Vigilante justice-keepers Damien (Cyril Raffaelli) and Leito (David Belle) are back in the outer-Paris ghetto of District 13 in order to save the impoverished, violence-riddled community that is controlled by five different gang bosses.
1 December 1984, Tirana, Albania
26 September 1984, Paris, France
13 October 1965, Rouen, Seine-Maritime, France
28 November 1944, Vitry-sur-Seine, Val-de-Marne, France
11 October 1978, Guéret, Creuse, France
July 06, 2010
If you like your action comic-book style, with the emphasis more on slapstick than on blood and gore, this silly but slick sequel is a great way to get your fix.February 25, 2010
If anyone is going to persuade fanboys to attend a movie with French subtitles, that man is Luc Besson.February 18, 2010
While it doesn't match the bombastic, bone-breaking brio of its predecessor, 2004's District B-13, this sequel imaginatively spices up the leftovers.March 05, 2010
No need for CGI when you've got sweet moves, fast feet and a bottomless hoard of adrenaline.February 18, 2010
This is the first action movie in which bombs serve a humanitarian end.April 14, 2010
Adrenaline-filled, high-flying and brutal. A truly impressive action film that will hit you in the chest with awesome.April 04, 2010
Evildoers vs. parkour-running underdog heroesMay 01, 2010
French parkour-action sequel - featuring David Belle, one of the inventors of the sport - to the kinetic dystopian 2004 film District B13, features lots of incredible stunts that at least look as though they weren't accomplished by the use of green screenMay 14, 2010
Silly action with phony-looking stunts. And, the story? Don't get me started. Paul Chambers, CNN.March 05, 2010
The chief motivation for watching this film is to see people bouncing off walls. That being the case, you could just as easily watch neighborhood kids on a sugar rush.February 25, 2010
This sequel to the French actioner District B13 (2004) offers more of what made the original such a sublimely stupid pleasure.February 12, 2010
This tale of conspiracy and corruption, directed with adrenalized pleasure by Patrick Alessandrin and written by a reinvigorated Luc Besson, has a brain.