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La Fureur du dragon

Original title: Meng long guo jiang
  • 1972
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 39m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
44K
YOUR RATING
Bruce Lee in La Fureur du dragon (1972)
Kung FuMartial ArtsOne-Person Army ActionActionAdventureComedyCrimeDramaThriller

A country bumpkin martial artist visits his relatives in Rome, Italy, where he must defend them and their restaurant against harassment from brutal gangsters.A country bumpkin martial artist visits his relatives in Rome, Italy, where he must defend them and their restaurant against harassment from brutal gangsters.A country bumpkin martial artist visits his relatives in Rome, Italy, where he must defend them and their restaurant against harassment from brutal gangsters.

  • Director
    • Bruce Lee
  • Writer
    • Bruce Lee
  • Stars
    • Bruce Lee
    • Chuck Norris
    • Nora Miao
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    44K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Bruce Lee
    • Writer
      • Bruce Lee
    • Stars
      • Bruce Lee
      • Chuck Norris
      • Nora Miao
    • 162User reviews
    • 86Critic reviews
    • 58Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Photos148

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    Top cast37

    Edit
    Bruce Lee
    Bruce Lee
    • Tang Lung
    Chuck Norris
    Chuck Norris
    • Colt
    Nora Miao
    Nora Miao
    • Chen Ching Hua
    Ping-Ou Wei
    Ping-Ou Wei
    • Ho
    • (as Paul Wei Ping-Ao)
    Chung-Hsin Huang
    Chung-Hsin Huang
    • 'Uncle' Wang
    • (as Wang Chung Hsin)
    Robert Wall
    Robert Wall
    • Bob
    In-shik Hwang
    • Japanese Fighter
    • (as Ing-Sik Whang)
    Ti Chin
    Ti Chin
    • Ah Quen
    Tony Liu
    Tony Liu
    • Tony
    Little Unicorn
    Little Unicorn
    • Jimmy
    Malisa Longo
    Malisa Longo
    • Italian Beauty
    Ngan Wu
    • Waiter
    Fu Ching Chen
    Fu Ching Chen
    • Robert
    • (as Robert Chen)
    Jon T. Benn
    • The Big Boss
    John Kenny
    • Quen
    • (voice)
    Robert Baker
    • Thug
    • (uncredited)
    Riccardo Billi
    • Bank Manager
    • (uncredited)
    Russell Cawthorne
    • Man at Airport
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Bruce Lee
    • Writer
      • Bruce Lee
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews162

    7.143.5K
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    Featured reviews

    blaketheidiotmanchild

    My personal favorite Bruce Lee film.

    Even though this movie was dubbed, and the dubbing isn't that great. the whole movie is great. I actually find this movie way better then Enter the Dragon. Plus, you got Bruce Lee, writing, starring and directing it, and he knew what to do to make this kung fu movie awesome. I reccomend this one to any kung fu fan who has not seen this one yet... i give it 9 out of 10.
    8Fella_shibby

    In this world of guns n knives, Tang Lung is respectd wherever he goes cos of his fist fights n nunchukas.

    I first saw this in the late 80s on a vhs, then again in the early 2k on a dvd which I own.

    Revisited it recently.

    As a kid from the 80s n aft seeing this movie, i was in awe aft witnessing the nunchukas fight sequence.

    This one gets a bit repetitive cos of the same goons who keeps on getting thrashed by the character of Lee but they keep on coming back. One of the fat goon with a beard looks like poor man's Russell Crowe.

    The best n the most memorable is the treatment of the fight in the Colosseum with Chuck Norris with a cat as a spectator.

    In this one Lee plays Tang Lung, a kung fu expert who is sent from Hong Kong to Italy by his uncle to help family friends whose restaurant business is threatened by a mafia boss.

    This one showcases Lee's immense energy n amazing fighting skills, especially the way his feet moves.

    He mimicked Mohammad Ali's float like a butterfly style.

    Lee is allowed to have a sense of humor in this movie.

    This one aint gory like The Big Boss.

    Ping-Ou Wei (famous for playing the interpreter in this one n the Fist of Fury) acted very well. His body language is total effeminate, especially his limp wristed n running style is a big lol.

    Another best fight sequence is the one in the alley with the nunchukas.
    7tshodan

    Bruce Lee at his best

    Bruce Lee demonstrates why without ever being a tournament champion that he was one of the best martial artists of all times. His speed and technique easily out class the other real martial artisits this film presents. His fight with Chuck Norris in this film is legendary. Watching Chuck in his prime is intense, high speed and accuracy. What scares me is that Bruce is faster. And even though he is lacking size, its obvious that the little dragons power is intense. Yes the scenes in these movies may be choreographed, but it's hard to make duplicate the skills shown by these fighters with trick photography and ballet lessons.

    This is the first film Bruce took a major role in both on and off the set. He searched for quality martial artists for the fight scenes and was the one who reccomended Italy for this shoot.

    The film revolves around a restaurant in Italy run by Lee's uncle and his (assumably ) cousins. Local gangsters try to close the restaurant down and get a piece of the action. To avoid complications with the law, they try and man handle the resteraunt owner and workers and Lee comes to the rescue.
    8alice liddell

    Adorable mixture of silly slapstick and ritual violence.

    If, like me, you have only seen Bruce Lee in the wonderful, but portentous, ENTER THE DRAGON, than you might be surprised by this quite potty earlier film. In ENTER THE DRAGON, Lee was amused, but sombre; a fighting machine, pivotal piece in a deadly serious mythological puzzle, his strength never in doubt.

    The first third of this film couldn't be more different. Played as (very funny) comedy, Lee is passive (we first see him waiting for someone), a figure of fun, a fish out of water, exagerratedly polite, bewildered by alien custom and language, as well as his own bowels. A number of scuffles take part early on in which he takes no part, and which make us doubt his prowess.

    Lee directed this film, and his visual conception is much more inventive that Robert Clouse's (ENTER). Although it lacks the insane invention of A TOUCH OF ZEN, or the dizzy verve of Tsui Hark's films, Lee is not content with simple ego gratification. His two directorial mentors seem to be Melville and Leone. The former (hugely influenced by Oriental martial discipline himself) gave him a hero who is narcissistic (check the opening shot), whole; whose physical prowess is ironically the result of mental superiority, an almost Zen laid-backness; concealing the coiled, taut, muscle-burst of Lee's beautiful body.

    Kung Fu is primarily an art of self-defense, and this film returns to these roots: its conception of protecting the oppressed rings throughout the film (in the seemingly gratuitous picture-postcard scenes, Lee makes the connection between European colonial splendour, and the poverty and repression of Hong Kong). Chuck Norris's character has betrayed Kung Fu by siding with the oppressor - his art is bestial and clumsy, lacking the spare geometric elegance of Lee's.

    But Kung fu's self-defense is also a defence of one's 'self' (this is where Melville comes in) - it protects one from any threat to one's powerful wholeness, especially women (and men. There is a slight whiff of homophobia, mitigated by the outrageous campness of the film (all that red! The whole idea of SHANE recast in a restaurant!). This is ironic, since it is the proof of Lee's martial art power that makes the initially sceptical heroine (very stylish and lovely) fall for his charms (and who can blame her?).

    Lee's second master is Sergio Leone, from whom he has learnt an irreverent approach to genre, with jokey zooms, close-ups and cuts; mocking, yet mournful and melancholic Morricone-esque music; a ritual stand-off between mythical archetypes (an awesome set-piece in the Colosseum), with the film's heart belonging to the slightly silly, but loveable, subsidiary characters.

    The use of these iconoclastic directors adds a reflective and critical dimension to a genre previously (in its most populist form) a showcase for male vanity (although Lee never lets us forget how gorgeous and sweetly small and cuddly he is). A supremely entertaining film which unexpectedly achieves a climactic power and melancholy.
    7ma-cortes

    Martial arts expert Bruce Lee fights off mobsters and world champion Chuck Norris

    "Fury of the Dragon" or "Return of the Dragon" or ¨Way of the Dragon¨ is a classic Chop-Socky in which wild fighting scenes provide an overwhelming view of Bruce Lee's skills . A man named Tang Lung (Bruce Lee choreographed his own fight scenes) arrives in Rome to visit his relatives , he helps his cousins (Nora Miao who along with Lee played ¨Fists of Fury¨) in the restaurant business . However , they are being pressured to sell their property to the syndicate, who will stop at nothing to get what they want. There Tang has to defend them against brutal gangsters harassing them and attempting to take over . The syndicate boss hires the best foreign martial art fighters (Robert Wall who played some films with Lee) to face off Tang , but he easily finishes them off . The American martial artist Colt (Chuck Norris film debut) is also hired and takes place a deadly ending combat .

    This violent Chop-Socky displays action-packed , thrills , fast-paced and wild fighting images . It is a corny , action-filled and violent film , being entirely filmed in Rome , Italy . Breathtaking fights and embarrassing acting , the whole thing was shot without sound, with the actors looping their lines in post-production . Overwhelming final duel between Lee and Norris , in fact it was last movie to be filmed in the actual Roman Colisseum ; Bruce Lee had Chuck Norris put on weight so he would looks less impressive by comparison . This is a top-notch Kung-Fu movie with the unforgettable Bruce Lee , though he does not fight till almost 30 minutes into the movie . It was billed "Return of the Dragon" during its western release in order to cash in on the success of "Enter the Dragon" as its "sequel". Bruce Lee produced , directed and even wrote and also dubbed almost all of the English speaking characters in this film .

    Bruce Lee played and directed this Return of the Dragon , one of the biggest international hit smashes , it was previously realized to his American box office ¨Enter the dragon¨ that was made by an expert on Chop-Socky movies , Robert Clouse , and he directed Bruce Lee's last film : the incomplete ¨Game of the death¨ . This ¨Enter the Dragon¨ was made later but released before ¨Lee's Return of dragon¨ , and Lee had formerly starred ¨Fists of fury¨ or ¨The big boss¨. ¨Enter the Dragon¨ is his last complete movie character but his next film ¨ Game of death¨ was absurdly edited after his death . This Kung-Fu actioner titled ¨Return of Dragon¨ was well made by Bruce Lee himself . According to the Bruce Lee documentary, this is Linda Lee Cadwell's (Bruce's wife) favorite of all her husband's films. ¨Return of the Dragon¨ is indispensable and essential seeing for Lee fans and art-martial enthusiasts . It is not ¨Enter the Dragon¨ but his fans -who have so few to choose from- undoubtedly will want to see it again .

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The entire film was shot without sound, with the actors looping their lines in post-production.
    • Goofs
      At the beginning of the movie, Bruce Lee is eating several different types of soups and several times he takes a spoonful of an orange colored soup and as he puts it into his mouth some dribbles on his chin. The soup he dribbles on his chin is white.
    • Quotes

      [last lines]

      Ah Quen: In this world of guns and knives, Tang Lung is the one who walks the lonely road.

    • Alternate versions
      All above mentioned cuts to the original US release were restored to the new 2005 DVD release. Plus an additional scene of Lee being made fun of by the gang for saying "excuse me" to one of the crooks after bumping into him.
    • Connections
      Edited into Le Jeu de la mort (1978)
    • Soundtracks
      As A Judgement
      (Colt's Theme)

      by Ennio Morricone

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    FAQ19

    • How long is The Way of the Dragon?Powered by Alexa
    • Why the ironic music when Tang Lung presents the wad of banknotes to the bank manager?
    • What are the differences between the old British VHS and the Uncensored Version? How about the US Version?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 18, 1974 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Hong Kong
    • Official site
      • Miramax [United States]
    • Languages
      • Mandarin
      • Cantonese
      • English
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • El dragón
    • Filming locations
      • The Colosseum, Rome, Lazio, Italy
    • Production companies
      • Golden Harvest Films
      • Concord Productions
      • Golden Harvest Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $130,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 39m(99 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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