This film essentially begins where its predecessor left off with a man named "Martel 'Too Sweet' Gordone" (Leon Isaac Kennedy) having been released on early parole from prison due to his boxing skills. On that note, one of the conditions for his release is that he must report to a boxing promoter by the name of "Sam Cunningham" (Stan Kamber) and work with him for at least one year. The problem is, Martel doesn't particularly want to be a professional boxer and as a result he wants nothing to do with Sam. So, in the meantime, Martel has since moved in with his sister "Ellen Johnson" (Peggy Blow) while he contemplates what he wants to do in life. As luck would have it, he also meets his old girlfriend "Clarisse" (Eugenia Wright) and the two get back together again. Unfortunately, just as everything seems to be falling into place, an old enemy named "Half Dead" (Ernie Hudson) breaks out of prison and has only one thing on his mind--to settle an old score with Martel. Now, rather than reveal any more, I will just say that I honestly didn't care that much for this particular sequel due in large part to the manner in which the director (James Fanaka) kept cutting away from one scene to another during the main fight. This repeated technique made everything look much too cheap and totally diminished the overall effect. Likewise, I thought that the acting of Leon Isaac Kennedy could have used some improvement as well. Be that as it may, I simply wasn't that impressed with this film and I have rated it accordingly. Below average.
Penitentiary II
1982
Action / Crime / Drama / Sport
Penitentiary II
1982
Action / Crime / Drama / Sport
Plot summary
An ex-con, on parole and trying to straighten his life out, decides to resume his boxing career when one of his prison enemies escapes and kills his girlfriend.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
September 24, 2021 at 05:01 AM
Director
Tech specs
720p.BLUMovie Reviews
Not a Particularly Good Sequel
Penitentiary 2
Leon Isaac Kennedy made Body and Soul, a movie for Cannon in which he got Muhammad Ali to show up as himself. In the second of three boxing in prison movies, Mr. T and Archie Moore do the same, appearing as their real world selves in this near comic book of a movie. Then again, Mr. T feels like a movie character in our real world most of the time.
Martel "Too Sweet" Gordone (Kennedy) has earned his parole from jail by winning a prison boxing tournament, so you should forget anything about this movie taking place in the universe we accept as our own.
He moves in with his sister and her husband while getting a job sweeping floors at a boxing gym. He wants nothing to do with the ring, staying on the outside, content with his life as a free man. "Too Sweet" even hooks back up with Clarisse (Eugenia Wright) but that's when this movie decides that he's had things too easy, because the enemy from the last movie who tried to assault him - physically and sexually - at every turn, "Half-Dead" Johnson (this time played by Ernie Hudson) has broken out. On a rare night that his sister and her husband go out, the lovemaking between our hero and his lady turns into a horror movie when "Half-Dead" locks her in a bathroom and treats her like he wanted to treat "Too Sweet," who responds by beating the man into oblivion and leaving him near brain-dead with his head in the toilet.
This movie defies film logic, because "Too Sweet" gets destroyed in his first pro match back - yes, it takes his lover's death to make him fight - by Jesse "The Bull" Amos (Donovan Womack), it's the fact that he won't get knocked out that makes him a star. At the same time that his career is on the rise, the rest of "Half-Dead's" gang is targeting "Too Sweet's" family.
To add even more weirdness, you'd think the hero would be the one to get revenge on the villain, who attacks him before his big fight. Nope. It's Mr. T who saves the day.
This is also a movie that starts with a way too long Star Wars text that made me laugh out loud.
Director and writer Jamaa Fanaka made every movie in this series, as well as Street Wars and Welcome Home, Brother Charles. I am excited to report to you that if you thought this movie was strange, Penitentiary III goes even further, existing in a world beyond your wildest boxing prison movie dreams.
Better than PEN 3
The only good thing I can say about PENITENTIARY II is that it's better than PENITENTIARY III, which was a soulless Cannon exercise redeemed only by the couple of really bizarre moments. In PEN II, the film is more down to earth, relaxed and "real" than Part 3. The film is still pretty much terrible but I like these junky "grindhouse" type of movies that they simply don't make anymore. The story doesn't make much sense, and by the time the second fight occurred, I completely lost track of what was going on. The last shot in the film reminded me of a Crumb comix. The funniest thing in this movie is the "villain" and his ho. The entire moment when they eat in bed is priceless!