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Il furore della Cina colpisce ancora

Titolo originale: Tang shan da xiong
  • 1971
  • VM14
  • 1h 40min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,9/10
30.996
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Bruce Lee in Il furore della Cina colpisce ancora (1971)
Clip: Bruce Lee fights thugs
Riproduci clip2: 35
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99+ foto
Arti marzialiAzioneCrimineDrammaKung FuThrillerUno contro tutti

Un giovane che conduce una vita non violenta lavora con i suoi cugini in una fabbrica di ghiaccio dove misteriosamente iniziano a scomparire.Un giovane che conduce una vita non violenta lavora con i suoi cugini in una fabbrica di ghiaccio dove misteriosamente iniziano a scomparire.Un giovane che conduce una vita non violenta lavora con i suoi cugini in una fabbrica di ghiaccio dove misteriosamente iniziano a scomparire.

  • Regia
    • Wei Lo
    • Chia-Hsiang Wu
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Wei Lo
  • Star
    • Bruce Lee
    • Maria Yi
    • James Tien
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,9/10
    30.996
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Wei Lo
      • Chia-Hsiang Wu
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Wei Lo
    • Star
      • Bruce Lee
      • Maria Yi
      • James Tien
    • 119Recensioni degli utenti
    • 173Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Video1

    The Big Boss
    Clip 2:35
    The Big Boss

    Foto147

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    Interpreti principali17

    Modifica
    Bruce Lee
    Bruce Lee
    • Cheng Chao-an
    Maria Yi
    Maria Yi
    • Chow Mei
    James Tien
    James Tien
    • Hsiu Chien
    • (as Paul Tien)
    Nora Miao
    Nora Miao
    • Drinkstand owner
    • (as Miao Ke Hsiu)
    Kun Li
    Kun Li
    • Ah Kun
    • (as Li Quin)
    Ying-Chieh Han
    Ying-Chieh Han
    • Hsiao Mi (Boss Mi)
    • (as Han Ying Chieh)
    Tony Liu
    Tony Liu
    • Hsiao Chiun (Boss Mi's son)
    Shan Chin
    Shan Chin
    • Ah Shan
    • (as Chin Shan)
    Hua-Sze Li
    • Ah Chai
    • (as Li Hua Sze)
    Marilyn Bautista
    Marilyn Bautista
    • Miss Wuman
    • (as Malalene)
    Chih Chen
    Chih Chen
    • Ice Factory Manager
    Billy Chan
    Billy Chan
    • Ah Pei
    • (as Hui-yi Chen)
    Ching-Ying Lam
    Ching-Ying Lam
    • Ah Yen (Cheng's cousin)
    Chia-Chen Tu
    • Third Uncle
    • (as Ka-ching To)
    Lung Chan
    Lung Chan
    • Gatekeeper…
    Stephen Chang
    Stephen Chang
    • Disciple
    Cheng Ying Tu
    • Regia
      • Wei Lo
      • Chia-Hsiang Wu
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Wei Lo
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti119

    6,930.9K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    DHMJr

    Bruce Lee....There Will Never Be Another

    Fists Of Fury was the second best of the Lee films. (Chinese Connection was tops). The speed, action and excitement in the film was unprecedented. The only thing that came close were the episodes of the Green Hornet and they were Lee also. He was the epitome of being physically fit and had screen presence like no action star before him. His fitness level and physical capabilities are qualities that some action stars have today, but at the time there was no one like him. Fists of Fury had a good story and the acting was good. In the last almost thirty years, you will be able to find films that are equivalent to the technical and production measures of this film, but none as good due to the fact that this was the first.

    DHM
    7SnoopyStyle

    kung fu movie classic

    Cheng Chao-an (Bruce Lee) leaves his Chinese village to join relatives in Thailand. He is greeted by cousin Hsiu Chien who readily fights for others while Cheng promised his mother never to fight again. He joins his relatives at an ice factory owned by drug-lord big boss Hsiao Mi. When two of his cousins find drugs hidden in the ice, they are offered money but they politely refuse. They are killed and their bodies chopped up. Hsu Chien and Ah Pei go to ask questions but then they disappear. The men riot and Cheng is made foreman to appease them. Chiao Mei berates them for forgetting her brother. The boss throws him a party to get him drunk. Chiao Mei runs into him sneaking out of the brothel and the men are not happy that he forgot about Hsu Chien once again. Eventually, the hooker Sun reveals the truth and is killed. The boss's henchmen attack Chiao Mei and the family while Cheng is breaking into the factory. He finds drugs and the hidden bodies. He's confronted by the boss's son and numerous henchmen.

    It's a functional kung fu story. The idea that he promised not to fight is great one. It allows him to be on another level when he actually does fight. It also allows him to be human. He gets tricked by the boss. He falls for a hooker. He's restrained by his promise. That makes the fights so much better. It's like he had saved all of his energy for his big fights. The movie is also more brutal and bloodier than I expected. The main thing is that this is a Bruce Lee movie and he shows that he's obviously a superstar. He's burning with charisma and it comes across on the screen.
    7lawrence-14

    Referred to here as THE BIG BOSS...

    After years of trying to get into Hollywood, Bruce Lee returned to Hong Kong and began his efforts with this low-budget martial-arts thriller. The result - an Asian box-office smash which made Lee an overnight sensation in the East. Whilst its not a great film or Lee's best work, it is an definite film classic that really opened the door for the martial-arts genre, as well as kicking off Lee's career. The story sees Lee coming to work in Banghok with his cousins in an ice factory, where he soon discovers sinister operations taking place under the thumb of the title villain. Like Lee's other films, the action builds up through the film to impressively staged fight scenes, all topped by a dramatic, all-out climatic bout between Lee and the Big Boss. Breakthrough stuff but the best (and the West) was yet to come.
    8Fella_shibby

    Left a good impression on my young mind in the late 80s, especially Lee's karate n the attractive Marilyn Bautista. Cn someone tell me wher i cn buy d original uncut version.

    I first saw this in the late 80s on a vhs i used to own.

    Then again in the early 2k on a dvd which I own.

    Revisited it recently.

    Here Lee plays a young man named Cheng who travels from China to Thailand to stay with his cousins. Before departing, he swore an oath to his mother to not get into any fights. Lee gets a job at an ice factory and inspite of trying to stay away from troubles, Cheng confronts the factory boss after the disappearance of his friends.

    This one doesnt have the comic stuff which is ther in Way of the Dragon and for this reason i like this better than Way of the Dragon but this one has a lil flaw cos it has comedic wi fu movements where people just fly as if they have wings.

    This one is very gory n has lil nudity.

    Marilyn Bautista with her assets is very attractive in this movie.

    The knife kickback scene will make Cristiano Ronaldo go rofl.

    The villain throws a knife at Lee but Lee kicks it back n it lands in the stomach of the opponent.

    Brother Hsu Chien (James Tien) is shown to be very good with karate n especially his wi fu where he keeps jumping, he cud have easily outrun n gone straight to his house or the police after confronting the boss but he n Ah Pei gets into fight rather than trying to get away.

    Also what was the need to tell the boss straight on his face and that too in his house about complaining to the police.

    Inspite of all the silliness, the movie is a must for fans of Lee.

    Some solid n very visible mistakes:

    After the prostitute (Marilyn Bautista) tells Cheng (Lee) about the drug smuggling, he leaves. She is sitting with her back to the door when the big boss' son sneaks in. You hear the knife flying through the air and see her face as it hits her in the chest. If she had her back to the door, how did the knife landed in her chest?

    During the fight inside the ice factory when Cheng (Lee) gets caught, he ducks down a little too obviously before his opponent throws an object at him.

    Cheng (Lee) bends down before the opponent throws something.

    I wud still love to see this movie again but the original uncut version.

    The version with the notorious "handsaw in the split head" shot.

    Some say the uncut version has another very important scene where Cheng runs down the road from the creek, rather than showing him arriving at the Big Boss' mansion which is shown in all the available versions, in the uncut, Cheng returns to the Thai brothel for a third time. Here, he picks up a different prostitute (not Marilyn Bautista). Cheng and the prostitute go to her room; Cheng pushes her onto the bed, and the two begin to strip. Later Cheng lays his remaining money on her stomach, even though he already paid to be with her. He then picks up a bag of crisps from the bedside table; he tries one, then leaves. This scene is symbolic and quite important, as in the previous scene Cheng discards his belongings in the river, and here he gives away his money and enjoys his final pleasures and one last meal before either being killed or arrested, a message which is now partially lost.

    In the cut version, Cheng (Lee) directly arrives at the boss' house after discarding his belongings in the river and full of rage but the movie shows Cheng walking in happily and enjoying a packet of chips.

    That means he after being enraged, must have visited the brothel to unwind. Otherwise why wud he be eating chips, where did the chips come from n how did his mood changed.

    In the cut version, during the fight after discovering the dead bodies in the ice, Cheng picks up a handsaw n the next scene is abruptly changed. He is not shown hitting anyone in the cut version.

    That means an uncut version does exist somewhere.

    A few seconds of this scene (including a shot of an apparently naked Bruce standing behind the bed) can be seen in the original 3mins 38 secs trailer on YouTube.
    eibon09

    Bruce Lee's Goriest Movie

    Tang Shan Da Xiong/The Big Boss(1971) is of all the Bruce Lee movies the most censored and cut because of some scenes of graphic violence. The violence in its uncut form seems to be on the level of the Street Fighter flicks with Sonny Cheiba. Bruce Lee doesn't show off his fighting skills until mid way through the film. What a great fighting performance Bruce Lee gives the viewer when he beats up the big boss's factory workers. Interestingly, the film has a couple of erotic scenes that are unusual for a Kung Fu movie. Both these scenes were either trimmed or cut from the picture. Bruce Lee's films would get less bloody by the time he did Enter the Dragon(1973). Mr. Vampire actor, Ching Ying Lam has a small part as the cousin of Cheng Chao An. Film that brought Bruce Lee international stardom even though the film was not very good. For a Kung Fu flick Bruce Lee is unable to show his full ability as a martial artist due to the filmmakers concern about his appearence in film. Bruce Lee would not fully utilized his excellent skills until the fight sequence at the Japanese martial arts school in Jing Wu Men(1972)/The Chinese Connection.

    The Big Boss(1971) is noted for the infamous scene cut from the film of Bruce Lee spitting a man's head in half with a saw. A scene that has been lost scene since probably the film's debut in Hong Kong theatres. Just as infamous as the lost Pirhana scene of Cannibal Holocaust or the lost eye sucking scene from Full Contact. This sequence is definitely a scene that may have influenced similar sequences in The Streetfighter(1974). This one scene makes The Big Boss(1971) a must find in its fully uncut and uncensored form. Bruce Lee does well for what little material he had to work with. One gory sequence that was trimmed for the film's US release was the scene where Cheng sticks his fingers deep into the main villain's torso. It would be great if someone would find elements from The Big Boss(1971) in order to put together the longest print possible. The Hong Kong version is superior to the badly cut and badly dubbed American version. Its the version that I recommand the most for Bruce Lee admirers and fans.

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    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      Bruce Lee endured "two days of hell" when he sprained his ankle badly while landing awkwardly from a jump from a high jump on a slipped mattress, and had to be driven to Bangkok to see a doctor, where he caught a virus in the hot and stuffy conditions. Close-ups were used to finish the fight, as Bruce struggled and had to drag his leg, which was covered up by, and contributed to, his character's worn out, exhausted appearance. He couldn't move properly and was also racked with aches and fever and was having difficulty keeping food down. Even so, filming continued. His twisted ankle meant that he had to drag his injured leg, so in several scenes he had to be filmed in closeup. He also broke a glass in his hand, resulting in a gash that required ten stitches. While at the hospital in Bangkok, he caught flu and rapidly lost ten pounds.
    • Blooper
      When the guard dogs leap at Cheng, they are obviously thrown.
    • Citazioni

      Cheng Chao-an: Just keep away. Go on. It's not your fight.

    • Versioni alternative
      When the film was released in the United States, the death of Hsiao Mi, "The Boss", was cut down to him simply being stabbed in the chest with a knife in order to receive an "R" rating. The original version of his death, which not only shows an explicit close-up of the knife in his chest but Cheng Chao-an's fingers piercing his rib cage and blood flowing from under his shirt, would have given the film an "X" rating. This scene has since been restored for the Bruce Lee Ultimate Collection DVD released by Fox, and the Shout Factory DVD/Bluray releases.
    • Connessioni
      Edited into L'ultimo combattimento di Chen (1978)
    • Colonne sonore
      To Be a Man
      Lyrics by James Wong

      Performed by Mike Remedios

      [English Dubbed Japan Version]

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 13 aprile 1973 (Italia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Hong Kong
    • Lingue
      • Mandarino
      • Catonese
    • Celebre anche come
      • The Big Boss
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Pak Chong, Thailandia
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Golden Harvest Company
      • Nova Media
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

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    • Budget
      • 100.000 USD (previsto)
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 40 minuti
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Mono
    • Proporzioni
      • 2.39 : 1

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