#IconicReleaseOfTheDay: Enter the Dragon πŸ‘πŸ‘

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One Line Review: Enter the Dragon is a hopelessly action-filled movie with Bruce Lee’s 33KV energy.


 Enter The Dragon
(1973) on IMDb

Youtube Trailer Enter the Dragon


Starring: Bruce Lee

Director: Robert Klause

Release Date: 19 August 1973

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Introduction

Enter the Dragon has completed more than five decades of its legacy. Today is its release anniversary and here is our little effort to rejoice the nostalgia and complement the good work.


Iconic dialogues from this movie

Lee: Don’t think! Feel. It is like a finger pointing away to the moon. Don’t concentrate on the finger or you will miss all that heavenly glory.

Williams: Mr Han, suddenly I wish to leave your island.

Han: It is not possible.

Williams: Bullshit, Mr Han-man.

Lee: You have offended my family and you have offended the Shaolin Temple.


Critic Reviews

β€œA whoop-and-holler entertainment, which is to say that it’s a lavish, corny action movie, not boring for a second and as outrageously wry as it is visually appealing.” Alan Howard


Plot Summary

Lee is a martial art expert who wants to take revenge on the drug lord who is responsible for his sister’s death. The drug lord organizes a martial arts competition and Lee decides to enter it so that he can get into the gangs and destroy it.


Too much Action in one film

The fighting scenes in this film were authenticated in his time because Bruce Lee is also a combat coordinator. His power and trust is something that you can not fake or act as an actor, but a symbol of something greater. He represents his generation more so that John Travolta strands with his stuff or Stallone Sylvesters ran up a staircase. Bruce Lee Pass is just an actor and becomes an ideal. He put the bar because near perfection, everyone can reach, and that makes him great. There are too many classic fight scenes, I can watch them over and over again without getting bored. Many of them are still well maintained, especially by 2004 standards, the battle scenes are mostly digitally enhanced, or involve “cables” or “arrays” to make up for the lack of actual stunt work; Furthermore, it should be remembered,

This movie was made in 1973 when wire rods dominate today’s martial arts movies. In any martial arts movie, “Cave Warfare” is probably my favorite battle sequence of all time. Many of the fights in this movie, especially those that Lee participated in, give people a surreal feeling. He brings a kind of elegance to his action scenes, unsurpassed for any actor alive today. Lee even brought many of his personal philosophies to this movie, which makes sense and may help to understand some of the more philosophical elements in the story. But most importantly, this is the main dish of the American Bruce Lee; many people, including myself, know martial arts movies through “Dragon Fight and Tiger Fight.”


Robert Klaus Bringing martial arts to Hollywood

Although director Robert Klaus’s elegant and violent martial arts feast is not necessarily Bruce Lee’s best film, it is his most famous and influential film because it is his first American-made film (and also His first martial arts film made in the United States) was once), mainly because it was the last film the master appeared before his young death. More precisely, “Dragon Fighting Tiger” had its world premiere just six days after the great martial arts icon’s death on July 20, 1973.

The movie’s cult status even surpassed its reputation for the iconic image of Bruce Lee. . His chest must be one of the most famous movie still images of all time. Even people who have never seen a movie and don’t know the title can recognize it immediately. Basically, this movie is the beginning of the popularity of martial arts movies in the western world, but even if its influence is aside, it is also a movie worth watching. As far as its style is concerned, it is somewhat similar to the stylish and extremely violent version of Martial Arts’ old James Bond film.


Conclusion

Enter the Dragon Movie Review
Enter the Dragon Movie Review

Bruce Lee was a believer in training every part of the body. I guess by every part he also meant facial muscles also because my man got some serious acting skills. Not to forget his electric energy in the action scenes.