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BRUCE LEE VIDEOS

Posted in Bruce Lee (Monday, October 13, 2008)

It stars Bruce Lee, Van Williams. It was directed by Frank Striker. By Bonzai Media Corp. RSP. Sells new for $74.95.
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No comments about Green Hornet 3 DVD Set Volumes 4,5 and 6.



Posted in Bruce Lee (Monday, October 13, 2008)

It stars Bruce Lee. By Diamond Ent. Corp.. The regular list price is $7.95. Sells new for $3.99. There are some available for $2.99.
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No comments about Bruce Lee Collector's Edition.



Posted in Bruce Lee (Monday, October 13, 2008)

It stars Bruce Li, Carter Wong, Chang Kuei, Alan Ellerton, Ching Chi Min. It was directed by Chang Chee, Wah Chan. By Beverly Wilshire. The regular list price is $12.98. Sells new for $4.50. There are some available for $0.99.
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5 comments about Story of the Dragon.
  1. Classic kung fu movie! Bruce Lee stars in this action-packed cheesy 1970's kung fu movie featuring hilarious dubbing and exciting kung fu. Based on a true story, Bruce comes to San Francisco and and starts a kung fu school. He quickly makes enemies from other schools and after escaping death, Bruce realises that his traditional kung fu moves are not that effective against American street fighting so he creates his own style, Jee Kune Do and combats his enemies in spectacular battles. Bruce plays Bob. Or at least I think it's Bob. He is refered to as Bruce once. I reccomend Story of the Dragon if you like great action movies.


  2. I love this movie, but my praise will have to wait until I make sure a few important facts are established for those out there unfamiliar with Bruceploitation films. First and foremost, Bruce Lee does not appear in this picture, nor does it have the first thing to do with the real Bruce Lee; the star of the film is Ho Chung Tao (aka Li Shao Lung), better known as Bruce Li. I wasn't that impressed with Li in the first couple of films I saw, but I have now come to understand why he is regarded by and large as the best of the Bruce Lee clones (and I might point out he never really embraced the concept of being renamed after his idol). It is unfair to even compare him to Bruce Lee because Li is a pretty darn good martial arts star in his own right. With this movie, he has won me over completely. Another important fact about this film concerns the title: these Bruceploitation films of the mid- to late-70s are notorious for having different titles. This 1976 film is probably best known as Bruce Lee's Deadly Kung Fu, although you may very well see it called Bruce Lee's Secret or Story of the Dragon; additional but less common titles include Bruce Li's Jeet Kune Do, A Dragon Story, and He's a Legend, He's a Hero. You really have to be careful when buying Bruceploitation films such as this because each movie bears multiple titles.

    As for the movie itself, the plot is a very familiar one. Li plays "Bob" Lee, a young Chinese man working in San Francisco; he and his friend are bullied by a trio of thugs, and Bob's decision to teach the guys a little respect for the Chinese lands him and his buddy out of work. For some reason, the scraggly American guys Bob put a licking on exercise some control over Chinatown, making it very difficult for our hero to find a new job. When he does get a job working on the docks, the roughnecks show up along with some of their friends to beat everybody there up. Bob finally has to do his thing again, after which his coworkers convince him to open his own school and teach them kung fu. If you've seen The Chinese Connection (or just about any other martial arts film), you know this means trouble with the schools already in existence (all of which are, of course, rife with bad guys). Well, as you can well imagine, the conflict escalates. Two things make this particular film a little different, though. For one, Bob is defeated at one point by what I assume was supposed to be some type of Japanese karate expert, forcing him to rethink his strategy and thereby come up with his own personalized form of kung fu. This provides a window in which a tiny bit of the essence of kung fu is explained to the audience. Second, in the final conflict, Bob has to deal with an unusual weapon, which makes the predictable climax a little more interesting.

    A good many Bruceploitation fans don't seem to care for Bruce Lee's Deadly Kung Fu, but I loved it. As I said, the plot is pretty similar to that of many a martial arts film, but this story works for me, particularly with the emphasis Bob places on disproving the idea that the Chinese are cowards; everyone who gets in his way is made to respect the Chinese. Some who know more about kung fu than I do (and I basically know nothing about it) aren't that impressed with the fight scenes featured in the movie, but I thought they were outstanding. Bruce Li impressed me more here than in any other of his movies I have seen so far. The action is fast and furious, particularly the one fight between Bob and the Japanese assassin sent to kill him. The final battle scenes were especially good, as Bob had to single-handedly go through several heavy layers of bad guys in order to reach the man he was really after.

    Formulaic it may be, but Bruce Lee's Deadly Kung Fu is one of my favorite Bruceploitation films, and Bruce Li impressed the heck out of me with his fighting skills in this one. It can be hard for a fan of the real Bruce Lee to embrace the string of Bruceploitation films that were churned out in the years after his death, and many a Lee fan will not watch any of them. As long as they do nothing to tarnish the image of Lee, however, I can't get enough of them, and Bruce Lee's Deadly Kung Fu is one of the best ones out there.



  3. I agree 100 percent with DARKGENIUS!
    I think people are too hard on Bruce Li and his movies.
    I've been collecting Kung Fu movies since the 80's.
    (I even paid $80 several years ago for an Encylopedia of Kung Fu movies. Yes, encyclopedia's for this genre do exist!!)
    "Bruce Lee's Deadly Kung Fu" is one of my all-time top
    ten favorites!
    One of the main reasons I love this film so much is that
    the dialouge is so bad, IT'S GOOD! It's classic 70's!
    One example, is when the "San Francisco Kid"(white guy)first comes in with the chinese guy(who always played a "traitor" in several Bruce Lee films), says, "Ha, ha, ha! Don't worry. Ha, ha. I'll make them sorry they stared this! Ha, ha, ha."
    They made him sound like "Butthead"(from Beavis & Butthead!)
    It's ...classic. There's nothing else like this genre!

    Lastly, I would also like to point out that the fight scenes
    are excellent(none of the ... wire-work that's rampant now-a-days)! And the story is not half bad either.



  4. BRUCE LI. The successor to the late Bruce Lee, stars in what I consider the best movie ever made. Bruce Li is my HERO! My idol. Bruce plays a cook in San Francisco who is fired for fighting. Bruce opens a kung fu school but others don't like it. He falls out with a kung fu school owned by Mr Grace and in the final showdown, Bruce takes on Mr Grace and his entire kung fu school. If you're a Bruce Li fan, I reccomend you get this in the DRAGON 4 PACK from videoasia. It contains the original print of the film entitled BRUCE LEE'S DEADLY KUNG FU (a.k.a. Bruce Lee's Secret). The picture quality is pretty bad but remember that this is a low budget 1970's kung fu flick. Overall, I think this is the best Bruce Li movie and anybody who likes to see great fights will love it! A classic!


  5. This is a GREAT movie. Yeah it's old and the picture is full of lines and everything but so what? I don't really care. This is better than RUSH HOUR. Jackie Chan is no match for Bruce Lee. Everyone knows that. Bruce Lee fans will enjoy this movie. I know I did.


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Posted in Bruce Lee (Monday, October 13, 2008)

It stars Jun Arimura, Robert Baker, Tom Chan, Fu Ching Chen, San Chin. By Universal Studios. The regular list price is $7.98. Sells new for $2.86. There are some available for $1.24.
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5 comments about The Chinese Connection.
  1. The voices are dubed in and it is in a deep voice but there a some great fight seens but if you want to see a really good Bruce Lee movie get Enter the Dragon.The Chinese Connection is still a good movie


  2. I wanted to like this but in the behind the scenes interviews they show little respect for Bruce Lee and that got me started off on the wrong foot. Then I watch it and it just isn't that clever. I did laugh once or twice but i expected something more along the lines of What's Up Tiger Lilly. At least they could have had the actors play orientals. Too bad because this concept could have been funny.


  3. I love this movie and still think its Lee at his best. Between the scene of him as a very awkward phone repairman, and the scene where he takes on a horde of bad guys with Nunchucks, this is his most complete performance on screen to me and showed his talent at its best. This transfer is of a much better quality than most of the releases out there of this movie. If you ever wanted to see just how good and talented Bruce was, just watch this one and find out.
    The story is standard for these movies but Lee bumps the action and the acting up to give this one it's true classic reputation.


  4. 1972's "The Chinese Connection" features a young Bruce Lee as the leading student at a King Fu Academy in 1908 Shanghai. The storyline is a simple tale of revenge, but in the context of a Shanghai dominated by Japanese and other outsiders, in which the natives are treated as second-class citizens, it resonated deeply with its original Chinese audience.

    In the movie, Chen, played by Bruce Lee, returns to his academy to find that his beloved master, a famous martial artist, is dead. Chen is stricken with grief, but learns from his fellow students that his master's death may not have been an accident. Chen patiently but violently works his way back through the members of a rival Japanese school, looking for those responsible for the master's death. Highlights include a many-on-one fight at the school, which Chen wins decisively, and a confrontation with a Russian martial artist brought in to deal with Chen. Chen's willingness to stand up for his fellow Chinese forces the hand of the local authorities (including a police chief played by director Lo Wei), who are beholden to the Japanese. Cornered at the end, the gallant Chen will be left with only one option.

    The original Chinese is dubbed over in English, unfortunately resulting in dialogue that sounds like it was lifted from a high school drama. Fortunately, the non-verbal qualities of the acting, including a touching performance by Nora Miao as Chen's love interest and some nicely choreographed fight sequences, carry the movie. "Chinese Connection" is a Raymond Chow production, and a better than average representative of the early martial arts genre.

    This movie is highly recommended to fans of Bruce Lee and of the early martial arts movies.


  5. This movie (called Fist Of Fury overseas) was made before Enter The Dragon and, in my opinion, ranks just behind ETD! While all of Bruce's films and fight scenes are legendary, if this one or ETD is on TV, everything stops! LOL!

    The plot, like ETD, is very basic. Bruce comes back to his martial arts school to find out his teacher was dead! Not only that, he suspects was murdered and goes on a rampage to avenge his death!

    What's interesting is that even though the film is fiction, the teacher was actually a real life person. That character was recently shown in a film by Jet Li called "Fearless."

    Back to the movie, what makes this special is Bruce himself. He was electrifying in every scene he was in. While I am still biased to Enter The Dragon, Chinese Connection ranks a close second in my view! Highly recommended!


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Posted in Bruce Lee (Monday, October 13, 2008)

It stars Bob Bremer, Bruce Lee, James Coburn, Ted Wang, Van Williams. It was directed by Guy Scutter. By Lions Gate. The regular list price is $14.98. Sells new for $7.98. There are some available for $3.82.
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No comments about Bruce Lee: Martial Arts Master, the Life of Bruce Lee.



Posted in Bruce Lee (Monday, October 13, 2008)

It stars Bruce Lee, John Saxon, Kien Shih, Ahna Capri, Angela Mao. It was directed by Robert Clouse. By Warner Home Video. The regular list price is $19.98. Sells new for $22.67.
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5 comments about Enter the Dragon [UMD for PSP].
  1. If there's one thing I personally hate with every ounce of my body, it's a mediocre film that gets propped up on an undeserving pedestal for nostalgic reasons. Why? Because frequently the film's proponents will mask their nostalgia by magically transforming mediocrity into greatness with their rose-colored glasses. Meanwhile, these fanatics will demean other movies that are objectively better than their beloved film for no valid reason. Yes, I know that the enjoyability of a movie is subjective to each viewer, but the most superlative claims made by these fanatics venture dangerously into assertions of objective fact.

    Bruce Lee fans are a perfect example. While reading comments for "Enter the Dragon", I hear endless put downs for every martial arts movie that doesn't star Bruce Lee. Considering the fact that none of his movies ever succeeded to crack the ceiling of mediocrity, a non-nostalgic observer (absent of brainwashing) can only conclude that these are certifiable lunatics trying to convince themselves that "Enter the Dragon" is a great movie, either due to nostalgic reasons or coersive pressuring from media (and fanboys) to jump on a bandwagon with square wheels.

    As a fan of martial arts cinema, I can ignore a mediocre script, wooden acting, and an inept storyline if the film gives me what I want in terms of action. "Enter the Dragon" fails to provide what it so desperately attempts to accomplish: well-choreographed, entertaining fight scenes.

    Some Bruce Lee lunatics start their reviews by saying that the opening fight is a "brilliant sequence of moves." I can only respond to this as I would someone who says that the sun is black - shake my head in disbelief and slowly walk away in fear of being assaulted. When one watches this scene (as with most of Bruce's fights), there is a noticeable lack of two things: combinations and countermoves. Bruce will typically engage in a series of one-hit exchanges with his opponents while mixing in a few three-move combos. Meanwhile, his opponents act like sparring dummies to be owned as necessary. While this has the potential to work in a one-vs-many scene, it simply doesn't work in a one-on-one scene. If you think that the beginning fight in "Enter the Dragon" is "brilliant", then you need to watch the Wu Jing/Andy On exchange in "Fatal Contact" (2006) for an example of a truly scintillating martial arts fight with combinations and countermoves executed with great speed and precision. If you still think the Bruce Lee/Sammo Hung fight is better, please seek psychological counseling immediately.

    Afterward the viewer is treated to some lame fights with John Saxon, Jim Kelly, and a Chinese lady, none of which look convincing on screen. After some incredibly bloated and overly long shots of boats on water (as well as some partying) we finally get to see Bruce do something again. This time, he goes stealth and takes out a few guards using nothing more than a few incredibly basic punches and chops. Mediocrity at its finest.

    Later on, Bruce goes stealth again but must now deal with a few dozen baddies in what many lunatics claim to be a spectacular one-against-many scene. In all honesty, I thought it was good and entertaining, with a bit of welcomed variety in terms of weaponry and moves. However, at least 70% of the baddies were dispatched with a simple fist to the face, which undermines this scene from being anything more than "good." If you think this one-against-many fight was "spectacular", then you need to watch the Tony Jaa finale in "Tom Yum Goong" (2005), where he dispatches over 40 guys using over 30 different strikes, holds, and take-downs. The sheer variety of that scene easily overpowers anything Bruce Lee ever did. If you still think the Bruce Lee scene was better, please look under "Psychiatrist" in your Yellow Pages.

    We finally come to an overrated finale where Bruce takes out 90% of his opponents using the same exact kick and punch. Virtually no effort was put into the fight choreography, and it's obvious to anyone without a platinum membership to Rose Colored Glasses, Inc. It gets a little better when Bruce spars with the main villain, but the all-too-common shortcomings of Bruce Lee fights - the lack of combos and counterattacks - rears its ugly head even here. Sure, there are a few good exchanges, but for the most part it's incredibly bland (Bruce's slow-mo jump kick being a case in point) and the actor playing the villain is just too slow and unconvincing. Unlike Bruce's other films (e.g., "Way of the Dragon"), they had other credible stuntmen and martial artists in this movie. Why not choose a more athletic lead antagonist (Jackie Chan, Sammo Hung, etc.) to provide for some sparks? As is, it's a decent but disappointing scene that's very drawn out with lots of unnecessary slow motion.

    Now, I'm familiar with the dangers of expressing an unpopular viewpoint in the realm of movies, and I am convinced that Bruce Lee fanatics have unknowingly established an organized religion of sorts that will stop at nothing to insult and demean anyone who doesn't like Bruce's movies - one may as well call it the "Cinematic Inquisition." Don't misunderstand me though. I have a great deal of respect for Bruce Lee as an intelligent person and an exceptional martial artist, but whether or not his movies are entertaining is a completely different issue altogether. The fact still remains that we have an incredible martial artist in middling action films.


  2. Bruce lee's creative and outstanding performance is highlighted in this extraordinary movie. This is his finest quality performance exhibiting his Legendary skills which were ahead of his time and even to this day still inspiring and engaging. The beginning of the film where he spars Sammo Hung is an awesome setting for what is to come in the movie. What sets Bruce a part from all of the rest is his character energy and his extraordinary power and speed from such a small framed man. Now that Enter the Dragon is in Blueray, it is sheer pleasure and excitement as on the big screen! What a legendary Martial Artist, actor and human being!!!


  3. I finally saw Bruce Lee's acting!!!
    That's what impressed me the most with this movie. Bruce Lee was not just the martial arts pro in this one. I saw a quality ACTOR. Kudos!!!


  4. My Dad is going to love this when he comes back to visit in Dec. 2008. He took us to the movies to see this film in 1973 or 1974 can't pin point it I was about 7 or 8yrs old. My kids say whose better Bruce Lee or Jet Lee? My son said Bruce of course, so I said lets have a history lesson. Classic good digital color and sound. Must have in your library.


  5. To reviewer anticlamagus: YOu think wire-fu is better. Thats all you have to say, theres no need to write an entire page to express that,and call people who doesnt share the same view lunatics.
    Bruce written,directed,and choreagraph most of his movies. Which means
    all his movies are will be influenced by his own personal beliefs and philosophy.One would probally be his ideal of the ultimate
    warrior(very obvious in the game of death, when he had to overcome various and very different styles to reach the top) and most importantly
    JKD, which literally translates to method of the straight fist( because the straight line is the most direct and quickest route from point a to point b). So his movies does not really contain longish types of choeagraph action. If thats what you want, you need to look elsewhere.


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Posted in Bruce Lee (Monday, October 13, 2008)

It stars Bruce Lee, John Saxon, Jim Kelly, Ahna Capri, Shek Kin. It was directed by Robert Clouse. By Bonzai Media Corp. RSP. The regular list price is $29.95. Sells new for $14.06. There are some available for $14.00.
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No comments about Enter The Dragon.



Posted in Bruce Lee (Monday, October 13, 2008)

It stars Bruce Lee, Van Williams. It was directed by Frank Striker. By Bonzai Media Corp. RSP. The regular list price is $29.95. Sells new for $19.90.
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No comments about Green Hornet vol.5 The Sting of the Hornet.



Posted in Bruce Lee (Monday, October 13, 2008)

It stars Bruce Lee, Van Williams. It was directed by Frank Striker. By Bonzai Media Corp. RSP. The regular list price is $29.95. Sells new for $19.93.
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No comments about Green Hornet vol.6 Fear the Vengeance of Kato!.



Posted in Bruce Lee (Monday, October 13, 2008)

It stars Bruce Lee, Van Williams. It was directed by Frank Striker. By Bonzai Media Corp. RSP. The regular list price is $29.95. Sells new for $19.90.
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No comments about Green Hornet Vol.4 Hell Hath No Fury!.



Page 6 of 36
1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9  10  11  12  13  14  15  16  20  30  
Green Hornet 3 DVD Set Volumes 4,5 and 6
Bruce Lee Collector's Edition
Story of the Dragon
The Chinese Connection
Bruce Lee: Martial Arts Master, the Life of Bruce Lee
Enter the Dragon [UMD for PSP]
Enter The Dragon
Green Hornet vol.5 The Sting of the Hornet
Green Hornet vol.6 Fear the Vengeance of Kato!
Green Hornet Vol.4 Hell Hath No Fury!

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Last updated: Mon Oct 13 11:20:19 EDT 2008