It was one of the ones that I never got around to watching growing up in the 80s/90s, and I still have quite a few to go through (especially 80s rated R movies I wasn't allowed to watch but thankfully Tubi exists).
The movie was fine, but unfortunately I couldn't help but think about how Disney totally butchered the IP. I cancelled D-Plus in 21 but I heard about the Willow tv show and while watching the movie I couldn't help but say "you really couldn't come up with some sort of family friendly followup without injecting gay crap or current year nonsense into it". They constantly talk about diversity but it seems like the writer rooms are people with the exact same worldview off of a factory conveyer belt. Best example is an article I read when Star Trek Discovery had first started about how the writing room had to do a Star Trek boot camp because they didn't have any knowledge of the IP.
I vaguely remember that tv series. You'd think Disney would work on some sort of "old man Blade" type story due to the positive reception his cameo got.
What happened with their planned Blade movie is yet another example with everything wrong in mainstream entertainment. A story about a vampire hunter shouldn't be hard to write, but they couldn't resist making some women the center piece.
He refuses to work in the US because the IRS tried to illegally steal his wife and kids money. Sylvester Stalone is his friend, and works with that for Expendables.