No Retreat, No Surrender 2 (also known as Karate Tiger 2: Raging Thunder) is a 1987 Hong Kong-American martial arts film directed by Corey Yuen, and starring Loren Avedon, Matthias Hues, Max Thayer and Cynthia Rothrock.
In Moc Hoa, Vietnam, a group of prisoners are executed under the watchful eye of General Ty.
Despite Mr. Nguyen's pleas, the American consulate suggests sending Scott to Singapore and keeping him detained for three months.
At Patpong, Scott finds Mac at the Super Star bar, arm wrestling with a local man.
Returning to Mac's private warehouse, an artillery factory, Scott learns that Sulin's father's was a Vietnamese general who, for the sake of his family, stopped a deal with a Soviet militia.
The trio leave by foot the following day, along the way fending off a Buddhist temple used as a spy base.
They skirmish with the Vietnamese army, which kidnaps Terry, and leave believing to have killed Scott and Mac with a rocket launcher.
The next morning, as Sulin and Terry are slated to be executed in the alligator pit, Scott and Mac attack the Soviets.
Loren Avedon did not follow Jean Claude's example and stayed on after this film fulfilling his three-picture contract.
To prepare for the film, producer Roy Horan had Hues train with his martial arts teacher, co-star Hwang Jang-lee.
The U.S. version of the film cuts out the opening "firing squad" scene and goes right to the airplane landing in Bangkok with the title card superimposed.
It was followed by No Retreat, No Surrender 3: Blood Brothers, which again features Avedon in the lead role but is unrelated in terms of plot and characters.