Bruce Lee, Dan Inosanto, James Tien, Robert Wall, Sammo Hung, Yuen Biao Tags: Escrima, Golden Harvest, karate, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Kung-fu, martial arts, Robert Clouse
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Starring Bruce Lee, Dan Inosanto, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar,
Robert Wall, Sammo Hung, Yuen Biao, Kim Tai Jong, James Tien
Fight Choreography for Bruce Leeās fights by Bruce Lee
Fight Choreography for everyone else by Sammo Hung and Yuen Biao
Directed by Robert Clouse
Letās get one thing cleared up first: Game of Death is not Bruce Leeās last film. That moniker belongs to Enter the Dragon, and to that film alone. Game of Death could be best described as a compilation/tribute/b-sides album. The film compiles memorable scenes from Bruceās earlier films, new scenes shot by a bunch of fake Bruces (Yuen Biao being one of them) and the final fights that feature the actual Bruce Lee.
Was it a good tribute to Bruce? In a small way.
Was it a grab for more cash after the success of Enter the Dragon? Hell yes.
Bruce Leeāor actually his body doublesāstars as Billy Lo, a martial arts film star who is filming a scene with Chuck Norris (archived scenes from Way of the Dragon) when a light from above crashes on the ground near him, stopping production. During these scenes you see Bruce from behind only, and I just knew this was gonna be a long film. I almost died laughing when they would show Bruce speaking to different people from behind, and then Bruceās reaction shots would be clipped scenes from his other films. Anyway, some douchy fight promotor who works for some shadowy company called the Syndicate wants Billy to fight in the ring, and Billy slaps the guy away. Shit, the real Bruce wouldāve slapped the guy through the door. During this scene they had the audacity to actually superimpose a cut out of Bruceās head on the actorās body!
Anyway, we then cut to the Meeting of Evil Villians, where the same douchy promotor and his lackeys played by Robert Wall (whatās the deal with him being Bruceās bitch?) and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar decide to beat Billy into signing the contract. Billy goes out to dinner that night with his girlfriend played by Colleen Camp, when he gets ambushed by some of douchyās men. This first fight of Fake Bruce is exactly what you would expect-badly shot scenes of a guy trying to pretend to be Bruce, but isnāt even close.
This brings me to what would be common theme in this film until you get near the end: Billy gets his ass kicked. A lot. WTF?! Okay, I can accept a lot of things, but the sight of a couple of hired thugs beating up someone who is supposed to be BRUCE LEE just kills me. Iām surprised Bruce not only didnāt roll around in his grave at this, but didnāt outright punch his way back to the land of the living so he could smack Robert Clouse around for a second, telling him what the hell, man?! There is not one scene, in any of Bruceās films, where anyoneāand I mean no oneākicks his ass. Yeah, some guys get their shots in, but Bruce NEVER LOSES. Itās not boring, thatās just Bruce. He doesnāt lose. And who would be equal to him for him to lose to? Nobody, thatās who. And yet in several fight scenes with Fake Bruce, he gets his ass owned by everyone, hell even Robert Wall. He punches and kicks these thugs, and they get right back up. If Real Bruce hits them, they aināt gettinā back up.
Before long Billy is shot on the set of his film, but isnāt killed, and with the help of an old friend stages what has to be the absolute worst scene ever filmed, lacking in any amount of taste whatsoever. Any respect I mightāve had for Robert Clouse died right at this moment. Billy fakes his own death, and the funeral scenes were ACTUAL FOOTAGE OF BRUCEāS FUNERAL. That takes some balls, but holy shit that was a dung pile of bad decision making to allow it into a fictional film.
Not long afterward I was able to briefly set aside my disdain by watching a fight between Robert Wall and Sammo Hung, which was actually well doneāno where near Sammoās normal qualityābut well done nevertheless. It allowed Sammo to show off some fancy moves before Robert Wall kicks his ass, and then in turn gets his ass killed by Fake Bruce following this fight. Iāll say this for Mr. Wall, he always looks great getting his ass kicked.
Soon Billyās girlfriend is kidnapped by Douchy, and Billy frees her and goes after Douchy and his boys, and here is where Real Bruce returns for the final fights between himself and Dan Inosanto, nunchuck to nunchuck, a fight with another karate master, and the crowning moment, the fight between Bruce and his real life student NBA superstar Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Each fight is great in itās own way, and the fight with Kareem is fantastic, a study of fighting while facing a great size disadvantage (it could be argued both ways) and Kareem does a great job here.
After that we go back to Fake Bruce and he has to fight Douchy, in a fight that tries to make Douchy feel like a threat, but his isnāt, and is weakly killed and the film thankfully ends. This is really a horrid film, but I get what they wanted to do. They tried to honor the memory of Bruce and to make sure that audiences would feel that absence would make the heart grow fonder, and at least in this film, it succeeds.
(On a scale of 1-10, 10 being the best)
CHOREOGRAPHY: (4) Sammo tried his best to choreograph fights the way Bruce wouldāve, but without the secret ingredient of Bruce, none of it works. Sammoās fight with Robert Wall was the best non-real Bruce Lee fight in the entire film.
BRUCEāS CHOREOGRAHY: (8) For what there was, was terrific. The fight with Kareem was a classic. The last we would ever get from Bruce.
STUNTS: (3) Not much here. Some good acrobatic here and there, but thatās about it.
STAR POWER: (8) There really was a lot of star power from the martial arts world here. Too bad that power was used in this film.
FINAL GRADE: (4) Only the Bruce fights, because they are classic, keeps this film from getting a lower grade that this. Unfortunately the success of this film would spawn the legion of fake Bruces to follow, and an insipid sequel.
10/10