Bruce lee in his own words download




















Director John Little. Top credits Director John Little. See more at IMDbPro. Photos 2. Add photo. Top cast Edit. Bruce Lee Self as Self archive footage. Peter Archer Self as Self archive footage uncredited. Linda Lee Cadwell Self as Self archive footage uncredited.

Jackie Chan Self as Self archive footage uncredited. Robert Clouse Self as Self archive footage uncredited. Jim Kelly Self as Self archive footage uncredited. John Saxon Self as Self archive footage uncredited. Wei Tung Self as Self archive footage uncredited. Bob Wall Self as Self archive footage uncredited.

Geoffrey Weeks Self as Self archive footage uncredited. John Little. More like this. Watch options. Storyline Edit. Add content advisory. Be water, my friend. Just about completely Bruce'd out as I approach the end of Criterion's set, but this little feature is a great way to cap it off.

It consists of the one thing that's been missing from virtually every other special feature I checked out: Bruce Lee himself. Like an engaging blend of laid-back stoner and enlightened instructor, he discusses fame, acting, fighting, and the art of being in the world. The most noteworthy detail is that he was basically style-agnostic at that point in his career. Looking back, I see this attitude reflected in the mixing and matching that drive martial arts encounters in his two directorial efforts.

And anyway, after all the endless hagiography and exploitation, it's honestly just great to hear the real voice of the person responsible for the greatest fish-out-water soup humour ever written. Many of his dialogues in "Enter the Dragon" are part of his own philosophy of life: acting fearlessly and without thinking too much, not having a characteristic fighting style using elements from everyone , and a bit of ego mixed in with it.

This is Bruce Lee! This right here explains my issue with Bruce Lee's portrayal in Once upon a time In Hollywood. A nice little bonus feature, nothing more, nothing less. This featurette takes several interviews that Bruce Lee gave and turns it into something for him to be able to explain his thoughts on martial arts and life.

The majority of the interview footage comes from Lee's interview on the Pierre Berton Show and this footage is usually shown in every documentary on Lee. I'm sure most super-fans have already seen this footage but director John Little does a very good job at taking it and editing into a nice little piece.

The highlight of this documentary are the various clips from his movies but the real gem are the behind-the-scene photos. The final few minutes of this film is nothing but photos from him on the sets of his films and having fun with his co-stars and this alone makes the film worth watching.

Review by Nick Fulton. Criterion bonus of archive footage. It ends with a photo montage set to a song written by the films director and I gotta say Review by Kirk Yoshonis 1. An oddly constructed highlight reel of a couple of interviews that ends with a really awkward montage of clips of Bruce Lee. When the opponent expands, I contract and when he contracts, I expand and when there is an opportunity, I do not hit.



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