’s less a functioning institution and more a holding pen for cartoon lunatics. There’s the “funny one,” the “loud one,” and the “guy who thinks he’s Napoleon” — because originality died sometime in pre-production. These characters don’t serve the plot so much as they fill dead space between Lamas’s grimacing. They’re meant to be quirky comic relief, but instead come off like offensive stereotypes pulled from a discarded Benny Hill sketch.

Jack teams up with these goofs to take down a drug ring, which, in this universe, seems to consist entirely of five dudes in Hawaiian shirts and one sleazy pharmaceutical exec. There’s no real investigation, no strategy, no danger — just vague growling about justice, followed by gunplay so lazy it looks like it was choreographed by someone who’s never seen an action movie but has heard them described.

The villain? Please. I’ve seen more menace in a bottle of diet ginger ale. The head drug dealer is a yuppie scumbag who gives speeches about profits and supply chains like he’s pitching a TED Talk titled “How to Succeed in Crime Without Really Trying.” He’s about as threatening as a waiter who brings you the wrong soup and shrugs.

Meanwhile, Lamas broods and pouts his way through each scene like a high schooler forced to read Hamlet in front of the class. He throws punches like he’s trying not to break a nail, and delivers lines with all the urgency of a DMV employee on Quaaludes. Every time he opens his mouth, it sounds like someone dropped a motivational poster into a blender.

Jack Kelly:
“They tried to put me in a cage. But I’m the one with the key.”
Congratulations. You just made Steven Seagal sound like Aaron Sorkin.

Let’s not forget the tone — or, more accurately, the complete lack of one. Snake Eater II swings wildly between cheesy action, cheap comedy, and half-hearted melodrama. One moment, a character is joking about stealing Jell-O from the psych ward cafeteria; the next, Lamas is doing a voiceover about justice and the war on drugs, as if we’re supposed to take any of this seriously.

You can’t. You really can’t. Especially when the climax involves Jack and his mentally unstable Scooby Gang launching an assault on the drug dealer’s hideout using a mixture of slingshots, paintball guns, and hijacked construction equipment. It’s like watching The A-Team if the A stood for “Amateur Hour.”

There are explosions. Of course there are explosions. This is a cheap ’80s action movie, and explosions are the duct tape holding the whole mess together. But even those feel phoned in. One van blows up twice — same shot, replayed. Another explosion looks like someone set off a bottle rocket under a grill.

And what of the “Drug Buster” moniker? It’s never earned. Jack doesn’t bust any kind of drug ring in any meaningful way. He stumbles into rooms, shoots people, and then flexes while the credits roll. He’s less of a cop and more of a heavily armed intruder with delusions of grandeur.

The only minor — and I mean microscopic — redeeming factor is that the film occasionally veers so far into stupidity that it becomes unintentionally hilarious. There’s a scene where Jack interrogates a dealer by threatening to crush his head with a car hood. Another where he holds court in the psych ward like he’s leading a revolution. It’s so absurd you can’t help but laugh — not with the movie, but at it, loudly.

Final Verdict:

Snake Eater II: The Drug Buster is a masterclass in sequel degeneration. It’s what happens when a movie studio bets on the wrong horse, loses, and then doubles down out of sheer spite. It’s poorly written, poorly acted, and directed like a tax write-off. The humor is juvenile, the action is limp, and Lamas gives the kind of performance that makes you appreciate the subtle nuances of a cardboard cutout.

If you’re a glutton for punishment, or if you just enjoy watching ‘80s action stars sleepwalk through scripts like they’re trying to cash a paycheck without waking up — then sure, give it a spin. But for everyone else? Just say no.

Zero stars. And I’m being generous.

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