
The Army finds itself fighting the nearly indestructible corps it created. When Seth, the supercomputer controlled ultra-warrior.

The once user-friendly Seth, the project's main computer, revolts, finds itself something comfortable to slip into, a top-notch body (the muscular Michael Jai White), and then foments a coup that turns all the Unisol units against Luc and the top brass. Luc Deveraux, the heroic former Universal Soldier, is about to be thrown into action once again. All hell breaks loose as Luc battles Seth and a deadly team of perfect soldiers in a struggle that pits man. When Seth, the supercomputer controlled ultra-warrior, decides to take revenge and destroy its creators, only Luc can stop it. All is well until the Unisol detachment is threatened with termination by the military. Luc Deveraux, the heroic former Universal Soldier, is about to be thrown into action once again. So here is Luc (Jean-Claude Van Damme), a former Unisol somehow brought back to actual life, now helping to run the Unisol program. The film spawned an entire franchise of sequels, both official and unofficial.
#Universal soldier the return cast movie#
This is a sequel to "Universal Soldier," a movie that, if the universe were merciful, would have spawned no sequel. Universal Soldier is a 1992 American science fiction action film directed by Roland Emmerich and starring Jean-Claude Van Damme and Dolph Lundgren as soldiers who kill each other in Vietnam but are reanimated in a secret Army project along with a large group of other previously dead soldiers.

Universal Soldier is a 1992 American military science fiction, action film produced by Mario. Any charms the first film had were completely stripped away by the time Universal Soldier: The Return hit theaters in 1999 and effectively marked the end of Van Damme’s mainstream movie career. Brought back to a kind of "life," these fallen have been rejiggered into fearless and nearly unstoppable fighting machines. 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 5 References 6 External links. The universal soldier - or Unisol - of the title generically refers to battlefield casualties "recycled" in an American military living-dead project conducted at a central Texas facility.
