Lee, un adepte des arts martiaux, participe à un tournoi de karaté organisé sur l'île forteresse de Han, un baron du crime, afin de l'espionner.Lee, un adepte des arts martiaux, participe à un tournoi de karaté organisé sur l'île forteresse de Han, un baron du crime, afin de l'espionner.Lee, un adepte des arts martiaux, participe à un tournoi de karaté organisé sur l'île forteresse de Han, un baron du crime, afin de l'espionner.
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire au total
- Oharra
- (as Bob Wall)
- Su Lin (Guest star)
- (as Angela Mao Ying)
- Bolo
- (as Yang Sze)
- Hood
- (as Pat Johnson)
Avis à la une
The plot involves Lee, a skilled martial arts instructor, being recruited by British intelligence to enter a martial arts contest held by crime lord Han on his own private island. While there, Lee is supposed to look for evidence of Han's criminal activity. Han talks a big game about honor during the matches, but if things don't go his way he does not fight fair. And that includes Han having various prosthetics for his missing left hand that include knives and spikes.
There's no doubt Lee is a charismatic presence that commands one's attention. The choreography is so tightly performed (and also blocked out by Bruce Lee himself) that it's hard not to be dazzled. And I say that as somebody who really knows nothing about the martial arts.
I'd say that one aspect I found humorous were the lines given to African American martial artist Jim Kelly. They were typical of the kinds of lines and roles given to African American actors during the 70s at the height of the popularity of blaxploitation films. If you've seen Hollywood Shuffle - and if you haven't you should - it is hard not to notice such stereotyping. Still I'd recommend this film if you are curious about the film work of Bruce Lee.
Revisited it recently with my family.
This time Lee plays a martial arts instructor who is approached by the British Intelligence and is persuaded to attend a martial arts tournament on a private island owned by Han, a crime lord.
Lee's assignment is to gather evidence that will prove Han's involvement in drug trafficking and prostitution.
The movie has amazing star cast, few top notch martial arts fight scenes n wonderful music score.
This one is not as intense as Fist of Fury but very entertaining.
The villain Han is not intimidating or a convincing fighter yet he is able to take down the character of Jim Kelly.
We have Sammo Hung in an uncredited role in the opening fight scene against Lee at the start of the film.
We also have Jackie Chan in a blink n miss role as the henchman who grabs Lee from behind n later Lee holds Chan by his hair.
We have Bolo Yeung before he became the usual villain in JCVD's movies.
Enter the Dragon along with Game of Death were the foundation for fighting games. Both these movies inspired various martial arts n action movies.
In Fist of Fury, Lee's character bites the leg of a Russian fighter during a duel.
In this movie John Saxon's character bites the leg of Bolo Yeung during a duel.
Very seventies, full of flairs, sideburns, zooms and a groovy Lalo Schifrin score; it was shot on location in Hong Kong without bothering to record any sound, the dialogue and sound effects obviously post-synced.
Although billed third, the delectable Ahna Capri actually gets sadly little screen time.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesBruce Lee actually struck Jackie Chan in the face with one of his fighting sticks. Chan admitted that it was his own fault: he wasn't where the fight choreography required him to be, and would have been fine if he'd been on his mark. In any case, Lee was so horrified that he immediately helped Jackie up and hugged him while apologizing profusely, and later insisted that Chan could work on all of his movies after that. Unfortunately, Lee died before he could keep his promise, but Chan still claimed the moment was one of the greatest things that has happened to him in his entire career (he even admitted that he hammed up how much pain he was in because he didn't want Lee to stop hugging him).
- GaffesMr. Han moves his left hand before it is revealed to be fake.
- Citations
Lee: [Lao approaches Lee; both bow] Kick me.
[Lao looks confused]
Lee: Kick me.
[Lao attempts kick]
Lee: What was that? An exhibition? We need emotional content. Try again.
[Lao tries again, but with more aggression]
Lee: I said "emotional content". Not anger! Now try again... with me.
[Lao tries again and succeeds]
Lee: That's it! How did it feel to you?
Lao: Let me think...
[Lee smacks his head]
Lee: Don't think. FEEL! It is like a finger pointing away to the moon.
[Lee looks at Lao, who is looking at the finger; Lee smacks him again]
Lee: Don't concentrate on the finger, or you will miss all that heavenly glory. Do you understand?
[Lao bows; Lee smacks him again]
Lee: Never take your eyes off your opponent... even when you bow.
[Lao bows again, this time keeping his eyes on Lee]
Lee: That's it.
[Lao walks away; opening credits begin]
- Versions alternativesTo celebrate the movie's the 25th Anniversary, 10 minutes originally not shown in the US version (but shown in the Chinese version) were restored, although it said only 3 minutes on the box. According to Linda Lee Cadwell, Bruce Lee's widow, this is the uncut version. Also included is "Bruce Lee: In his own words," the original theatrical trailer, a special "Behind the Scenes: The Filming of 'Enter the Dragon'" documentary, and never before seen photos.
- ConnexionsEdited into Le Jeu de la mort (1978)
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Enter the Dragon?Alimenté par Alexa
- What happened to Parsons after he lost the match with Williams? Did he leave the island?
- How exactly did Lee kill Oharra?
- What are the differences between the theatrical cut and the extended cut (25th Anniversary)?
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Operación dragón
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 850 000 $US (estimé)
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 25 259 $US
- Montant brut mondial
- 115 762 $US