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unusual facts about Bruce Lee: The Curse of the Dragon


Bruce Lee: A Warrior's Journey

'Warrior's Journey' is a documentary in its own right, but it can be found as a bonus feature on the release of the 2004 edition of Enter the Dragon on DVD along with the documentary, Bruce Lee: The Curse of the Dragon.


A Walk in the Spring Rain

A little known fact is that martial arts superstar Bruce Lee, a personal friend of producer Stirling Silliphant, is credited as the film's fight choreographer.

Angela Mao

She was paid US$100 for her short role as the sister of Bruce Lee's character in the film Enter the Dragon.

Beopjusa

Beopjusa was chosen by Bruce Lee as the original setting for the movie Game of Death, with the five floors of Palsangjeon pagoda representing five different martial arts.

Bruce Lee: A Dragon Story

Bruce Li himself has also spoken about his dislike for this and his other early films.

We then see Lee competing in various martial arts tournaments and eventually landing a role on the television show The Green Hornet.

Bruce Lee: A Dragon Story is almost universally considered one of Bruce Li's worst movies.

The soap opera-style romance takes over the film in its second half, and at one point there is a love triangle between Lee, Betty Ting-Pei, and one of Lee's co-stars (almost certainly based on Nora Miao).

Bruce Lee: The Lost Interview

Bruce Lee: The Lost Interview is an 1971 interview of Bruce Lee that aired in 1994.

Bruce Lee: The Man, The Myth

Fans of Bruceploitation movies almost universally consider this the best of the low budget Bruce Lee biopics that were released during the 1970s, and some call it Ho Chung-tao's best film as well.

Two years later, Martial Arts Films Box Set DVD was released on 23 December 2002, at a 4 disc set including three films are: Black Friday, Legacy of Rage and Rumble in Hong Kong.

Carter Hargrave

His interest grew more as Bruce Lee made his debut in feature films, and was sealed by a gift from a family friend of a set of real nunchukas like Lee had used in Enter The Dragon.

Chai Sirisute

Dan Inosanto: Filipino-American martial arts instructor best known as a student of Bruce Lee

Charles Heung

In the 1970s, Charles subsequently married Betty Ting, the actress, who is remembered today primarily because of the "mysterious" death of Bruce Lee in her apartment.

Charles Lecour

Charles Lecour's open-minded and pragmatic approach to martial arts and his according integration of boxing techniques into his inherited fighting style made him an early predecessor of Bruce Lee.

Chiao Mei

Despite being the second billed character in the film, Mei's role is actually very insignificant, basically only existing to be a love interest for the film's protagonist, Cheng Chao-an portrayed by Bruce Lee.

Colleen Camp

She also appeared in the Bruce Lee movie Game of Death as his girlfriend, Ann, the young aspiring singer (her scenes were shot with a lookalike as Bruce had died long before she became involved) performing the film's love theme "Will This Be The Song I'll Be Singing Tomorrow".

Corbis

GreenLight also represents rightsholders directly, including the personality rights of Bruce Lee; Johnny Cash and June Carter; the Andy Warhol Foundation; Steve McQueen; Mae West; the Wright brothers; and Albert Einstein.

CV Productions, Inc.

The promoters set out to address the hypothetical question: “Who would win between Muhammad Ali (boxer), Bruce Lee (martial artist) or Bruno Sammartino (wrestler)?”

Daoism–Taoism romanization issue

The OED records the first usage of gung-ho in 1942 (referring to Evans Carlson's Marines) and of kung-fu in 1966 (referring to Bruce Lee's movies).

Donald Hugh Nagle

During his lifetime he met and knew many notable martial artists including Bruce Lee, Chuck Norris, Michael DePasquale Sr., S. Henry Cho and Peter Urban, to name a few.

Double Dragon Advance

The Special Thanks on the end credits now mentions Bruce Lee, as well as Yoshihisa Kishimoto, the director of the Double Dragon arcade game.

Fists of Bruce Lee

Fists of Bruce Lee is a 1978 film directed by and starring Bruce Lee imitator, Bruce Li.

Freestyle nunchaku

Freestyle nunchaku refers to the use of the nunchaku weapon (used in martial arts and popularised by Bruce Lee and other martial artists) in a more visually stunning, rather than combative way.

Fruit Chan

On August 22, 2007, Chan announced that he will make a film focusing on Bruce Lee's early years, specifically, the Chinese-language film, Kowloon City, will be produced by John Woo's producer Terence Chang.

Guillotine choke

Although the technique has been around for many centuries, it was popularised by martial artist Bruce Lee in his 1972 movie Way of the Dragon.

Hwang In-Shik

A great popularizer of the art in Asia through his work in the Hong Kong based films of Bruce Lee, Jackie Chan and Angela Mao, he is known nevertheless as one the top teachers of the art and was eventually awarded a 10th degree black belt, the highest rank possible in the art, by the World Hapkido Association.

Jay Sebring

Sebring had a hand in launching the film career of Bruce Lee, after meeting him at the International Karate Championships in Long Beach in 1964.

JuJu Chan

2011- Chan as Bruce Lee's kung fu sister in The Young Boxer (詠春小龍), her first action film directed by Antony Szeto, also coined as Female Bruce Lee by the Hong Kong Press and the only female actress in Hong Kong who has mastered the nunchuckus, including double nunchuchkus.

Kenshiro

Now turned into a full-grown adult, Buronson has stated that he based the revised Kenshiro on actor and martial arts legend Bruce Lee and the character Max Rockatansky from the Mad Max series.

According to Buronson, Kenshiro's character design was inspired by the character of Max Rockatansky from the Mad Max film series and martial artist Bruce Lee.

Kung-Fu Master

The game is considered by many to be the first beat 'em up video game, and contains elements of Bruce Lee's Game of Death.

Linda Lee Cadwell

Linda wrote the 1975 book Bruce Lee: The Man Only I Knew (ISBN 0-446-89407-9), on which the 1993 feature film Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story was based.

Meprobamate

An acute cerebral edema caused by a reaction to Equagesic, a combination of aspirin and meprobamate, is believed to have caused the death of Bruce Lee.

Mingering Mike

Mingering Mike had created a whole complex, yet nonexistent music career (including a Bruce Lee concept album), and had released more than 50 album covers in 10 years.

Rock Lee

IGN called Lee one of their favorite characters in the series and compared his personality to that of Bruce Lee and Noel Gallagher.

Round 5 Corporation

In addition to creating figures based on existing Bruce Lee mythology, Round 5 created figures based on new characters that populate a fictional universe based on the Bruce Lee license such as the Temple of Kung Fu line.

Shunde District

Martial artist Bruce Lee's ancestral roots are traced to Gwan'on (Jun'an) in Seundak (Shunde).

Sonny Umpad

Glover, the first student of Bruce Lee, referred to Umpad as “Bruce Lee with a stick” because of the speed and economy of his movement.

Umpad was chosen as the model to portray Bruce for making the Bruce Lee video game.

St. Francis Xavier's College

Bruce Lee (李小龍), world famous Martial arts instructor, actor, philosopher, film director, screenwriter, and martial arts founder.

Superdragon

Bruce Lee: A Dragon Story, Bruce Lee biopic also known as Superdragon

The Big Boss

Various Bruce Lee biopics have been filmed over the years, with the two most famous being Bruce Lee: The Man, The Myth and Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story.

The Tao of Wu

In the book he uses Hip-Hop lyrics, autobiographical anecdotes, and parables, to explain how he was simultaneously inspired by Hinduism, Buddhism, Christianity, Bruce Lee, and Islam.

Último Dragón

The name "Ultimo Dragon", which means "Last Dragon" in Spanish was initially used as a gimmick of Asai claiming to be the last student taught by legendary martial artist Bruce Lee, whose nickname was "The Dragon".

William Dozier

He also performed those functions on the The Green Hornet TV show, which starred Van Williams and Bruce Lee, although here the narration was limited to the stock opening, the next-episode trailers, and the story-so-far recaps in its three two-part episodes.

Zachary Oberzan

Having bizarrely overdosed on the anxiety drug Xanax at approximately the same time and under similar circumstances as Whitney Houston, the multimedia piece resurrects Amelia Earhart, Serge Gainsbourg, Bruce Lee, Buddy Holly, and a host of others to examine, through pop culture, timeless existential quandaries.


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