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Enter The Game Of Death [1978] [DVD]

2 out of 5 stars 2 customer reviews

7 used from Â£1.49

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Product details

  • Actors: Bruce Le, Bolo Yeung, Chi Ling Chiu, Michael B. Christy, Steve James
  • Directors: Joseph Velasco, Kuo-Hsiang Lin
  • Writers: Kwon Yong
  • Producers: Robert Jeffery, Robert Jeffrey
  • Format: PAL
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: 15
  • Studio: Showbox Home Entertainment
  • DVD Release Date: 22 Sept. 2003
  • Run Time: 87 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B0000BXBZD
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 28,581 in DVD & Blu-ray (See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray)

Product Description

Product Description

Hong Kong martial arts action. With China facing invasion from Japan and Germany during World War Two, the unstoppable Chang (Bruce Le) is hired by a mysterious group to break into an office building and steal a secret document that could affect the outcome of the war.

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Top Customer Reviews

Format: DVD Verified Purchase
A Brucesploitation movie "super starring" Bruce Le, who is asked to help retrieve some sensitive Chinese documents before they fall into Japanese (boohiss!) hands. He declines to help them though until his cousin is man handled behind a bush and then he goes into impersonation overdrive as he dons his yellow jumpsuit, begins to make strange chicken noises and joins the good guys in defeating an army of losers in wacky outfits...

This movie is literally none stop action from beginning to end, as Bruce Le first enters a tournament - to beat up Bolo Yeung!.. Then pulls off his best Bruce Lee impression as he navigates a tower of super fighters, until all hell eventually breaks loose in the grounds of the tower and he takes on all comers.

An obvious rip off of what you'd think..
Does he sound and look like Bruce Lee? Well yeah, a bit.
Is he as cool as Bruce Lee? Err... No!
Does he fight some dude with nunchucks? Yes!
Is Kareem Abdul Jabbar in it? No.
But does he at least fight a giant black dude? Yes.

In truth it gets rather boring after a while.. Suffering from just too much Bruce Lee rip off action. With a next to none existent plot and the same extras being beat up in the same ways for almost 80m of a 90m film.
Of course Le tries his hardest and doesn't do too bad a job, considering it's an impossible act to follow.. But let's face it, he's no substitute for the genuine article.
By all accounts though (don't quote me, it's just what I've read) Bruce Le was a genuinely good martial artist and ran his own school. He was sent to prison for fraud (not related to his Bruce Lee impressions!) and has remained in obscurity ever since, refusing to be interviewed because he thinks people hate him for cashing in on Lee's death.
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Format: DVD
This film plods along, filled with mediocre fights and a non-existent plot. Bruce Le tries to imitate Lee's mannerism but looks like an agitated chimp. Even the opening scene,(which overuses slow motion) steals the Enter the Dragon theme tune, making the whole film seem like a bunch of borrowed, watered down ideas in no particular order. Easily one of the poorest Game of Death imitators.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)

Amazon.com: HASH(0x87eb6e34) out of 5 stars 2 reviews
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful
HASH(0x88460ea0) out of 5 stars Game of Death 25 April 2000
By Rob Found - Published on Amazon.com
Enter the Game of Death was originally released as Game of Death 2, though both titles try to emphasize the fact that they feature the great Bruce Lee. In reality, Bruce Lee appears only briefly, playing the part of older brother Bobby Lo,to the true star of the film playing his younger, wilder, brother Billy. Bobby is investigating the death of his master Chin-Ku when he is killed at the funeral, and as expected in a kung-fu movie, someone has to avenge his death. Undisciplined Billy Lo arrives on the scene at his brother's funeral, in which they use the actual footage of Bruce Lee's funeral. He reads an inspirational letter from his brother,and reads his brothers book on kung-fu, which of course is the real book that Bruce Lee wrote on his martial art style of Jeet Kune Do. From there,Billy learns discipline, deals with the temptation of a prostitute sent to assissinate him, fights a lion, discovers a secret temple built upside down into the earth,and discovers what really happened to both his brother and master Chin-Ku. He exacts his revenge in a lengthy final fight scene, and everything wraps up nicely. The film has a more involved plot than most martial arts movies,which gives it a leg up on the competition, and builds on that with both variety and quality of fighting sequences. Opening with a beautiful swordsmanship form, it flows swiftly from action packed scene,to action packed scene. Bruce Lee has his only real fight early on in the film, taking on Tae-kwon-do master in a poorly lit greenhouse. It is one of the fastest and most exciting bits in the film, and it is unfortunate only in that it is all Bruce Lee does himself. The actor playing his brother, unbelievably, is nearly as good as Bruce himself. An incredibly tough act to follow, he performs spectacularly in a fight against a one handed servant, a bearded white man that drinks deer blood, a multitude of nondescript guards,and a beautiful sequence with a monk armed with a staff. It is the final fight that shows just how good a fighter this guy is, taking on Chin-Ku and his deadly sword in a lengthy battle that is mind-boggling in it's artistry. A film lost in the shuffle of the main Bruce Lee films, this film is vastly superior to any of them, save for Enter the Dragon.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful
HASH(0x887ca7b0) out of 5 stars The late kung fu master's name is dishonored yet again 26 Dec. 2002
By BD Ashley - Published on Amazon.com
This movie is, to put it mildly, an abomination on Bruce Lee's name. Released seven years after his death, the new footage is shoddily edited with some scenes of Lee to try and make a sequel to one of Lee's most famous films. There is practically nothing to recommend GAME OF DEATH 2. One of the earlier reviews says that Lee imposter Bruce Le (star of MY NAME CALLED BRUCE, a very obscure chop socky flick) stars instead. Simply, this movie is garbage, shame on Raymond Chow for producing this. When will people realise there was only one Bruce Lee, and the Bruce Le's, Li's, Lai's should be ashamed as well. My advice is don't watch this, check out GAME OF DEATH 1 or ENTER THE DRAGON again and see THE REAL MAN in action!!
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