THE
BIG BOSS
Rating: |
|
Aka:
FISTS OF FURY
- Stars:
Bruce Lee, Maria Yi, James Tien, Lam Ching Ying,
Han Ying Chieh
- Director:
Lo Wei
- Fight
Choreography: Han Ying Chieh
- 1971,
Hong Kong, Golden Harvest
- Cheng
Chao An (Bruce Lee) arrives at Thailand looking for work. He stays with some
relatives and starts working with them and other Chinese migrants in a local
ice factory. But when two workers find drugs inside the ice, strange things
start to happen and the two workers disappear from the factory. When his cousin,
Hsu Chien, disappears after paying a visit to the boss, Chao An has no other
choice than to investigate the manner.
-
- This
was Bruce's first kung fu movie and it made him an overnight star. The movie
broke box office records only after three weeks of its release taking $3,2
million in 97 cinemas in Hong Kong.
- During
the first week of shooting, the hot-tempered director, Wu Chai Wsaing, was
arguing with the actors all the time so Raymond Chow (the producer) hired
Lo Wei to direct the movie instead. But Lo Wei loved to gamble, and as the
movie was going to be post-dubbed he had loudspeakers on the set during filming
so he could follow the racetrack.
- And
although Bruce now had more control over the script and fight scenes it was
not all good. Bruce twisted an ankle during a fall and while in the hospital
he caught a flu. Bruce had earlier back pains and now the pains exceeded and
he had to take injections after each shot. As he couldn't eat the local meat
he ended up loosing ten pounds and was sick during the rest of the filming.
He also argued a lot with the fight choreographer (the one who played "the
big boss" in the movie), Han Ying Chieh.
- Bruce
also injured his finger with a glass and had to wear a bandage for the major
part of the film. If you look clearly you can see that the size of the bandage
changes as the movie proceeds. He
also pulled a muscle in one leg near the end. He had to get cut in the leg
in the movie so you couldn't notice his injure.
- As
they were shooting Golden Harvest was going bankruptcy and Raymond Chow made
a deal with Cathay Pictures and got a little finance so he could end the movie.
-
- This
movie was made with a tiny budget and still is a great entertaining and bloody
movie. Bruce shines with charisma and although this is his worst movie concerning
his martial arts abilities he's still great, and this is a great film dealing
with migrants that are badly treated by the locals!
- The
other actors fight using the Wang Yu "arm swinging" type of style
which isn't beautiful but acceptable. But like in all of his other movies,
the only thing you really care about is Bruce Lee himself.
- End-line:
Watching the badly dubbed 5 minutes shorter UK version and the new uncut Cantonese
language widescreen DVD version is just a totally different experience. It's
a great movie and it really deserved the awesome remastering by the great
Hong Kong Legends. They just
rule the Hong Kong DVD market, there's no way you could compare them with
others, they are simply put the best!
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