FIST OF LEGEND (1994)

FIST OF LEGEND, recently released on Blu-Ray, is generally considered to be one of Jet Li’s best action films.  It’s a remake of Bruce Lee’s FIST OF FURY, which is a statement of intent right there: A) Jet Li and his co-workers are feeling up to walking (and kicking) in Bruce Lee’s formidable footsteps, and B) This particular fist is so furious it’s legendary.

 

The director of FIST OF LEGEND (FOL) is  Gordon Chan, which is great, because if you’re going to Americanize your name, of course you’re gonna go with “Gordon”, and the martial arts choreography was done by Yuen Woo-Ping, whose other famous work includes: CROUCHING TIGER HIDDEN DRAGON, THE MATRIX, KILL BILL 1&2, and others.  Jet Li, of course, is one of the most successful international action stars in the world, and on FOL these guys were all operating at the height of their kung-fu-documenting powers.

 

 

The result? Good fights.  Great fights.  I mean, really great.  That’s primarily what Jet Li and this movie are known for, and rightfully.  FOL is primarily a great-fight delivery system, even though the story is far more interested in documented history and period detail than the average kung-fu flick.  It’s set in the early decades of the previous century, and focuses on the occupation of Shanghai or something like that.  Let’s see what IMDB.com has to say about it…

 

In 1937, a Chinese martial artist returns to Shanghai to find his teacher dead and his school harassed by the Japanese.

 

Well…um…actually, when you put it like that, it sounds a little bit like THE KARATE KID PART 2, or NO RETREAT NO SURRENDER or some other young-dude-against-impossible-odds action flick from the 1980s.  And in fact, it plays that way a little bit too.  This is strange, since this is the 1990s by now and Jet Li is, as so often happens, a little old for the role he’s playing.

 

 

Jet Li plays the mild-mannered university student who-don’t-want-any-trouble, but the mean men in Japanese army uniforms, personified by a tall nasty customer who would have been played by William Zabka if this movie wasn’t so Asian, just won’t leave him alone.  After some feigned reluctance, Jet Li steps up and wipes the floor (in some cases literally) with his oppressors.

 

This movie isn’t super-violent, nor does it need to be.  It’s relatively mild, not at all gory, but the fights are world-class.  Look, I’m not that complicated.  Sometimes I just want to watch Jet Li kick a whole mess of guys across a room.  FOL gives you plenty of such scenes, in triplicate.  Well worth watching if you’re even remotely a fan of the genre.

 

One thing I love most about ‘nineties movies, though:  Even the Asian guys have hi-top fades.

 

 

VERDICT: SEE IT!

 

 

JA.

 

 

 

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One Comment

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    October 26, 2011

    Such a great movie. Unfortunately the film’s direct sequel LEGEND OF THE FIST: THE RETURN OF CHEN ZHEN isn’t nearly as good. I’ve never thought of Jet Li as being particularly charismatic, but he’s really an appealing lead here. Donnie Yen has comparable physicality, but simply isn’t as fun to watch onscreen.

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