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Hapkido (a.k.a. Lady Kung-fu) Kung Fu: King Boxer (a.k.a. Five Fingers of Death) Way of the Dragon: 1973: Enter the Dragon: Little Tiger of Canton: The Awaken Punch: Fist of Unicorn: Karate Kiba: 1974: Yellow Faced Tiger: Fist to Fist: Black Belt Jones: The Street Fighter series The Legend of the 7 Golden Vampires: 1975: Goodbye Bruce Lee: His ...
Tiger & Crane Fists (Chinese: 虎鶴雙形) (a.k.a. Savage Killers) [1] is a 1976 kung fu movie, starring and directed by 70s Hong Kong star Jimmy Wang Yu. The story concerns the Tiger and the Crane martial arts style of two schools that has been separated from each other for many years. No one can determine which technique is the best.
It’s safe to say that the ’70s was one of the greatest decades in cinema history. Apart from introducing us to the notorious Michael Corleone from The Godfather, the film industry ushered in a ...
4. Jaws (1975). Cast: Roy Scheider, Robert Shaw, Richard Dreyfuss Rating: PG It’s the summer blockbuster that turned Steven Spielberg into a household name and made people think twice before ...
The site's critical consensus reads, "Badass to the max, Enter the Dragon is the ultimate kung-fu movie and fitting (if untimely) Bruce Lee swan song." [80] On Metacritic, it has a weighted average score of 83 out of 100 based on reviews from 16 critics, indicating "universal acclaim". [81]
Monkey Kung Fu. a.k.a. U.S. title: The Stroke of Death; He Who Never Dies; Legend of Feng Hsiu; Murder Plot; The Kung Fu Instructor; Shaolin Daredevils; Abbot of Shaolin; The Proud Twins; Dirty Ho; What Price Honesty; Naughty Scandals; The Ghost and I; 5 Superfighters; Tigress of Shaolin; Magnificent Ruffians; Mad Monkey Kung Fu; Kid with the ...
Lee achieved his greatest global stardom with his last completed film, and the first kung fu film to be produced by a Hollywood studio, Enter the Dragon (1973). This led to a "chopsocky" kung fu craze, while Lee's death shortly before the film's release resulted in a wave of "Bruceploitation" films in Hong Kong cinema. [1]