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18 Reviews
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Aweful sequel to Fist of Fury (Chinese Connection),
By
This review is from: New Fist of Fury [VHS] (VHS Tape)
This is a bad bad movie, so it's not worth watching. This is Jackie Chan at his worst, well...most of his old movies are really really bad, except for "Drunken Master", "The Young Master", and "The Fearless Hyena". This is suppose to be the sequel to Bruce Lee's "Fist of Fury", but "The New Fist of Fury" would make Bruce Lee roll over in his grave.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Give "New Fist" A Chance!!!,
By Itani Mullik "Redd" (Decatur,GA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: New Fist of Fury (DVD)
I feel that many of the critics that rated New Fist of Fury as being horrible, a travesty of justice, Bruceploitation, and the like have flat out missed the point(especially, if they only watched the English dubbed version which makes this movie suck to death). I'm not going to bore everyone with storyline, plot, and character specifics...but think about it...while it may've been the intent to launch Jackie Chan into international stardom, what if the film's intent was to depict the succession of the Ching Wu school as opposed to the succession of Bruce Lee's character(Chen Jun) from the original Fist of Fury? Having watched this film for the first time in a decade, I found myself not only enjoying the memories, but the call to unity against oppression in the film(ie, the persecution of the Ching Wu school and other Chinese kung-fu schools)...which is why you don't see Jackie Chan out shining everyone else, it's more of a collaborative effort of his character AND the lesser known/unknown faces we see jumping in. If you look at it that way, I think you'll get the point and it won't turn your stomach to see him go from being a petty thied(getting his backside handed to him) to learning kung-fu and calling the people to unity against the "occupying power." If it WAS Bruceploitation at all, the finger should've been pointed at Lo Wei,not Jackie Chan, because he was trying to cash in on Bruce Lee's death with a sequel. But I see this effort as standing out because of it's philisophical value, much like Bruce Lee's Game of Death would've been had he lived to finish it. If you add this one to your collection, make sure it features Mandarin with English subtitles.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Comeback movie (well first comeback) for Jackie,
By
This review is from: New Fist of Fury (DVD)
After co-starring in Hand of Death, Jackie Chan was forced into an early retirement because of the shift in consumer tastes in movies. The Hong Kong audience was dissatisfied with the action films after the death of Bruce Lee, leaving an ever-widening amount of unemployed stunt-men and bit-players. Since Jackie was one of these casualties he retired to Australia to be with his family. There he did construction in the day and worked in a Chinese restaurant at night. Then he received a telegram from Willie Chan wanting him to work in a new film called New Fist of Fury - a sequel to the beloved Bruce Lee film Fist of Fury. He told him that the movie would be for the newly formed Lo Wei Productions and that the film would be directed by Lo Wei himself. Jackie would receive 3000 Dollars (HK) per month for acting (he would later receive 9000 for being the stunt coordinator.) Little did anyone know that this unknown actor would become a big boon to the industry; though, this would not happen for a while and would not happen (directly) because of this film.
New Fist of Fury is typical of a Lo Wei film, it lacks cohesion and character with an overuse of plot elements. The film starts after the destruction of the Ching Wu School in Shanghai. The remnants of the school, led by the delightful Miss Lee (Nora Miao), are forced to flee to Taiwan to avoid persecution from the Japanese. She will stay with her grandfather Su Onli who is the head of a martial arts school. Unfortunately, the Japanese are ubiquitous in Taiwan too. When her group arrives, they are the target of a thief Helong (Jackie Chan) and his companion Old Chin (Hon Siu). Helong (Ah Lung in some translations) steals a wooden box containing the prize weapon of the late Brother Chen (Bruce Lee in the superior Fist of Fury) - nun-chucks. Later, after Helong is found in a ditch beaten half-to-death by the students of Chin Ching Kai, he is found by Miss Lee's group and is nursed back to health (with the help of his prostitute mother's money, whom he does not know.) For all of this help and their forgiveness of him stealing their property, he refuses to learn Kung Fu so he can continuously be beaten up. Miss Lee has bigger problems than trying to get Helong to learn Kung Fu - the Japanese occupancy. Akumora (played by the muscular Chan Sing) is the Japanese provincial leader who wants to combine the Chinese martial art schools under his Di Wah school. There is a great scene with him catching a knife in his teeth and then throwing it from his mouth killing an attacker. It is so hard to take this scene seriously, but it reminded me what Ed Wood might have done if he directed a Kung Fu film. Akumora is an interesting character that starts off semi-decent and then ends up completely anti-Chinese ("I kill Chinese, just like I kill dogs.") This is another annoyance with the film; it is completely ethnocentric with one-dimensional Japanese characters. This annoyance is especially evident when Akumora challenges a staged Kwong Gung, stating that the Japanese heroes are much better than Chinese's heroes. This infuriates Master Su during his 80th birthday celebration and leads to his death (when he jumps over a large crowd of people and apparently has a heart attack.) With the death of Master Su, Miss Lee decides to revive the Ching Wu School. This leads to an obvious clash with the Di Wah School. One of the biggest problems with this film (yes even worse than the ever-yelling Jen Da So, the kiai spewing daughter of Akumora) is that Jackie is misused and miscast in this film. He constantly gets beat up by both Japanese and Chinese and yet refuses to learn Kung Fu. He does not get a decent fight scene until at least three-fourths of the film is over and yet he obtained his skills in just a few days (it is amazing what anti-Japanese sentiment can make you accomplish). When he does fight, his skills are quite evident. Jackie is very acrobatic and his fight scenes flow well though he is relegated to using actors who are weak in martial arts (with a few exceptions like Han Ying Chieh) and they slow down many of the action scenes. I am a fan of Jackie Chan (and many of the HK films of this era), but this is not a film that rises above mediocrity. While it is not worse than many films during the 70's it has a few negative attributes that will doggedly follow it -- New Fist of Fury followed one of the most beloved of Bruce Lee films with a weak sequel and misused a future Hong Kong Superstar. Useless Tidbit: look for a small cameo role for Lo Wei where he portrays an inspector.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Why it wasnt very good,
A Kid's Review
This review is from: New Fist of Fury (DVD)
As the reviewers below me have said, jackie is supposed to play bruce lee's brother in this movie. After Bruce Lee died director Lo Wei tried to turn Jackie into bruces replancement, hence why they made a sequel to the classic Fist of Fury (the chinese connection) I have read Jackies autobiography I AM JACKIE CHAN: MY LIFE IN ACTION and he stresses how much he hated being called "the next bruce lee". He didnt want to play a serious and fearless character like bruce lee's was. On the bright side this film allowed for him to become what he is today. In my opinion if you want to see a Bruce Lee style kung fu movie (aka a fearless hero who is an undefeated fighter), see the orignal Fist of Fury (called The Chinese Connection in america) and if you want to see a Jackie Chan kung fu/comedy movie (his characters are usually trouble makers that dont want to fight) i would recommend both the drunken master movies and snake in eagles shadow.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Not a "Jackie" movie but a Kung Fu classic!,
By A Customer
This review is from: New Fist of Fury (DVD)
Many people have criticized this movie a bit too harshly in my opinion. It was Jackie Chan's first movie and he had no control over anything. If you compare this movie to Police Story or Drunken Master 2 you will be disappointed. It's not the Jackie you know and love. Here he plays a sullen young man with no interest in learning kung fu until he becomes fed up with the Japanese suppressing the Chinese folk. Not as much fighting as one would expect but good story and good characters make this an entertaining movie. But don't watch FOF2 while comparing it to his other films or even the original with Bruce Lee. Let it stand just as it was meant to be: a kung fu film that happens to star Jackie Chan.
1.0 out of 5 stars
This is not the Jackie Chan you know and love,
By Michael A. Duvernois (Minneapolis, MN United States) - See all my reviews (TOP 500 REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: New Fist of Fury (DVD)
This is his first come-back film, a sequel to Bruce Lee's Fist of Fury. Well, that might have been the marketing idea anyway. Only worth watching if you need to see every Jackie Chan movie. There's just not much here of interest.
1.0 out of 5 stars
dont buy this,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: New Fist of Fury (DVD)
dont anytone buy this this a cheap rip off knock of of a jackie chan movie the case was cheap the printed insert was clearly done on a realy bad if not old printer and was total smeard and smudged with black ink all over place and the dvd was like watching a realy realy bad ep copy of a video tape..your better of buying a used copy of it on vhs i know i own the good one ...save your self the troulbe dont buy form this company.
1.0 out of 5 stars
bad,
A Kid's Review
This review is from: New Fist of Fury (DVD)
jackie chan misses (he rarly does bad im sad to say he did)
didnt like it at all. not jackie chan style at all. bad fight scenes
1.0 out of 5 stars
Really bad movie.,
By A Customer
This review is from: New Fist of Fury [VHS] (VHS Tape)
This movie was probably Jackie Chan`s worst movie. If I could I would have given this movie zero stars. The only good parts of this movie was when Jackie Chan was training to be a Kung Fu Master, and also the ending fight scene. I probably would have liked it better if the movie was ALOT shorter. The movie was so long I could of fallin asleep. The ending fight scene could of been shortor too. And at the end Jackie Chan was shot and killed, and right when he got shot they had a big THE END. Sorry for spoiling the crummy movie ending. I am a huge Jackie Chan fan, but this movie I did not like. Check out "Supercop" and "Jackie Chan`s First Strike" they are really good.
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Horrible,
By J. Pinkerton Snoopington (Toronto, Ontario, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: New Fist of Fury (DVD)
"New Fist of Fury" was one of Jackie Chan's first movies, made before he discovered the comedy/kung fu combination that put him on the map. Being a sequel to Bruce Lee's "Fist of Fury" (aka "The Chinese COnnection), it's Jackie's only full-blown 'Bruceploitation' movie. The story involves a young wise guy who decides to help Bruce Lee's Ching Wu school in the face of the evil Japanese army. This is without a doubt the worst Jackie Chan movie I've ever seen. The dull, slow-paced plot stretches for two hours, with nary a fight scene in the first half. In addition, it contains just about the worst rip-off ending in the history of cinema.The DVD from Beverly Wilshire Filmworks is nothing short of abomindable. The transfer used appears to be from an eighth or ninth generation VHS tape, which is murky and washed out and nearly impossible to watch in the darker scenes. There are black bars at the top and bottom of the screen to give the illusion of widescreen, but it's obvious the company just slapped bars on a pan and scan print. Worst of all, there is no menu and no chapter links. Easily the worst DVD I have ever seen. |
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New Fist of Fury by Wei Lo (DVD - 2001)
$10.98
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