IMDb रेटिंग
5.5/10
2 हज़ार
आपकी रेटिंग
अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंIn Japanese-occupied Taiwan, a young thief, no longer able to withstand the Japanese oppression, begins practicing kung fu to fight back against the oppressors.In Japanese-occupied Taiwan, a young thief, no longer able to withstand the Japanese oppression, begins practicing kung fu to fight back against the oppressors.In Japanese-occupied Taiwan, a young thief, no longer able to withstand the Japanese oppression, begins practicing kung fu to fight back against the oppressors.
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
Ok, call me crazy but I think good Kung-Fu films should have a lot of fighting.....don't you? In the first hour of this film, there's about 30 seconds of fighting. Why? What's the point of this film? This film is said to be a sequel to the original. It is not. This movie is a waste of time if you're looking to watch some good Kung-Fu action films. This movie is a drag. There's no character development, no good action sequences, and no story line.
Leave this one on the shelf and rent the original Fists of Fury instead.
Leave this one on the shelf and rent the original Fists of Fury instead.
New Fist of Fury is a martial arts film directed by Late Lo Wei. The film stars Jackie Chan, Nora Miao and Chan Sing.
Lung, a thief, is unwillingly hired by Lier, fiance of Chen Cen, to help her save her martial arts school from the Japanese. However, Lung must first master the martial arts to prove his worth.
The film can be termed as a film with decent plot and an abrupt ending. The film which is the second part of Late Bruce Lee's Fist of Fury the film serves a huge disappointment specially for those for were looking for some martial arts action film.
The acting in the film is decent although Jackie Chan who tries to look funnier and acted as a punching bag in the first half of the film disappoints. Nora Miao carries the same face throughout the film. Chan Sing as the main villain was impressive.
Screenplay of the film is topsy turvy as the film gives lots of false hope of some serious or great fight which you didn't see until the climax which surely has some violent action scenes but with a atypical ending.
Overall a film which raise your expectations sky high and ends in an disappointment.
Lung, a thief, is unwillingly hired by Lier, fiance of Chen Cen, to help her save her martial arts school from the Japanese. However, Lung must first master the martial arts to prove his worth.
The film can be termed as a film with decent plot and an abrupt ending. The film which is the second part of Late Bruce Lee's Fist of Fury the film serves a huge disappointment specially for those for were looking for some martial arts action film.
The acting in the film is decent although Jackie Chan who tries to look funnier and acted as a punching bag in the first half of the film disappoints. Nora Miao carries the same face throughout the film. Chan Sing as the main villain was impressive.
Screenplay of the film is topsy turvy as the film gives lots of false hope of some serious or great fight which you didn't see until the climax which surely has some violent action scenes but with a atypical ending.
Overall a film which raise your expectations sky high and ends in an disappointment.
The first of several movies directed by Lo Wei to feature up 'n' coming martial arts star Jackie Chan, New Fist of Fury was devised as a sequel to Bruce Lee's popular film Fist of Fury (which was also directed by Wei).
Chan plays Lung, a layabout thief in Japanese-occupied Taiwan who hates the Japs and enjoys a brawl, but has no interest in learning kung fu, meaning that he regularly gets his ass handed to him by his opponents.
After being discovered left for dead in a ditch after one particularly severe beating, Lung is nursed back to health by the students of a local kung fu school run by kindly Master Su and his pretty grand-daughter, Miss Lee (Nora Miao). Lung is invited to train at the school but refuses, unwilling to give up his freedom as a thief.
However, when Akumora (Chan Sing), the local Japanese official, takes his bully boy tactics too far, eventually causing the death of Master Su, Lung has a change of heart, becomes a highly skilled martial artist overnight (or so it seems) and kicks some major Japanese butt (before being shot to death in the film's closing frames!!!).
With the star spending most of this film as a punching bag for his enemies, and very little evidence of the innovative slapstick comedy/fight action that one generally associates with his later movies, New Fist of Fury is bound to disappoint many Chan fans. Unless you are a rabid fan of JC and wish to see all of his early work, you would probably be better off giving this one a miss (or watch either the Bruce Lee original, or the excellent Jet Li version of the story, Fist of Legend).
Chan plays Lung, a layabout thief in Japanese-occupied Taiwan who hates the Japs and enjoys a brawl, but has no interest in learning kung fu, meaning that he regularly gets his ass handed to him by his opponents.
After being discovered left for dead in a ditch after one particularly severe beating, Lung is nursed back to health by the students of a local kung fu school run by kindly Master Su and his pretty grand-daughter, Miss Lee (Nora Miao). Lung is invited to train at the school but refuses, unwilling to give up his freedom as a thief.
However, when Akumora (Chan Sing), the local Japanese official, takes his bully boy tactics too far, eventually causing the death of Master Su, Lung has a change of heart, becomes a highly skilled martial artist overnight (or so it seems) and kicks some major Japanese butt (before being shot to death in the film's closing frames!!!).
With the star spending most of this film as a punching bag for his enemies, and very little evidence of the innovative slapstick comedy/fight action that one generally associates with his later movies, New Fist of Fury is bound to disappoint many Chan fans. Unless you are a rabid fan of JC and wish to see all of his early work, you would probably be better off giving this one a miss (or watch either the Bruce Lee original, or the excellent Jet Li version of the story, Fist of Legend).
Fairly drawn-out and sometimes frustrating Kung Fu film about the Japanese occupation of Taiwan. This film is not too bad, you just have to make it to the final reel - something that I expect only enthusiasts of this genre will do. So why is it frustrating? Well, Jackie (or Jacky as credited here), does virtually nothing until fellow Chinese literally drag him into a Kung Fu school in the last quarter of the (2 hour) film.
Sure, he has one action scene early in the film, but he succeeds only in getting pounded nicely by two Japanese fighters. A nice motive for him to learn Kung Fu, I thought. But I was wrong. He does nothing about it...
Anyway, this is one of the more coherent Wei Lo films, and the tension builds fairly steadily. The main villain played by Sing Chen is a believable and decidedly confronting and dangerous man - he's great.
The references to Bruce Lee are tastelessly rammed down your throat, but the final fight is great and suitably brutal. It's a good revenge story, with an unusual ending.
Sure, he has one action scene early in the film, but he succeeds only in getting pounded nicely by two Japanese fighters. A nice motive for him to learn Kung Fu, I thought. But I was wrong. He does nothing about it...
Anyway, this is one of the more coherent Wei Lo films, and the tension builds fairly steadily. The main villain played by Sing Chen is a believable and decidedly confronting and dangerous man - he's great.
The references to Bruce Lee are tastelessly rammed down your throat, but the final fight is great and suitably brutal. It's a good revenge story, with an unusual ending.
First I will say that, yes I did enjoy Bruce Lee's "Fist of Fury", but I also enjoyed this pseudo-sequel as well. There wasn't all that much reference back to the first movie if you look at it, sure Chen Zhen was mentioned, as was Jing Wu, but beyond that, then there wasn't all that much reference. And I found that "New Fist of Fury" was actually an adequate movie in itself. Watch it for what it is, a Kung Fu movie meant for entertaining.
The story is fairly simple, a young man living as a thief comes to be forced into learning Kung Fu at the Jing Wu academy during the time when Taiwan was occupied by Japanese troops. And this young man embodies the Taiwanese spirit and fights for an independent Taiwan, standing up to the Japenese occupational force.
Bear in mind that this is an early Jackie Chan movie, and it was before all the slapstick comedy became his trademark, so this is a more serious Kung Fu movie compared to most other of his movies. Being a movie from 1976, you of course have the odd sound effects during the Kung Fu scenes and fairly questionable acting compared to today's standards.
There was a good amount of nice fighting throughout the movie, however I think the last showdown, the climax of the movie, was actually a little bit too much drawn out, taking a bit too long to finish. And then the scene when the movie ends was rather anti-climatic.
The movie in itself is a well worthy addition to any Jackie Chan fan's DVD collection, especially because it is outside of the usual slapstick comedy genre of Kung Fu.
The story is fairly simple, a young man living as a thief comes to be forced into learning Kung Fu at the Jing Wu academy during the time when Taiwan was occupied by Japanese troops. And this young man embodies the Taiwanese spirit and fights for an independent Taiwan, standing up to the Japenese occupational force.
Bear in mind that this is an early Jackie Chan movie, and it was before all the slapstick comedy became his trademark, so this is a more serious Kung Fu movie compared to most other of his movies. Being a movie from 1976, you of course have the odd sound effects during the Kung Fu scenes and fairly questionable acting compared to today's standards.
There was a good amount of nice fighting throughout the movie, however I think the last showdown, the climax of the movie, was actually a little bit too much drawn out, taking a bit too long to finish. And then the scene when the movie ends was rather anti-climatic.
The movie in itself is a well worthy addition to any Jackie Chan fan's DVD collection, especially because it is outside of the usual slapstick comedy genre of Kung Fu.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाThe first using Chan's stage name Sing Lung (literally meaning "becoming a dragon", by which Chan is still known today in Asia).
- इसके अलावा अन्य वर्जनThe original UK cinema release suffered extensive cuts, including to the use of nunchaku and fighting staff, plus numerous edits to groin kicks, punches and an ear clap. Although the VHS releases required lesser cuts (BBFC only required the removal of footage featuring the use of nunchaku), distributors extensively edited both of them, removing almost three minutes of footage. All cuts were waived for the 2002 Eastern Heroes DVD release, though it was missing around six minutes of dialogue footage.
- कनेक्शनFeatured in The Incredibly Strange Film Show: Jackie Chan (1989)
- साउंडट्रैकKiss of Death
Performed by Mandingo
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
विवरण
इस पेज में योगदान दें
किसी बदलाव का सुझाव दें या अनुपलब्ध कॉन्टेंट जोड़ें