Opisy(1)

Enter the Dragon revolves around the three main characters. Lee, a man recruited by an agency to investigate a tournament hosted by Han, since they believe he has an Opium trade there. Roper and Williams are former army buddies since Vietnam and they enter the tournament due to different problems that they have. Roper is on the run from the Mafia due to his gambling debts, while Williams is harassed by racist police officers and defends himself from them and uses the car for his getaway. It is a deadly tournament that they will enter on an island. Lee's job is to get the other two out of there alive. (oficjalny tekst dystrybutora)

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Recenzje (3)

Malarkey 

wszystkie recenzje użytkownika

angielski For the time it was made in, it is certainly unique. Personally, however, I think that Jackie Chan’s movies, which I watched while growing up in the nineties, are still significantly better. ()

lamps 

wszystkie recenzje użytkownika

angielski The story sucks, but everything is so stylishly and artfully packed that I didn’t give a toss. The most important thing is that Bruce Lee is clearly in top form and the entire film is his exhibition. I’ve never liked this kind of films, and I don’t think I’ll ever watch this one again, but I didn’t get bored at all. 75% ()

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kaylin 

wszystkie recenzje użytkownika

angielski After the American Pie series, I turned to a completely different genre and finally watched a film I had been looking forward to for an incredibly long time but never got around to because I just wasn’t in the mood or didn’t have enough time, etc. But when I finally made the effort, I realized that Bruce Lee was simply a master. He wasn’t a master of film art, as Enter the Dragon isn’t that great of a film and doesn’t bring much new to the table, but what he, as a master of martial arts, demonstrates is breathtaking. Jackie Chan became famous mainly for his martial arts, which are essentially a dance. It looks great, it’s effective, but it’s still a dance. Bruce Lee doesn’t dance. Bruce Lee fights. It’s still martial arts, but there’s nothing kind in it. His movements are focused, precise, and effective. He literally flies in individual scenes, capturing attention even when he speaks with that amazing accent. No, I wouldn’t want to meet him as an opponent. If he accomplished anything, it was making a film where the fights look real. Maybe even too real. As is generally known, Enter the Dragon was his last film because he succumbed to an injury he sustained during the filming of this movie. ()

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