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Bruce Lee filmography

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bruce Lee filmography
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This article details the filmography of Hong Kong-American actor and martial artist Bruce Lee.

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Several of Lee's films premiered after his death, including Enter the Dragon, Game of Death and Circle of Iron.

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Filmography

Feature films

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Released posthumously

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Box office performance

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Television appearances

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Note: all the series produced after Lee's death (1973) feature archival footage of Lee.

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Documentaries

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Note: all the documentaries listed here were produced after Lee's death; therefore, all the Lee footage is composed of archive footage and some never-before-seen footage.

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Video games

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Note 1: In Super Mario RPG, when Mario is about to fight a boss, his comrade Mallow stops him and says "Who do you think you are? Bruce Lee? You can't go in there with your fists flying!"

Note 2: Check Kim Dragon in World Heroes (1992), World Heroes 2 (1993), World Heroes Jet (1994) and World Heroes Perfect (1995).

Note 3: Check Marshall Law in Tekken (1994), Tekken 2 (1995), Tekken 3 (1996), Tekken 4 (2002), Tekken 5 (2005), Tekken 6 (2007) and Tekken 7 (2016) as well as Forest Law in Tekken Tag Tournament (1999), Marshall Law and Forest Law in Tekken Tag Tournament 2 (2011).

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Music videos

1975Robert LeeBruce Lee's brother released an album entitled "The Ballad of Bruce Lee".[4]
2001LMFHip-hop band from Hong Kong released a song with videoclip called "1127".[5]

Bruceploitation films

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See also

Notes

  1. When The Big Boss was being prepared for American distribution, the U.S. release was to be re-titled The Chinese Connection, a play on the popular The French Connection, since both dealt with drug trafficking. The U.S. title of Lee's second film, Fist of Fury, was to be kept nearly the same, except using the plural Fists. However, the titles were accidentally reversed. The Big Boss was released as Fists of Fury and Fist of Fury became The Chinese Connection.[1]
  2. In the United States and Canada, the film earned $2.4 million in theatrical rentals.[2] This was equivalent to estimated box office gross receipts of approximately $8 million.[3]
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References

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