AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,9/10
31 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Um jovem sob juramento de não cometer atos de violência trabalha com seus primos em uma fábrica de gelo onde eles começam misteriosamente a desaparecer.Um jovem sob juramento de não cometer atos de violência trabalha com seus primos em uma fábrica de gelo onde eles começam misteriosamente a desaparecer.Um jovem sob juramento de não cometer atos de violência trabalha com seus primos em uma fábrica de gelo onde eles começam misteriosamente a desaparecer.
- Direção
- Roteirista
- Artistas
Marilyn Bautista
- Miss Wuman
- (as Malalene)
Nora Miao
- Drinkstand owner
- (as Mao Ke-hsiu)
Chia-Chen Tu
- Uncle
- (as Chia-Cheng Tu)
Billy Chan
- Ah Pei
- (as Hui-yi Chen)
Avaliação em destaque
Saw this in a theatre in 1971 and just revisited it 45 years later.
Conclusion:
As a film, it suffers badly from the massive improvements in choreography, skill, and staging that MA films have enjoyed in the interim. What seemed sort of "OK" in a dark theatre in 1971 becomes, after several decades, almost a slow dance of awkward fighting moves, with off-sync sound effects and blows that never seem to connect with anything.
In this instance it is not fair to judge the old by the new ... so, no rating.
And then there is the topic of Mr. Lee.
History tells us that Bruce Lee exploded into Asian cinema on this film and anyone can see why. IT IS AS IF HE IS OPERATING AT A FAST CAMERA SPEED AND THE REST OF THE CAST AT A SLOW CAMERA FEED. Of course, the speed of the camera is the same throughout, it is the speed of the actors that differed.
The cast were the usual bunch that made many dozens of these films in a year. They looked slow and awkward because they actually were slow and awkward.
Mr. Lee on the other hand lived (and ultimately died) for his craft. His whole life was MA and even today the debate continues as where he would have ranked against the best fighters of all time. At the top is my guess.
In essence, this is almost an audition tape for Mr. Lee and not much else. But it is a piece of history and deserves great respect.
Conclusion:
As a film, it suffers badly from the massive improvements in choreography, skill, and staging that MA films have enjoyed in the interim. What seemed sort of "OK" in a dark theatre in 1971 becomes, after several decades, almost a slow dance of awkward fighting moves, with off-sync sound effects and blows that never seem to connect with anything.
In this instance it is not fair to judge the old by the new ... so, no rating.
And then there is the topic of Mr. Lee.
History tells us that Bruce Lee exploded into Asian cinema on this film and anyone can see why. IT IS AS IF HE IS OPERATING AT A FAST CAMERA SPEED AND THE REST OF THE CAST AT A SLOW CAMERA FEED. Of course, the speed of the camera is the same throughout, it is the speed of the actors that differed.
The cast were the usual bunch that made many dozens of these films in a year. They looked slow and awkward because they actually were slow and awkward.
Mr. Lee on the other hand lived (and ultimately died) for his craft. His whole life was MA and even today the debate continues as where he would have ranked against the best fighters of all time. At the top is my guess.
In essence, this is almost an audition tape for Mr. Lee and not much else. But it is a piece of history and deserves great respect.
- A_Different_Drummer
- 29 de nov. de 2016
- Link permanente
Enredo
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesBruce Lee sprained his ankle badly while landing awkwardly from a jump. He couldn't move properly and was also racked with aches and fever and was having difficulty keeping food down. Even so, filming continued. His twisted ankle meant that he had to drag his injured leg, so in several scenes he had to be filmed in closeup. He also broke a glass in his hand, resulting in a gash that required ten stitches. While at the hospital in Bangkok, he caught flu and rapidly lost ten pounds.
- Erros de gravaçãoWhen the guard dogs leap at Cheng, they are obviously thrown.
- Citações
Cheng Chao-an: Just keep away. Go on. It's not your fight.
- Versões alternativasWhen the film was released in the United States, the death of Hsiao Mi, "The Boss", was cut down to him simply being stabbed in the chest with a knife in order to receive an "R" rating. The original version of his death, which not only shows an explicit close-up of the knife in his chest but Cheng Chao-an's fingers piercing his rib cage and blood flowing from under his shirt, would have given the film an "X" rating. This scene has since been restored for the Bruce Lee Ultimate Collection DVD released by Fox, and the Shout Factory DVD/Bluray releases.
- ConexõesEdited into Jogo da Morte (1978)
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- How long is The Big Boss?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 100.000 (estimativa)
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By what name was O Dragão Chinês (1971) officially released in Canada in French?
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