Hong Kong circa 1973. Lee, a member of a Shaolin Temple, is a master of the physical and spiritual disciplines of the martial arts, and is being visited by Braithwaite, a British law officer. Lee has been invited to a tri-annual martial arts tournament held on an island owned by Han, a reclusive billionaire who was once a member of the Temple but has now become a renegade. Braithwaite believes Han uses his tournaments as cover for narcotic and prostitution activities. Lee reluctantly agrees to enter the tournament, but his reluctance to confront Han disappears when a Shaolin monk reveals that... during the previous staging of this tournament, he and Lee's sister were accosted by several toughs led by Han's personal bodyguard, an American named O'Hara. In the ensuing confrontation the monk cut a deep scar on O'Hara's face but Lee's sister ultimately perished, and at her gravesite Lee vowes revenge for her death. Also attending the tournament are two American martial arts experts, John Roper and Kelly Williams, who served together in Vietnam and took differing paths toward martial arts upon their discharge - Roper is on the run from Mafia gambling debt collectors, while Williams was accosted by two racist cops whom he'd dispatched before stealing their car to escape. All three will soon find themselves at the mercy of Han and his army of martial arts fighters as he protects his underground factory of narcotics and prostitution.
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Enter the Dragon In the film that saw Bruce Lee finally achieve true global stardom, the Dragon takes on an entire army on a remote island. And wins. The chop-socky film to beat them all
This is the film that made Bruce Lee a global, if sadly posthumous, star. It finds the chop-socky icon entering a martial arts contest on a remote island ruled by the psychotic, iron claw-wielding drug baron Shih Kien.
Lee (Lee) believes that the right-hand man of Han (Kien) is responsible for the death of his sister and, assisted by the friendly-to-American-audiences pairing of Jim Kelly and B-movie veteran John Saxon, mucho fighting ensues.
Yet, even if the plot and a good deal of ...
Same old Roper...not just old rope
Quite possibly the best martial arts film in history. You can't argue with a film that has Lee smacking down so many people, and one that has John Saxon trying to perform laughable Kung Fu in the tightest trousers in history.
A true classic, with some truly classic sequences and wonderful lines. The kung fu work is masterful (as always with Lee) - none of this modern-day wannabe over-the-top wire work - and where there was wirework you can't see it that obviously.
If you want a brilliant film that will keep you entertained and hooked from start to finish, watch Enter The Dragon. It tries, and succeeds, to be a top-notch, classic, and utterly unforgettable martial arts f...
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sure this movie looks old but never gets old. awesome fighting scenes by the greatest martial artist of all-time. bruce lee's last and best film he ever made. you cannot miss. 3 of 4 stars very good.