Fist of Legend

1994 [CHINESE]

Action / Drama / Thriller

56
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 100% · 10 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 92% · 25K ratings
IMDb Rating 7.5/10 10 24928 24.9K

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Plot summary

Chen Zhen, a Chinese engineering student in Kyoto, who braves the insults and abuse of his Japanse fellow students for his local love Mitsuko Yamada, daughter of the director, returns in 1937 to his native Shangai, under Japanse protectorate -in fact military occupation- after reading about the death of his kung-fu master Hou Ting-An in a fight against the Japanese champion Ryuichi Akutagawa.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
November 20, 2018 at 08:27 AM

Director

Top cast

Jet Li as Chen Zhen
Fred Tatasciore as (voice)
David Graf as (voice)
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
865.49 MB
1280*714
English 2.0
R
24 fps
1 hr 43 min
Seeds 23
1.64 GB
1920*1072
English 2.0
R
24 fps
1 hr 43 min
Seeds 38

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by chowdr 8 / 10

Much better than Chinese Connection

Now Fist of Legend is an amazing movie! There's good fighting scenes, good stunts, good acting, and best of all, the actor Jet Li. Now in this movie there's more action and cooler things in this movie. In Bruce Lee's The Chinese Connection there was "ok" fighting, acting, etc. It was more silly then Fist of Legend. I rate this movie 8/10. This is a type of movie where you should see if your into martial arts.

Reviewed by dee.reid 8 / 10

Jet's +Fist+ is a +Legend+ in Eastern Cinema

I had commented earlier this year that Chinese martial arts sensation Jet Li's most recent action film, "Danny the Dog" or "Unleashed" as it has been advertised here in the states, was the best film that I'd ever seen him act in. The fights in that movie, with choreography that was courtesy of Yuen Wo Ping, were brutal and spectacular and captured a side of Li that had not yet been seen by the audiences of American martial arts cinema.

After seeing "Danny the Dog," I've become convinced that there's no question of Li's talents as an actor and performer, as he had starred in some 40 successful action movies in China before making his American debut as the main villain in "Lethal Weapon 4" (1998). One of Li's most famous roles from his time in China was that of Chen Zhen in 1994's "Fist of Legend."

"Fist of Legend," a remake of the classic Bruce Lee movie "The Chinese Connection" (1972), is set in China in 1937 when the Japanese were occupying Shanghai and racial tensions between Chinese citizens and the Japan military were high. (I'm not all that familiar with Chinese history so I'm not going to pretend I know a whole lot about how these two industrious cultures clashed with one another in the streets.)

Li stars as Chen Zhen, a bright martial arts student who is away in Japan studying engineering. In the opening action sequence at a Japanese school, we already get a sense of the animosity the two rivaling cultures share, as Chen takes on an entire squad of Japanese police officers in the classroom as they attempt to arrest him. But of course, even more seriously, he has no idea of the ills that await him once he returns to his homeland when he receives word that his beloved martial arts master was killed in a challenge.

I was amazed at the degree of restraint exercised in "Fist of Legend." Obviously very few martial arts movies have action that is realistic, but this film has the kind of sequences that I really like, which is the nearly complete absence of wirework or "Matrix-fu" or "wire-fu." Instead, like my favorite American Jet Li productions, the aforementioned "Danny the Dog" or "Kiss of the Dragon" (2001), much of the action is down-to-earth and ground-based.

Back in China, Chen finds that life in his homeland is not the same as when he left it. He finds himself at odds with his best friend, who is now the academy's leading martial arts master but the students prefer Chen Zhen to him. Even worse, Chen had fallen in love with a Japanese woman while out of country, and faces the skepticism of his fellow countrymen and women as a result - his allegiance to his fellow Chinamen is now being tested.

But many of these personal woes will have to be pushed to the side, as Chen Zhen must square off against the Japanese general, who Chen suspects had his master poisoned and who also looks to shut the school down and misplace its students. Of course, Chen's not going away without a fight, and it becomes a showdown between warring cultures, the outcome of which we already know from history.

As stated earlier, "Fist of Legend" showcases Li in one of the most famous roles of his career as an action film star. He's channeling the mighty Bruce Lee himself in his on-screen actions - particularly evident in the film's over-the-top finale where Li battles the towering Japanese general in a no-holds-barred fight to the death.

In the case of many imported movies from China, it's easy to get over the horrendous dubbing, frantic pacing, and any changes that may have made to the film in order to accommodate the interest of American viewers. "Fist of Legend" was directed by Gordon Chan and choreographed by Yuen Wo Ping, who shows us what Li can really do in the absence of today's highly stylized wirework.

Now we know why Jet Li, Jackie Chan, and Bruce Lee are icons on the kung-fu movie circuit: they've all made movies and are idolized by a devoted fanbase that encompasses millions of loyal followers. Li is currently the screen's most electric and sensational martial arts star; his work in this film and this year's "Danny the Dog" show us why that's true. I'm just waiting for his acceptance speech - that may be just a pipe dream, but hey, anything is possible in today's times.

8/10

Reviewed by ebiros2 8 / 10

Better Fist of Fury than the original

You get to see what happens if Fist of Fury (A.K.A Chinese Connection) was made with bigger budget and modern film technologies, in this remake of Bruce Lee's classic. Some of the differences are: Japanese are portrayed as more honorable bunch in this picture, dialogs are in Japanese where Japanese characters speaks which adds to the realism, and as a secondary effect, although the movie is not intended to be a comedy, some of the scenes are unintentionally funny because posing on both sides are so over the top, and because they intentionally mimic the original film's way of framing the shots, and acting which looks strange by today's standards.

Jet Li is at his element in this movie, and it's one of the best movie he's ever made. Not too much acting, and lot of kung-fu action brings the best of him. He moves so fast that sometimes you'd be suspicious if they employed CG Jet Li to do some of the moves.

This Fist of Fury is not just a mindless grudge match between the Chinese and the Japanese, but there're actually some story plot to it. Jet is supposed to be sent to Japan to study Japanese technology by his master, and has a Japanese girlfriend portrayed by Shinobu Nakayama which adds an interesting twist to the story.

This is one case where the remake is far superior to the original. What I would have loved to see would be a fight sequence between Bruce Lee and Jet Li. Too bad that Bruce is no longer with us.

One of the best kung-fu action movie I've seen especially because I've seen the original before I saw this. I recommend seeing the original Fist of Fury before seeing this to appreciate the full effect of this movie.

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