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Bruce Lee défie Las Vegas

Original title: America bangmungaeg
  • 1976
  • 12
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
3.7/10
435
YOUR RATING
Bruce Lee défie Las Vegas (1976)
Kung FuMartial ArtsActionFantasyThriller

A kung Fu expert travels to America to take out a gang of mysterious villains responsible for the murder of his best friend.A kung Fu expert travels to America to take out a gang of mysterious villains responsible for the murder of his best friend.A kung Fu expert travels to America to take out a gang of mysterious villains responsible for the murder of his best friend.

  • Director
    • Lee Doo-yong
  • Writers
    • Lee Doo-yong
    • Jeong-hwan Kwak
  • Stars
    • Jun Chong
    • Deborah Dutch
    • Su-cheon Bae
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    3.7/10
    435
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Lee Doo-yong
    • Writers
      • Lee Doo-yong
      • Jeong-hwan Kwak
    • Stars
      • Jun Chong
      • Deborah Dutch
      • Su-cheon Bae
    • 26User reviews
    • 13Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos22

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    Top cast14

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    Jun Chong
    • Wong Han
    • (as Bruce K.L. Lea)
    Deborah Dutch
    Deborah Dutch
    • Susan
    • (as Deborah Chaplin)
    Su-cheon Bae
    Su-cheon Bae
    Anthony Bronson
    Mun-ju Kim
    Steve Mak
    Steve Mak
    Charlie Chow
    Jack Houston
    Philip Kennedy
    Jimmy Sato
    Jeong-lee Hwang
      Phillip Rhee
      Phillip Rhee
      Simon Rhee
      Simon Rhee
      Shô Kosugi
      Shô Kosugi
      • Suzuki
      • (uncredited)
      • Director
        • Lee Doo-yong
      • Writers
        • Lee Doo-yong
        • Jeong-hwan Kwak
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews26

      3.7435
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      Featured reviews

      5Space_Mafune

      Nothing to Do with Bruce Lee but Still A Fun Kung Fu Action Flick.

      An oriental Kung Fu expert named Wong Han (played by Bruce K.L. Lea) travels to America at the invite of his long-time friend and former Kung Fu school training partner only to learn his friend is now dead, apparently the result of a suicide. Suspecting foul play, Wong Han sets out to bring down a gang of strange characters he suspects are responsible for his friend's death but when he attempts to do so, there's also quite a few unexpected surprises awaiting our hero.

      Despite the title referring to Bruce Lee, he actually has nothing whatsoever to do with this movie apart from an extremely cheesy, silly opening introduction title sequence in which we see a man resembling Lee jump out of a grave with the headstone behind him bearing Lee's name. What this movie is actually about is a man coming to America trying to avenge his fallen friend while protecting his deceased friend's last belongings. There he befriends a beautiful young woman named Susan (played by the delectable Deborah Chaplin) who tries to help him in his quest. However, the gang of colorful thugs, a true assortment of weird characters if there ever was one, are after him and Susan for some reason unknown to Wong Han and go all out in their efforts to bring them down meaning Wong Han has to constantly fight for his own survival while also trying to protect Susan.

      As you can tell, the basic plot for this movie isn't half-bad. The Kung Fu fighting scenes featuring Bruce Lea, who throws a mean-looking kick, also proved much better than expected although they fall rather short in comparison to the one and only Bruce Lee. The major problem here is that the movie seems to go on a bit too long, the pace feeling a little too slow, which isn't helped by the fact there's too much obvious filler footage of people simply driving vehicles from place to place. Also the colorful villainous assortment of characters Wong Han tries to bring down never evolve beyond anything other than one-dimensional caricatures.
      3InjunNose

      Of course it's terrible! That's what makes it fun.

      *Possible Partial Spoilers*

      Originally entitled "The Stranger" and directed by Umberto Lenzi (under a Korean pseudonym), who helmed the infamous grossout cannibal flick "Make Them Die Slowly", "Bruce Lee Fights Back from the Grave" is the most hilariously awful installment in the Bruceploitation subgenre of 1974-80. It doesn't even star one of the three well-known Bruce Lee impersonators (Bruce Li, Bruce Le, and Dragon Lee). "Bruce K.L. Lea" is actually Jun Chong, a Korean taekwon do instructor based in Los Angeles. He's terrible as far as imitating Lee's mannerisms goes, but he's a fine kicker. You have to enjoy this for what it is. PLEASE don't expect a Bruce Lee movie! He only made four films--"Fists of Fury", "The Chinese Connection", "Return of the Dragon", and "Enter the Dragon" ("Game of Death" doesn't qualify)--and he wasn't identified by a name other than Bruce Lee in any of them. Not Li, not Le, not Lea, not Lai. The story has nothing to do with Bruce Lee fighting back from the grave, either. Jun Chong does not play Lee nor a character based on Lee, but rather a Korean martial artist who comes to Los Angeles to find out how his best friend died...only to discover that he's being stalked by a weird assortment of bad guys (a Japanese swordsman played by future "Revenge of the Ninja" star Sho Kosugi, a tall, bald black man with a cape and an earring, and a cowboy among them). As I mentioned, Chong does a kind of dimestore Bruce Lee impression during the fight scenes (thumbing his nose, going "waaaaahhhh!"), and the dubbing is truly hilarious--even for a martial arts movie. Particularly amusing is the evil cowboy's voice; he sounds about as masculine as the guy who wore the stetson hat in the Village People. Now that you know what to expect...enjoy! And look around for the original poster art for this film, too. The company that released the DVD is really doing its customers a disservice by not including this wild, cartoony art on the box!
      Wizard-8

      Typical 70s Asian martial arts movie

      At first glance, "Bruce Lee Fights Back from the Grave" seems to be indistinguishable from other 1970s martial arts movies, though there are two differences. The first is that it was filmed in the United States, and the second being that it was made by Koreans instead of Hong Kong filmmakers.

      But apart from those differences, the movie doesn't really stand out from the pack. As you may have expected, while the movie's title promises a resurrected Bruce Lee - and the opening sequence shows that title action - the movie quickly forgets what it promises and makes no further actions to be "Brucey". What follows is a long and hard slog through a really thin and boring story, with occasional martial art sequences that are badly directed, badly choreographed, and badly edited.

      Is there any saving grace? Well, there is some really awful dubbing that occasionally provokes a chuckle, and the Korean filmmakers' occasional misconceptions of America and American people also is unintentionally funny at times. But there are not enough unintentional laughs to make this worth a look. Even aficionados of martial art movies will find this particularly tough to sit through.
      4Leofwine_draca

      Typical kung fu flick masquerading as a Bruce Lee imitation

      This is a film with one of those great exploitation titles that promises so much more than it eventually delivers. At first glance I was expecting to see some extreme kung-fu horror flick with a mad sorcerer reviving Bruce Lee from his death and turning him into an unstoppable zombie killer, with only a young novice martial artist to stop him. Sadly this was not to be. Aside from the cheesy opening shot, in which a guy pretending to be Bruce Lee jumps straight out of a grave and a drawing of such a scene follows on quickly, we're in the middle of a run-of-the-mill fight flick that has nothing to do with Bruce Lee at all. In fact, he's not even mentioned!

      The film instead concerns a young Bruce Lee lookalike named Bruce Lea (see where the confusion can arise?). It turns out that an old buddy of Lea's has died, so he goes to investigate and find the killers responsible. It turns out to be, apparently, the Village People! Yep, a Japanese man, a black man, a cowboy and a white man were last seen with the deceased and soon Lea finds himself battling the criminal gang in a succession of largely unimpressive fights. Things are tied up with a very unsurprising twist ending, a touch of tragedy and lots of very bad dubbing and worse acting. Lots of running time is taken up with scenes of human bonding which occur between Lea and would-be girlfriend Deborah Chaplin and the will-they-or-won't-they relationship which develops between them.

      Interspersed with the light plot are some fairly average scenes of kung fu which are nothing to get excited about. They are okay, but Lea is no Bruce Lee or even Bruce Li. In fact, Bruce Lea is a better actor than he is a fighter, which is unusual considering the proliferation of good fighters/poor actors that fill our screens year after year! Chaplin is also not bad in a developed part, although the bad guys are little more than clichés waiting to be cut down by our hero.

      The film is quite slow and uninteresting, let down by poor production values and a somewhat gloomy atmosphere. The photography is always dark and the editing looks like child's work, with silly slow-motion inserts for no reason (the moves aren't even that impressive to begin with). For some reason, some prints of the film claim that Umberto Lenzi is the director, but I believe this to be a simple case of mistaken identity; also, why on earth would Lenzi leave his beloved cop films in Italy to go globetrotting for a low budget kung fu trash oddity? A guy named Doo-Yong Lee appears to be the real culprit.
      5markovd111

      Fine if you are aware what you're getting yourself into!

      Let's be real here, if you are going to watch a movie called "Bruce Lee Fights Back from the Grave" and you are expecting a good or even a decent movie, you are delusional.

      If you are instead expecting a bad movie with laughable dub and performances, editing and image quality proportional to the amount of money invested in making of the movie and fights that are decent for what they are, though expectedly ridiculous and over the top, you will enjoy your time with the movie.

      It is what it is and if you are willing to accept it you will have a great time, especially if you bring a friend along this "so bad it's good" ride. I give it 5/10 and I recommend it to anybody that know's what he's in for.

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      Storyline

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      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        American actress Deborah Dutch's first role. She was 17. She said in an interview that her manager sent her to Jun Chong's martial arts school in Los Angeles to where she and several other young actresses met with Chong. Dutch said Chong didn't even look at the other actresses after he spotted her because he loved her striking blue-green eyes. He invited her to dinner at a Korean restaurant that night to meet with him and people from the production company. At the end of the evening, they told her she had the part and she started filming the next day.
      • Goofs
        Just before Sasaki goes to attack Wong Han, the room suddenly goes from being almost totally dark to being fully lit.
      • Quotes

        Suzuki: You had better listen to me for your own damn good. Understand?

        Wong Han: Your threats don't frighten me one little bit.

        Suzuki: You should be!

        Wong Han: Why, what are you gonna do about it?

        Suzuki: Hold it! Why should I help you?

        Wong Han: Alright, if you can't help me then who can?

        Suzuki: Marc Welby.

        Wong Han: Where can I find him?

        Suzuki: You can try the race course.

        Wong Han: I've some questions for him.

        Suzuki: That's if you live to ask!

        [swings his katana at Won Han]

      • Connections
        Edited into Ninja Theater: Bruce Lee Fights Back from the Grave (2022)

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • October 26, 1977 (France)
      • Countries of origin
        • South Korea
        • United States
      • Language
        • Korean
      • Also known as
        • Bruce Lee Fights Back from the Grave
      • Filming locations
        • Los Angeles, California, USA
      • Production companies
        • Habdong Films
        • Hap Ding Film Company
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        1 hour 35 minutes
      • Color
        • Color
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 2.35 : 1

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