Rawhide 2 Dirty Deeds Official
The film is generally well-regarded by critics and historians of adult cinema for several reasons:
The film follows Chance (played by Dustin Rikert), a former race car driver turned driver for a high-stakes criminal syndicate. He's the nephew of a Las Vegas underworld figure.
At the start, Chance is tasked with delivering a mysterious briefcase from Los Angeles to Las Vegas within 24 hours. The briefcase contains evidence of a money-laundering operation tied to a ruthless casino owner named Dirty Deeds (or a similar villain — the name is used as a title and a character nickname). Rawhide 2 Dirty Deeds
Chance's car is a modified 1970 Dodge Challenger (nicknamed "Rawhide," hence the franchise name). Along the way, he picks up a reluctant female companion, Lola (played by Lana Wood), who has her own agenda involving the briefcase.
They are pursued by:
The plot twist: The briefcase doesn't contain money but rather digital records and photos of police and politicians on the syndicate's payroll. Chance must survive car chases, shootouts, and a final confrontation in an abandoned warehouse where he uses the Challenger as a battering ram.
In the end, Chance delivers the evidence to a clean journalist (or honest cop), and the villain is arrested. The final scene shows Chance driving off into the desert with Lola. The film is generally well-regarded by critics and
Before we dissect the “Dirty Deeds,” we must understand the groundwork laid by the first Rawhide film. The original movie introduced us to a desolate, post-economic collapse version of the American Southwest—not a dusty 1800s frontier, but a near-future wasteland where morality is as scarce as clean water.
The protagonist, a laconic drifter named Cale (played with stoic fury by genre veteran Tommy "The Ghost" Mulligan), lost everything—his family, his land, and his sense of purpose—to a marauding gang of scavengers known as “The Jackals.” The plot twist: The briefcase doesn't contain money
The first film ended on a somber note: Cale survived, but justice was not served. The villains fled into the desert, leaving a trail of ash and unanswered prayers. That cliffhanger set the stage for a sequel that promised to deliver the catharsis audiences craved. That sequel is Rawhide 2: Dirty Deeds.
Action directors have studied Rawhide 2 Dirty Deeds for its efficient, brutal choreography. Here are three sequences that fans search for by name: