Cuba Gooding Jr. And a visibly aged Dolph Lundgren (wearing a very bright shirt and a rather fetching hat) find themselves in the midst of a dispute between two warring groups of organised criminals in a film where there are plenty of bullets flying in both directions, and a reasonably high body count.
Dolph doesn't figure until about a third of the way in.
The acting is...not great, but that's standard for these sorts of movies. The Eastern European setting is in keeping with the gritty subject matter - the violence is graphically bloody - and the scenes between Cuba and Dolph are good, if not plentiful. The action movie cliches, however, are most definitely plentiful.
You know what you're going to get from a Dolph Lundgren film. Has he made better? Yeah, sure. But this is nonetheless a reasonable direct to video film. You could do worse than this on a Saturday night.