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Dragon Fist | |
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Directed by | Lo Wei |
Written by | Wang Chung-pin |
Produced by | Hsu Li-hwa Lo Wei |
Starring |
|
Cinematography | Chen Yung-hsu |
Edited by | Leung Wing-chan |
Music by | Frankie Chan |
Distributed by | Lo Wei Motion Picture Company |
Release date |
|
Running time | 93 minutes[1] |
Country | Hong Kong |
Language | Mandarin |
Box office | HK$1 million (Hong Kong) 246,046 tickets (overseas) |
Dragon Fist (simplified Chinese: 龙拳; traditional Chinese: 龍拳, also known as Dangsang Martial Arts or The Wild Big Boss)[2] is a 1979 Hong Kong martial arts film directed by Lo Wei. It stars Jackie Chan, Nora Miao, James Tien, Yen Shi-kwan, Eagle Han-ying, and Wu Wen-sau.
Tang How-yuen (Jackie Chan) is a disciple of kung fu master San-thye. San-thye wins a martial arts tournament, only to be killed by evil kung fu master, Master Li (Yen Shi-kwan). Tang tries unsuccessfully to fight Chung, and leaves the evil master unharmed. Tang, along with San-thye's wife and daughter head after the killer to seek revenge. When they find him, Chung has repented and has cut off his own leg as penance. The master's widow becomes ill, so Tang goes to work for a gang in order to get her medicine. However, whilst in their employ, he is blamed for the death of a young boy, and San-Thye's widow is poisoned. Tang and the one-legged master join forces to defeat the evil lord who poisoned San-thye's widow.
Like Chan's Spiritual Kung Fu, Dragon Fist was filmed in South Korea in early 1978 but was unable to be released or produced because the studio went bankrupt and was running out of money. As a result, both Lo Wei productions only had cost-cutting measures after Chan returned from his loan deal with Seasonal Films, where he made Snake in the Eagle's Shadow and Drunken Master alongside director Yuen Woo-ping. During the production, Chan reportedly had his nose broken repeatedly, joking "Do you think I was born with this nose?"[3] Unlike most of Jackie Chan's early films, Dragon Fist had a more serious tone, with little in the way of comedic moments.[4]
Like many other Hong Kong kung fu films, the film was scored with various musical cues from American films, mainly Jerry Goldsmith's 1966 score for The Sand Pebbles.[5]
The film was released in Hong Kong on 21 April 1979.[6] The film grossed HK$1,004,000 at the Hong Kong box office in 1979.[2] Overseas, the film sold 103,261 tickets in Seoul City (South Korea)[7][8] and 142,785 tickets in France (where it was released in 1982),[9] for a combined 246,046 tickets sold overseas in Seoul and France.