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Jackie Chan Movies

One of the most popular film personalities in the world, Jackie Chan came from a poverty-stricken Hong Kong family -- so poor, claims Chan, that he was almost sold in infancy to a wealthy British couple. As it turned out, Chan became his family's sole support. Enrolled in the Chinese Opera Research Institute at the age of seven, he spent the next decade in rigorous training for a career with the Peking Opera, excelling in martial arts and acrobatics.
Billed as Cheng Lung, Chan entered films in his mid-teens, appearing in 25 productions before his 20th birthday. Starting out as a stunt man, Chan was promoted to stardom as the potential successor to the late Bruce Lee. In his earliest starring films, he was cast as a stone-cold serious type, determined to avenge Lee's death. Only when he began playing for laughs did Chan truly attain full celebrity status. Frequently referred to as the Buster Keaton of kung-fu, Chan's outlook on life is a lot more optimistic than Keaton's, but in his tireless devotion to the most elaborate of sight gags and the most awe-inspiring of stunts (many of which have nearly cost him his life), Chan is Keaton incarnate.
From 1978's The Young Master onward, Chan has usually been his own director and screenwriter. His best Hong Kong-produced films include the nonstop action-fests Project A (1983), Police Story (1985), Armour of God (1986), and the Golden Horse Award-winning Crime Story (1993) -- not to mention the multiple sequels of each of the aforementioned titles. Despite his popularity in Europe and Asia, Chan was for many years unable to make a dent in the American market. He tried hard in such films as The Big Brawl (1980) and the first two Cannonball Run flicks, but American filmgoers just weren't buying.
At long last, Chan mined U.S. box-office gold with 1996's Rumble in the Bronx, a film so exhilarating that audiences never noticed those distinctly Canadian mountain ranges looming behind the "Bronx" skyline. Chan remained the most popular Asian actor with the greatest potential to cross over into the profitable English-speaking markets, something he again demonstrated when he co-starred with Chris Tucker in the 1998 box-office hit Rush Hour. In 2000 Chan had another success on his hands with Shanghai Noon, a comedy Western in which he starred as an Imperial Guard dispatched to the American West to rescue the kidnapped daughter (Lucy Liu) of the Chinese Emperor.

He maintained his status as one of the biggest movie stars in the world throughout the next decades in a series of films that include Rush Hour 2, The Tuxedo, Shankghai Knights, The Myth, Rush Hour 3. He enjoyed his biggest U.S. hit in quite some time starring in the 2010 remake of The Karate Kid opposite Jaden Smith. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
1971  
R  
Add One-Armed Boxer to Queue Add One-Armed Boxer to top of Queue  
Jimmy Yu Wang (billed simply as Yu Wang) directs and stars in the Cantonese-language One-Armed Boxer, also released as The One-Armed Boxer and the Flying Guillotine. Wang plays the physically challenged but totally self-sufficient master of a colorful martial arts school. His principal antagonist is the sight-impaired Master of the Flying Guillotine. In the film's climax, Wang's students square off against the villain's disciples. The sequel to One-Armed Boxer carries two titles: One-Armed Boxer II and Master of the Flying Guillotine. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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1972  
 
A low-level slave (Jackie Chan) becomes proficient in martial arts to defeat his enemy. ~ John Bush, Rovi

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1973  
 
This WWII-era war drama chronicles the effect of Japanese occupation upon their Chinese victims. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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1973  
R  
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One of the most popular kung fu films ever, and perhaps the peak of the famed Bruce Lee's career, Enter the Dragon achieved success by presenting a series of superbly staged fighting sequences with a minimum of distractions. The story finds Lee as a martial-arts expert determined to help capture the narcotics dealer whose gang was responsible for his sister's death. This evil villain operates from a fortified island manned by a team of crack martial artists, who also host a kung fu competition. Lee uses his skills to enter the contest and then tries to chop, kick, and otherwise fight his way into the dealer's headquarter. The story is, of course, merely an excuse for showdown after showdown, featuring masterly fighting by Lee in a wide variety of martial arts styles. Essential viewing for martial arts fans, the film was also embraced by a larger audience, thanks to a fast pace and higher-than-usual production values. ~ Judd Blaise, Rovi

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Starring:
Bruce LeeJohn Saxon, (more)
 
1973  
R  
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Wo Ma directs Meng Fei, Tzi Thian, and Lin Chi in the Hong Kong action film Young Tiger. When Shen Sin is challenged to a fight, he is promptly beaten. He sets about combining a series of fighting methods in order to create a new technique with which he can restore his honor. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi

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1974  
 
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Jackie Chan has a small role in the martial arts action film Rumble in Hong Kong, originally titled Police Woman. Chan plays a gang member who must retrieve a purse from a cab driver's car. The purse contains items that could lend members of the gang in jail. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi

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1976  
PG  
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New Fist of Fury stars Jackie Chan as A Lung, a kung fu master who is hired to help protect the Ching Wu Martial Arts School when it comes under attack from Japanese totalitarians. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi

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Starring:
Nora MiaoChang King, (more)
 
1976  
 
Jackie Chan stars in the martial arts action film Shaolin Wooden Men. Little Mute (Chan) refuses to speak after seeing his father murdered. He becomes the pupil of an ex-convict who teaches him kung fu. Eventually he studies Gliding Snake and Drunken Master styles at a Shaolin Monastery. After completing the exhausting 108 wooden men test, Chan is ready to get his revenge. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi

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1976  
R  
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The Chinese Manchus were a northern tribal people who conquered the country and formed the last Imperial dynasty. Most Chinese considered the Manchus to be foreigners. Many patriotic Chinese formed themselves into secret groups and sought martial-arts training at the anti-Imperial Shaolin temple. In this movie, Shih, a former student at the Shaolin temple who has defected to the Manchus, leads in the effort to suppress that temple and the martial arts which came from it. The abbot of that temple is forced to hunt down the renegade monk Shih. He finds unexpected allies on the road. The film was directed by Wu Yu Sen, who later became better known to Western audiences as John Woo. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

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Starring:
James Tien
 
1976  
NR  
Directed by Lo Wei, Killer Meteors is based on a serial by Gu Long, and marks one of Jackie Chan's earliest roles -- namely, the villainous Hua-Wa Bin, one of the two men in the world well versed in a top-secret weapon. Led to believe that his own wife poisoned him, Hua-Wa Bin (Chan) hires "Killer Meteor" Mei Hsi-Ho (Wang Yu) to kill his wife and retrieve the antidote for the poison, despite the fact that Mei has always been his personal nemesis. Complications ensue when it turns out that Hua-Wa's wife is being guarded by a gang of some of the world's most skilled warriors around. Not only that, but her elite bodyguards were armed with a mysterious weapon capable of vaporizing anyone who crossed their paths. Before long, Hua-Wa is forced to jump into the fray in hopes of saving his own precarious existence. ~ Tracie Cooper, Rovi

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Starring:
Jackie Chan
 
1976  
 
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Mao Ling stars as a young girl, well versed in the deadly art of kung-fu. She takes over for her deceased male relatives in doing battle against the fiercest of warriors. The final set-to pits Ling against one as strong and able as she. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Angela Mao Ying
 
1977  
PG13  
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The enormously popular martial-arts star Jackie Chan served as the action director for The 36 Crazy Fists and has a cameo. Wong Tai Kwong's (Tony Leung Siu Hung) father is killed, and he seeks revenge. Learning the intricacies of kicking and slashing from a Shaolin master, he takes on 18 opponents before finally getting his chance to square accounts with his dad's murderer. The supporting cast includes Liu Chia Yung and Jen Shin Kuan. Barely known in the U.S., The 36 Crazy Fists began showing up with reassuring regularity in American video stores after the box-office success of Chan's Rumble in the Bronx. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Tony Leung Siu-hung
 
1977  
NR  
Add To Kill with Intrigue to Queue Add To Kill with Intrigue to top of Queue  
Lo Wei spins this low-budget period epic featuring a young, deadly serious Jackie Chan. As the film opens, the Lei clan face extermination at the hands of a vengeful gang with magic powers called the "Killer Bees," who are bent on righting a 15-year-old wrong. Fearing for his pregnant wife's safety, Sau Lei (Chan) casts Chin-chin out of the house, accusing her of adultery. In the ensuing melee, most of Lei's kin are killed, but Lei's life is spared by Ting Tan-yen (Hsu Feng), the spiteful leader of the Killer Bees. As he hunts the hinterland looking for Chin-chin, Sau Lei joins the Dragon Escort clan and gets terribly injured defending the group's leader. Meanwhile, Chin-chin has taken up residence with the villainous Chin Chun, who leads the ruthless Bloody Rain group. When Chin Chun kills his boss, Sau Lei sets out for bloody revenge. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

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Starring:
Jackie Chan
 
1978  
PG13  
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Following up on his success with his 1978 smash hit Drunken Master, Jackie Chan directs this old school kung-fu-comedy. Lung (Chan) is an orphan being raised in a grim martial arts school run by a strict dour master. During the Lion Dance competition, Lung's buddy, Keung (Wei Pai), jumps ship and helps a rival school win. Keung is immediately kicked out of the school and Lung is sent out to go find him. Meanwhile, Keung falls in with a pair of thugs who are looking to bust the master of the rival school out of prison. The cops headed by the earnest Sam Kung (Shih Kien) mistakes Lung for Keung and eventually captures him. Though Lung easily manages to slip out of the cuffs and evade Kung, his daughter proves to be much harder to lose and a formidable kung-fu to boot. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

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Starring:
Jackie Chan
 
1978  
PG13  
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One of the earliest major films starring Jackie Chan, this 1978 Hong Kong offering highlights the relationship between a student and his martial arts master. This theme would dominate the American martial arts genre for years to come, as evidenced by The Karate Kid and many films to follow. Wong Fei-hong, played by Chan, is a 19th-century folk hero in Chinese culture and cinema, a kung fu master who fights injustice in the time of British colonialism. This character would later be portrayed by Jet Li in the more serious Once Upon a Time in China. Drunken Master finds Wong in his early years as a troublesome youth who is sent to receive discipline and martial arts instruction from his uncle (Siu Tien Yuen), the hard-drinking title character. Wong runs away, but runs afoul of some local villains. Beaten badly, he returns to his uncle, who trains him in "drunken-style" kung fu. The martial arts showcased by Chan in this film are important in the development of his career; the staggering, inebriated techniques allow for a looser, more flowing style, but more importantly, they contribute to the elaborate martial-arts slapstick that have become Chan's trademark and have made him an international star. ~ Jonathan E. Laxamana, Rovi

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Starring:
Jackie ChanSimon Yuen, (more)
 
1978  
PG  
Jackie Chan stars in Spiritual Kung Fu as a smart-alecky martial arts student whose bravery leads to him signing up to defend a supposedly haunted portion of the school. The ghosts end up teaching him a unique style of fighting known as The Five Style Fists. He masters the form, uses it to progress quickly through the ranks of the school, and eventually to survive an attack from a gang of bad guys. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi

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1978  
 
Jackie Chan stars in this period martial arts yarn -- which was originally shot in 3-D -- as Ting Chung, a kung-fu master summoned by a beautiful princess to shepherd her and her ailing brother through the notoriously dangerous "Stormy Hills" to a legendary doctor on the other side. Ting quickly realizes that danger is literally at every turn, and he is forced to contend with murderous fake monks, bandits of every stripe and shape, and a trap-laden temple. When their journey is nearly complete, Ting learns that his clients have not been truthful regarding the real reason of their journey. James Tien and Leung Siu Lung also appear. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

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Starring:
Jackie Chan
 
1978  
NR  
Add Snake and Crane Arts of Shaolin to Queue Add Snake and Crane Arts of Shaolin to top of Queue  
Jackie Chan stars in this straight-ahead kung fu saga directed Chen Chi-hua. The film opens with eight Shaolin masters developing a new, powerful martial-arts technique and writing the form down into a tome called "The Eight Steps of the Snake and Crane." Soon thereafter, the eight masters and the book vanish. Years later, young street punk Hsu Ying Fung (Chan) winds up with the book and has mastered the entire form. Hungry for its secrets, members from a sundry of clans try to seize the book. As it turns out, this is all a plan by the original eight's sole survivor and Hsu's master to suss out who killed his colleagues. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

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Starring:
Jackie ChanNora Miao, (more)
 
1978  
PG  
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Shangkuan I-yun (Hwang Jang-li) has developed the deadly eagle claw style to devastating effect on the follower of the Snake Fist technique, killing all except the group's dithering leader Pai Chang-tien (Simon Yuen Siu-tien). When harried orphan Chien Fu (Jackie Chan) saves Pai's life, the master teaches the youth some of the finer points of the Snake Fist style. When Chien nurses Pai back to health following an ambush by two of Shangkuan's followers, Pai teaches the lad everything he knows. Later, Chien watches with amazement as his pet cat kills a cobra, giving him the beginning of a new deadlier technique that eventually defeats the evil Shangkuan. This film helped created Jackie Chan's winning screen persona as a put-upon everyman and kung-fu comedian. This film proved to be so popular that director Yuen Woo-ping, Simon Yuen, and Chan went on to make the smash hit Drunken Master later that year. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

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1979  
PG  
Add Half a Loaf of Kung Fu to Queue 
Originally made in Hong Kong in 1979, Half a Loaf of Kung Fu was released in the U.S. in 1985. The inimitable Jackie Chan heads the cast of this martial-arts period piece. A valuable emerald jade is stolen when the gem's supposedly invulnerable Sern Chuan bodyguards are bushwhacked by bandits. Only Chan escapes the carnage relatively unscathed. In his usual moralistic, violence-only-when-necessary fashion, Chan sets about to make mincemeat of the bad guys. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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1979  
NR  
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Jackie Chan's first directorial assignment is a showcase for its courageous star, whose considerable reputation rests on his near-masochistic willingness to accept incredible amounts of physical punishment in order to entertain an audience, and, as the title suggests, his ability to laugh about it. Chan plays Shing Lung, a talented but lazy young fighter who disobeys his grandfather's orders not to fight. This proves costly, as the brutal General Yen (Yam Sai-kwoon) is slaughtering all of Shing's grandfather's anti-Ching clan. As soon as Yen hears of Shing's unique fighting style, he hunts down the grandfather (James Tien) and kills him. Shing has to take various jobs (including one as a second-hand coffin salesman) and disguise himself as a pauper and a woman until he is ready to fight the general. Chan Hui-lau plays the crippled master known as the Unicorn, who trains Shing in a deadly form of fighting called "emotional kung-fu," which uses laughter and tears as secret weapons. After a lengthy training sequence in which the long-suffering Chan does 14 sit-ups upside-down without a cut while loudly slamming his back into a tree after each, Shing finally takes on the general and his trio of assistants. For this film, Chan returned to producer Lo Wei's studio to fulfill a contract, then refused to work for the studio again. The producer managed to cobble together a paste-up sequel, Fearless Hyena 2, but was so incensed at Chan that he reportedly used his triad ties to put out a contract on the star, forcing Chan to work in Taiwan for some time rather than returning to Hong Kong. ~ Robert Firsching, Rovi

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Starring:
Jackie Chan
 
1979  
R  
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Jackie Chan headlines this martial arts adventure, one of the most internationally popular films of the genre. The story centers on his use of the ancient technique of Snake-Fist fighting to defeat the villains who murdered his father. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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1980  
NR  
Sammo Hung directs himself and Jackie Chan in the Hong Kong action film Dragon Forever. Chan plays a lawyer who discovers that his client is a drug king. Chan teams up with a hapless friend (Hung) and a mentally unstable associate (Yuen Biao) to stop the kingpin. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi

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