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Enter The Dragon (1973) Certificate 18

Enter The Dragon

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Rated 3.5 stars
Average rating
(71%)
 
Starring: Bruce Lee | John Saxon | Ahna Capri | Jim Kelly
Director: Robert Clouse
Studio: WARNER HOME VIDEO
Run time: 98 mins
Genres: Action/Adventure
Languages: English
Hearing-impaired: English
Subtitles: Arabic, English
Released: October 15, 2001

Featuring masterful kung fu action by the legendary Bruce Lee, ENTER THE DRAGON is one of most renowned martial arts film of all time. The opium-smuggling plot is secondary to amazing and violent action scenes. The 25th anniversary edition features additional footage, an interview with Lee's widow, Linda Lee Caldwell, and "Bruce Lee: In His Own Words," a behind-the-scenes documentary.

Radio Times

The doyenne of American critics, Pauline Kael, once described Bruce Lee as “the Fred Astaire of martial arts”, and he's at his balletic, brilliant best in this kung fu classic that, tragically, proved to be his last completed film. When his sister commits suicide rather than succumb to the henchmen of a ruthless master criminal, Lee leaves the Shaolin temple where he teaches kung fu and spiritual discipline to become a James Bond-like secret agent. When he arrives at an island fortress to take part in a notoriously brutal martial arts tournament, he finds himself having to smash an opium ring and a white slavery racket, as well as fight for his own life. Director Robert Clouse broadens the action from the intimacy of Lee's earlier movies, in the process producing a series of fast, furious, intricate and athletic fight scenes that, in the opinion of many aficionados, have yet to be bettered. John Saxon and Jim Kelly provide muscular support, but it's the Hong Kong cast that catches the eye, notably Yang Sze who is still one of chop-socky's most hissable villains. It's clear just why the Lee legend lives on.

Rating of 1 stars out of 5
Halliwell's Film Guide

The first Hollywood-based Kung Fu actioner; not bad, on the lines of a more violent James Bond.

Highest rated reviews

9 out of 9 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 5.0 stars
Enter the Dragon, Exit bad reviews please

Colin Johnstone from Arbroath, Scotland, 9th September, 2004

Bruce Lee was a legend for many reasons. watch this and discover one of them. Ok, the greatest film in the world, it ain't, but does that really matter when it has got the greatest martial artist of all times in it, at the peak of his mind-boggling abilities. The low-budget Bond film tag is unfair when all we have now are low-budget Bruce Lee's trying to copy THE MAN and failing miserably on every score.

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7 out of 7 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 5.0 stars
Pure Martial Arts Excellency

DeMonAz from Wirral, UK, 25th March, 2005

This may not be the best film for storyline or acting but the pure talent of Bruce Lee shines through like you wouldn't believe. Seeing the mind-blowing speed of Bruce Lee is amazing enough even before you consider that they actually had to slow him down so it wasn't a total blur on camera! Bruce Lee is an excellent philosophist also and a few snippets are portrayed in this film. If you like martial arts at all you will love this film. It shows how great an action film can be without using effects/CGI and without using the horrible 'chaos camera' that moves about so fast you can't see what's happening properly to make up for the actor's lack of talent which seems to be very cliched these days. It's just a shame Bruce wasn't around to see the premiere of his last proper film.

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6 out of 8 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 4.0 stars
waaawwwwww

AlanB from Scotland, 5th October, 2003

I have to say, the movie is no better than average if you take film quality alone into account, and would have earned a rating of 3 stars if it weren't for Bruce Lee being involved. You watch a movie like this for the martial arts, not for it's lighting and dialogue, so take all that in mind and what you're left with is genius. Bruce Lee was a martial arts genius, no doubt about it. Forget the special effects of Matrix, as good as Reeves is (and yes, he COULD whoop your ass!) a lot of the Matrix is effects-aided - Bruce is 100% talent.

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2 out of 2 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 3.0 stars
Good martial arts action.

Alexander Howard from Nottingham, 3rd August, 2005

This film is famous for many reasons, which I'm sure you know. To be honest, in many ways it doesn't live up to the hype that surrounds it. It's worth seeing for Bruce Lee in his full glory but modern martial arts films make it look silly by comparison. Don't rent this expecting anything like Crouching Tiger or Hero.

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Most recent reviews

Rated 5.0 stars
simply the best

cfcbluez7114 from , 24th March, 2010

seen it millons of times always was the best kung-fu film ive ever seen fight seens was amazing well worth watching again and again..

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Rated 5.0 stars
I would say the best martial film made.

Tonysfilms from , 31st October, 2009

You have to like martial arts films anyway and if you don't you wouldn't apreciate this film. For me, this is the best martial art film ever made. Bruce Lee is fantastic.

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0 out of 1 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 1.0 stars
Hollywood tripe

PaulTheHat from from Sunderland, 9th June, 2009

I love the original Bruce Lee films, and it is shocking how bad a job Hollywood made of this film. The addition of a white co-star who can hardly fight (though he is supposed to be able to) and a script that makes you whince are two of its many flaws. Cheesy beyond belief - even the fight scenes are poor compared to his earlier films. Avoid

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Rated 3.0 stars
So seventies

A Customer from Manchester, 24th May, 2009

Rented this for nostalgia and so my ten year old could see the fight scenes, I skipped the scene where Bruce Lee's sister dies and the sex scene so she didn't see those. Showed how much fight choreography has progressed since then. Bruce Lee was still very charismatic. Highly recommended

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