Their budgets may be low, but there's no denying the action movie magic that Adkins and Florentine regularly pull off frequently makes their big-budget theatrical competition look practically second-tier to their often Jackie Chan-worthy outings. To date, Florentine has directed eight movies with Scott Adkins, a figure which could be technically extrapolated to ten if his work as second unit director on The Legend of Hercules and his overseeing producer role on Boyka: Undisputed are also factored in. RELATED: Why Scott Adkins Would Be The Man For A Road House Reboot Aside from his frequent work with Adkins, Florentine has also directed such martial arts-filled action movies as Cold Harvest, High Voltage, Bridge of Dragons, and Acts of Vengeance, where he's directed names like Gary Daniels, Antonio Sabato Jr., Dolph Lundgren, Antonio Banderas, and Karl Urban. Like Adkins, the Israeli-born Florentine has also been a martial artist since childhood and got his start as a filmmaker on extremely low-budget movies like Desert Kickboxer and Savate along with second unit directing on Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers. The latter might not quite share the same mainstream recognition, but among action fans, Isaac Florentine is the Steven Spielberg of the straight-to-video action subculture.
How do Scott Adkins' movies with director Isaac Florentine rank from softest to strongest? Beginning his career in the late '90s in British television, Scott Adkins has steadily climbed to the top of contemporary action stars, and several of his most acclaimed martial arts films have been helmed by Isaac Florentine.