A band of counterfeiters wants to make Hong Kong their new territory. The disgraced leader of the Special Squad will have to team-up with a group of Hong Kong police officers in an attempt t... Read allA band of counterfeiters wants to make Hong Kong their new territory. The disgraced leader of the Special Squad will have to team-up with a group of Hong Kong police officers in an attempt to stop the dirty business of crime lord Han Tin Lung, but Han's problem not only is the in... Read allA band of counterfeiters wants to make Hong Kong their new territory. The disgraced leader of the Special Squad will have to team-up with a group of Hong Kong police officers in an attempt to stop the dirty business of crime lord Han Tin Lung, but Han's problem not only is the interference of the Police force, his Japanese ally Kimura is not happy with his 'cut' in th... Read all
- Dragon - Special Squad Leader)
- (as Ho Chung Dao)
- Inspector 'Mustache' Wang
- (as Chang Leih)
- Kimura
- (as Yang Szu)
- Nightclub Owner
- (as Ging-Man Fung)
- Kimura's Friend - Master at Kung Fu School
- (as Yee Sang Hon)
Featured reviews
However, oddly enough, the cast and crew seem to be quite aware that their whole effort is blatantly absurd.
Consequently, their are subtle but undeniable elements of self-parody in throughout the film. I will only describe the opening sequence: A man looking like a minor business executive is standing on a roof top, threatening to commit suicide. Bruce Li, dressed in the yellow-and-red gymnastic jump-suit long associated with Bruce Lee through publicity photos for his uncompleted last film (Game of Death) , climbs up five stories and jumps out to grab the exec by the arm. Unfortunately, it's a prosthetic arm. The force of the grab tears off the arm and inadvertently sends the exec five stories to his death. Bruce Li stands there looking at the prosthetic limb with an expression like, "hey, this never happened to the other guy!" Final underscore for this self-parody is when another character looks at Bruce Li and says: "Has anyone ever told you you look like Bruce Lee?" - Well, I'm not!" Bruce Li responds.
This is all pretty much 'in-joke' stuff; to appreciate the humor of this film, one has to have seen all of the real Bruce Lee films, and a good many Bruce-Clone films as well. But I have, so I had a blast.
In a movie that seemingly has nothing to with Bruce Lee, or his image, Bruce Li plays a cop who goes around beating people up, while trying trying to stop a counterfeit ring. Or something, I somehow managed to miss the important plot points (ok, there weren't any at all...).
There's lots of swearing, and naked ladies, and violence - enough to get an R-rating. Surprisingly, my copy of the movie comes with a family friendly M-rating. I'll admit right now, that I don't why I'm reviewing this - there isn't much to say about it.
Basically, the movie follows Bruce Li as he wanders around beating up bad guys, and follows Bolo Yeung as he wanders around beating up good guys. In fact, Li's character never takes his leather jacket off - either it gives him super-powers, or it is the secret to his kung-fu technique.
Overall, its actually pretty funny, in a cheesy way - 4/10
After Bruce Lee died, there were a stream of Bruce Lee imitators coming out throughout Hong Kong and this happens to be one of them, which is not bad. Plot has two interpol agents uncovering a counterfeit ring, one of those agents happen to look and fight like Bruce Lee name on the credits as Bruce Li!!!. Also star is actual martial artist David Chiang of many chop sockey movies and "Police Story" Part II playing the main bad guy's son and a young Bolo Yeung from "Bloodsport" playing the other bad guy who carries the plates. It has nudity and some well staged martial art fights.
My copy is unusual high quality. It is a digital file that plays on a HDTV as true wide screen with good resolution and is English dubbed.
This movie is labeled Brucexploitation. Exploiting Bruce Lee's name was done by VHS rental businesses. They had tons of VHS tapes for rent in America and labeled them not by proper title but to attract the American viewer. They often used words like "Shaolin", "tiger", "dragon", or "Bruce Lee" to attract the unknowing customer. Jackie Chan's name was also used.
Did you know
- ConnectionsReferenced in Kain's Quest: Bruce Lee & I (2012)
- SoundtracksRoving Report 6
Written and performed by Jack Trombey (uncredited)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Bruce Lee - Der reißende Puma
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro