Detailed item info | Movie description | Bruce Lee was immortalized in his films as a martial arts master and first-class entertainer. ENTER THE DRAGON was the first martial arts film that American audiences had witnessed, and was actually produced in both Hong Kong and Hollywood. Interestingly, ENTER THE DRAGON also set the stage for non-traditional, culturally specific narratives to make their way into Hollywood.
Bruce Lee plays a kung fu master recruited by a foreign government to infiltrate the island of a megalomaniac martial artist named Han. Han's bodyguard is also found to have killed Lee's sister, giving Lee a personal vendetta to fight for. The Hall of Mirrors sequence towards the end of the film is now famous, as are Lee's incredibly gymnastic martial arts abilities. This trend-setting film holds up as an entertaining, engaging action movie, more than 30 years later.
| | Credits | | Writer: | Michael Allin | | Cast: | Ahna Capri, Bruce Lee, Jim Kelly, John Saxon |
| | Details | | Edition: | 25th Anniversary Special Edition | | Sound: | HiFi Sound |
| | Notes | DVD Features:
Region 1 Encoding 3 Minutes of Extra Footage "Making of Enter the Dragon" Featurette "Bruce Lee: In His Own Words" Interactive Menus Production Notes 2 Theatrical Trailers English, French and Spanish Subtitles
Theatrical release: August 15, 1973
After making several Hong-Kong-produced martial arts films, Lee had become a huge star in Asia. "Enter the Dragon", though filmed in Hong Kong, was Lee's first movie financed by Hollywood money, and it was the film that made him an international star. Unfortunately, he had no time to enjoy the acclaim. He died the same year at the age of 32 under circumstances that remain mysterious. "Return of the Dragon," completed in 1973, was released after his death. "Game of Death," the film Lee was working on at the time of his death, was pieced together using outtakes and released in 1978.
| | Editorial reviews | "...One of the finest kung-fu films ever made, thanks to Lee..." -- Rating: A Entertainment Weekly - p.82 - Entertainment Weekly Staff (05/29/1998)
"...The most popular martial arts pic ever..." USA Today - Mike Clark (05/22/1998)
"If kung fu is now the standard badass language, ENTER THE DRAGON -- featuring Lee's great slow-burn stare -- is the first grammar lesson." Rolling Stone - David Lipsky (06/10/2004)
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