[go: up one dir, main page]

    Release calendarTop 250 moviesMost popular moviesBrowse movies by genreTop box officeShowtimes & ticketsMovie newsIndia movie spotlight
    What's on TV & streamingTop 250 TV showsMost popular TV showsBrowse TV shows by genreTV news
    What to watchLatest trailersIMDb OriginalsIMDb PicksIMDb SpotlightFamily entertainment guideIMDb Podcasts
    OscarsEmmysSan Diego Comic-ConSummer Watch GuideToronto Int'l Film FestivalSTARmeter AwardsAwards CentralFestival CentralAll events
    Born todayMost popular celebsCelebrity news
    Help centerContributor zonePolls
For industry professionals
  • Language
  • Fully supported
  • English (United States)
    Partially supported
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Watchlist
Sign in
  • Fully supported
  • English (United States)
    Partially supported
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Use app
  • Cast & crew
  • User reviews
  • Trivia
  • FAQ
IMDbPro

Legend of the Fist

Original title: Jing wu feng yun: Chen Zhen
  • 2010
  • R
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
11K
YOUR RATING
Legend of the Fist (2010)
Seven years after the apparent death of Chen Zhen, who was shot after discovering who was responsible for his teacher's death (Huo Yuanjia) in Japanese-occupied Shanghai. A mysterious stranger arrives from overseas ...
Play trailer1:02
9 Videos
23 Photos
Martial ArtsSuperheroActionDramaHistory

The year is 1917 and Chen Zhen, believed to be dead, returns to Shanghai under a false name. He joins a mob boss for info on the Japanese incl. a long kill list and at night fights the Japan... Read allThe year is 1917 and Chen Zhen, believed to be dead, returns to Shanghai under a false name. He joins a mob boss for info on the Japanese incl. a long kill list and at night fights the Japanese masked.The year is 1917 and Chen Zhen, believed to be dead, returns to Shanghai under a false name. He joins a mob boss for info on the Japanese incl. a long kill list and at night fights the Japanese masked.

  • Director
    • Wai Keung Lau
  • Writers
    • Gordon Chan
    • Chi-Sing Cheung
    • Koon-Nam Lui
  • Stars
    • Donnie Yen
    • Alex Ahlstrom
    • Shu Qi
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Wai Keung Lau
    • Writers
      • Gordon Chan
      • Chi-Sing Cheung
      • Koon-Nam Lui
    • Stars
      • Donnie Yen
      • Alex Ahlstrom
      • Shu Qi
    • 46User reviews
    • 87Critic reviews
    • 49Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 nominations total

    Videos9

    Legend of the Fist: The Return of Chen Zhen
    Trailer 1:02
    Legend of the Fist: The Return of Chen Zhen
    "Identities"
    Clip 1:11
    "Identities"
    "Identities"
    Clip 1:11
    "Identities"
    "WWI"
    Clip 1:14
    "WWI"
    "Rain Fight"
    Clip 1:29
    "Rain Fight"
    Legend of the Fist: Exclusive Clip
    Clip 1:46
    Legend of the Fist: Exclusive Clip
    Legend Of The Fist: The Return Of Chen Zhen (Dojo)
    Clip 1:45
    Legend Of The Fist: The Return Of Chen Zhen (Dojo)

    Photos23

    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    + 17
    View Poster

    Top cast44

    Edit
    Donnie Yen
    Donnie Yen
    • Chen Zhen
    Alex Ahlstrom
    • American Soldier
    Shu Qi
    Shu Qi
    • Fang Qing
    Anthony Chau-Sang Wong
    Anthony Chau-Sang Wong
    • Liu Yutian
    • (as Anthony Wong)
    Huang Bo
    Huang Bo
    • Inspector Huang Hao Long
    Ryu Kohata
    • Colonel Takeshi Chikaraishi
    • (as Kohata Ryuichi)
    Siyan Huo
    Siyan Huo
    • Vivian
    Zhou Yang
    • Qi Zhi-Shan
    Shawn Yue
    Shawn Yue
    • General Zeng
    Yasuaki Kurata
    Yasuaki Kurata
    • Tsuyoshi Chikaraishi
    Akira
    Akira
    • Sasaki Chikaraishi
    Yue Ma
    • General Zhou
    Jiajia Chen
    • Huang Lan
    Songwen Zhang
    • Wen-Zai
    Ikki Funaki
    Gregory Wong
      Tian Gao
      Laixi
      Laixi
        • Director
          • Wai Keung Lau
        • Writers
          • Gordon Chan
          • Chi-Sing Cheung
          • Koon-Nam Lui
        • All cast & crew
        • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

        User reviews46

        6.211.3K
        1
        2
        3
        4
        5
        6
        7
        8
        9
        10

        Featured reviews

        vps2

        convoluted plot but historically accurate

        Although the narrative gets convoluted at times, the historical setting of the Chinese labor corps sent to aid the allied war effort during world war 1 is historically factual ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_Labour_Corps ), though it has been largely forgotten.

        the Chinese intelligentsia also successfully mounted pressure to cause Japan to delay full scale aggression until the 30s ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twenty-One_Demands )

        this movie is essentially a big budget hong kong action movie produced as a homage to Bruce Lee. At times it strives to be too many homages at once with Donnie Yen resurrecting both Kato AND Chen Zhen ( Fist of Fury).

        It shouldn't be conceived as Chinese propaganda (anymore than any of the Bruce Lee movies were) or anti-Japanese, as long as you understand that the Chinese truly were the underdogs back then.

        in fact, the young Japanese actor playing the colonel totally stole the show.
        8DICK STEEL

        A Nutshell Review: Legend of the Fist: The Return of Chen Zhen

        This year marks the 70th year of Bruce Lee's birth, arguably the best martial artist the cinematic world has ever seen, with his short filmography still continuing to wow audiences young and old. With tribute screenings at the Hong Kong International Film Festival earlier this year, and at the Tokyo International Film Festival later this month, director Andrew Lau, writer Gordan Chan and leading kung-fu icon of the moment Donnie Yen pay their collective tribute with Legend of the Fist, taking one of the most memorable of Bruce Lee's characters Chen Zhen and imagining a follow up story.

        But wait, wasn't the final shot in Fist of Fury quite definitive? But as movie rules are concerned, nothing's canon if you don't see it, so a slew of gunshots count for nothing, passing it off as one of many rumours to discount his death, when in actual fact Chen Zhen (now with Yen picking up the mantle) is still alive and kicking, and sent packing to the WWI front in France to fight alongside his Chinese labourer compatriots against the Axis forces. It's an unsatisfactory explanation I know, but one of the rare blips in what I thought was a riveting story concocted that alas was let down by a clichéd ending that was too abrupt to be satisfying, leaving doors open for another film if it does happen.

        Other than that, Legend of the Fist continues how Bruce Lee films were steeped in Chinese nationalism, only here it went with trumpets blaring with any given opportunity. Chen Zhen assumes a dead comrade's identity to return to Shanghai keeping jolly well under the Japanese's radar, where now the city in the early 20s gets carved up into settlements, with a microscopic representation of the internal chaos existing within the nightclub of influential Shanghainese businessman Liu Yiutian (Anthony Wong), with whom Chen Zhen befriends, for an ulterior motive of course, since he's now with the resistance, and the Casablanca club providing a hotbed of information as they plot and counterplot moves against the Japanese's brewing aggression.

        Of late there's been a wave of such nationalistic movies that Donnie Yen tend to get involved in, such as Bodyguards and Assassins, and his more recent and successful Ip Man films, where Chinese people gather around a representative hero of their time to defeat foreign aggressors, where even in Ip Man 1, we see and expect the same mano-a-mano against a Japanese general who shows off his fair share of kung-fu knowhow. Like how many caricatures would be crafted in many more films that deal with that difficult period in Chinese history. While Yen had portrayed historical characters in those films, this one he continues with a fictional one made famous by a historical martial artist in Lee.

        As a film steeped in paying homage to Lee, there are times where you feel the characters and action get shackled from freedom of expression, but this is not always a bad thing. I had followed Donnie Yen's career pretty early when he was still doing television serials for Hong Kong's ATV, where he played Chen Zhen in a storyline that had to mimic Fist of Fury, but expanded to include a romance with a Japanese woman. Like some television dramas that gets new lease of life on the big screen, it helped that Yen has experience in portraying the role other than a few others like Jet Li in another feature film that was a remake, but this one had the guts to continue where the film / series left off with a new spin.

        While aspects of the Chen Zhen character were toned down probably because the character has to continue staying under the radar, gone are the high shrieks when he fights in the beginning (purists, please don't worry, you'll hear that toward the end), and got replaced by plenty of what I thought was MMA executed in brilliantly brutal fashion, starting with the prologue action sequence which had Chen Zhen being that one man soldier, followed by yet another nod in Bruce Lee's direction when dressed in a deliberate Kato costume. I'd say if not for his age, I'd give my vote to Yen if he were to be casted as Kato in the upcoming Green Hornet film in lieu of Jay Chou.

        More Lee homages were to come, with the necessity to go shirtless in highlighting the chiseled physique that has its fair share of punishment, and what would be defining of Lee in Fist of Fury with the use of the nunchaks, although with all due respect to Yen, Lee is quite indomitable in this area, and the filmmakers here can only up the ante by throwing in a lot more goons to dispatch of in the same dojo from the earlier film. Yen took the action choreographer reins, and skillfully designed some spectacular fight sequences for action junkies to go wow over, balancing the homage aspects as well as coming up with some really violent, finishing moves to rid opponents. Watch this in a cinema with a proper sound system decked out will heighten that sense surround of being within the all round action.

        The story's pretty much plain sailing with little surprises thrown in other than to present shifting loyalties in a tumultuous time, where Anthony Wong lends gravitas, Chinese actor Huang Bo providing comic relief as a corrupt policeman, and Shu Qi lending her vocals yet again as a club hostess already seen in films like Blood Brothers. While the story wouldn't be as iconic as Fist of Fury's, the fight action sequences lived up to its billing, and celebrated manifold the legend of Bruce Lee's instead.
        4grandmastersik

        Unfocused mess

        Imagine that an amateur screenwriter shat out a vomit draft and said, "That's Oscar-worthy!" Well, that pretty much describes this mumbled action flick.

        In fairness, the script - or final cut - could have been messed up by anyone, so I won't blame the writer, but as an espionage-cum-action thriller, the film is a total dud.

        If you're a fan of Donnie Yen (like me!), you'll watch this regardless of how bad anyone tells you it is, and where the big fight at the end nets it an extra star, please don't let the 4/10 fool you into believing that this is half-way decent, because it really is one of the worst Donnie films I've sat through. Which is a shame, because Shu Qi looks as gorgeous as ever and really pours a lot of emotion into her role... which only further highlights how badly the final film lets down both of its main stars.
        jcpbjctk2

        Huge let down

        Where to start….? Watched it on Netflix, and was really excited for the first 10 minutes because for once in my lifetime I finally came across a MA movie that's not telling me the story about how the Chinese being invaded from whomever for whatever reasons.

        I was wrong, miserably wrong.

        At one point I was still looking at Donne Yan killing German solider in the Western battlefield, minutes later he became Chen Zhen (played by Bruce Lee in the 1972 blockbuster, "Fist of Fury") in a black suit kicking Japanese's asses. Don't get me wrong, the fight scenes are crystal clear, fast, and furious; but for every 5 minutes fight scene comes a 35 minutes "Chinese trying so hard to be united against the Japanese", I just couldn't help but to skip through the so-called "acting" part. I knew what's coming next, you probably knew too, in fact everyone who have ever watched a MA movie would have known exactly what's going to happen next.

        This is not about being incredibly stereotypical, this is not about absolutely zero character development; this is not even about being predictable. This is about the epic failure of the Chinese movie industry, the fact that they DO NOT have the brain power to think of anything new that's suitable in a movie to tie with Martial Art.

        To conclude this, history is history, we do not need another and another and yet another movie to emphasis the past. We won't be nemesis trying to revenge the Japanese, this is not "glorious bastard", and we do not want to fall back in the same pattern and same routine, that's why we study history.

        And Just a side note, never did a single Chinese troop fought outside of Asia during WW1, try harder next time.
        7theycallmemrglass

        Very messy narrative saved by explosive Donny Yen action scenes

        Saw this at London preview.

        This is a loose sequel to Bruce Lee's Fist of Fury. Its not important to know that but if you are a fan of Bruce Lee, you will enjoy Donny Yen's sometimes blatant impression of Bruce Lee's nuances and war cries. If you aren't familiar with Bruce Lee, than a certain fight sequence may look a bit bewildering! There is a fascinating story to be told here with some interesting sub plots and bizarrely evolving into a comic book superhero flick. Unfortunately, it makes for a complete mess. I wont totally blame the director for that, that's an editor's job to maintain a narrative flow. The potential is there for this to work but unfortunately it just seems to me that couldn't bind it all together, or they were in a hurry to complete the film because it all seemed rushed.

        However, the film is sumptuous to watch in its period settings, and the 2 leads are charismatic enough to carry the film. There is a sprinkle of humour that gave me chuckles though some were unintentional.

        But the real star of the film is Donny Yen. As he gets older, he has even more star presence than ever before and when he fights, you can always feel his punches and awesome kicks. The action scenes are adrenaline pumping, visceral, with a stylish visual flair. These alone are worth the price of admission.

        I would watch this again, and maybe next time I can piece a few more pieces of the story together.

        Overall, see it for the brilliance of Donny Yen action and if you actually followed the story and enjoyed it, then good for you!

        More like this

        Swordsmen
        7.0
        Swordsmen
        Flashpoint
        6.7
        Flashpoint
        Kung Fu Jungle
        6.4
        Kung Fu Jungle
        Dragon Tiger Gate
        6.1
        Dragon Tiger Gate
        Special ID
        5.5
        Special ID
        La 14ème lame
        6.3
        La 14ème lame
        Bodyguards & Assassins
        6.8
        Bodyguards & Assassins
        S.P.L.
        6.9
        S.P.L.
        Jing wu men
        7.2
        Jing wu men
        Fist of Legend: La Nouvelle Fureur de Vaincre
        7.5
        Fist of Legend: La Nouvelle Fureur de Vaincre
        Chui lung
        6.7
        Chui lung
        Iron Monkey
        7.4
        Iron Monkey

        Storyline

        Edit

        Did you know

        Edit
        • Trivia
          The film featured two actors who had portrayed Ip Man. Donnie Yen played the character in the "Ip Man" trilogy and Anthony Chau-Sang Wong played him in Ip Man: The Final Fight (2013).
        • Goofs
          The original movie The Green Hornet is mentioned in the movie, while it is part of the homage to Bruce Lee, the movie came out in 1940, 15 years after the movie takes place.
        • Connections
          Featured in At the Movies: Venice Film Festival 2010 (2010)
        • Soundtracks
          Habanera from 'Carmen'
          By Georges Bizet

          Performed by Shu Qi

        Top picks

        Sign in to rate and Watchlist for personalized recommendations
        Sign in

        FAQ19

        • How long is Legend of the Fist: The Return of Chen Zhen?Powered by Alexa

        Details

        Edit
        • Release date
          • September 21, 2010 (China)
        • Countries of origin
          • Hong Kong
          • China
        • Official sites
          • Official Facebook
          • Official site
        • Languages
          • Mandarin
          • Cantonese
          • Japanese
          • English
          • French
          • German
        • Also known as
          • Legend of the Fist: The Return of Chen Zhen
        • Production companies
          • Media Asia Films
          • Beijing Enlight Pictures
          • Shanghai Film Media Asia
        • See more company credits at IMDbPro

        Box office

        Edit
        • Gross US & Canada
          • $50,433
        • Opening weekend US & Canada
          • $11,365
          • Apr 24, 2011
        • Gross worldwide
          • $27,390,678
        See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

        Tech specs

        Edit
        • Runtime
          • 1h 46m(106 min)
        • Color
          • Color
        • Sound mix
          • Dolby Digital EX
        • Aspect ratio
          • 2.35 : 1

        Contribute to this page

        Suggest an edit or add missing content
        • Learn more about contributing
        Edit page

        More to explore

        Recently viewed

        Please enable browser cookies to use this feature. Learn more.
        Get the IMDb App
        Sign in for more accessSign in for more access
        Follow IMDb on social
        Get the IMDb App
        For Android and iOS
        Get the IMDb App
        • Help
        • Site Index
        • IMDbPro
        • Box Office Mojo
        • License IMDb Data
        • Press Room
        • Advertising
        • Jobs
        • Conditions of Use
        • Privacy Policy
        • Your Ads Privacy Choices
        IMDb, an Amazon company

        © 1990-2025 by IMDb.com, Inc.