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Game of Death

1978 [CN]

Action / Crime / Drama / Thriller

Plot summary


Uploaded by: OTTO

Top cast

Colleen Camp Photo
Colleen Camp as Ann Morris
Chuck Norris Photo
Chuck Norris as Fighter
Bruce Lee Photo
Bruce Lee as Billy Lo
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
725.84 MB
1280*544
cn 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 40 min
P/S ...
1.63 GB
1920*1080
cn 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 40 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by bkoganbing3 / 10

Ghost film of Bruce Lee

I'm not a real big fan of martial arts films and don't tend to watch and review them. This one got me curiosity aroused as Game Of Death came out in 1978 and Bruce Lee left this world in 1973.

With outtakes, scenes from previous films, and body doubles a film was cobbled together involving a martial arts movie star who is being threatened and pressured to join up with a promotional outfit that has mob ties. Lee or some double thereof gets worked over a bit and loses some matches. Lee's girlfriend singer Colleen Camp is also being threatened.

The villains are Dean Jagger head of the promotion group and his chief enforcer Hugh O'Brian. Jagger overacts outrageously, O'Brian is a bit more circumspect in his performance. O'Brian's is not uunlike the one he did as Pulsipher the gambler in The Shootist.

The Hollywood precedent for this is Jean Harlow having a double finish Saratoga and Robert Walker with outtakes from Strangers On A Train used to finish My Son John. Neither of those was anything to write home about, but they beat this.

This was Gig Young's farewell performance and he was barely summoning any kind of resolve to play an investigative reporter. Chuck Norris is in this as a sparring partner of Lee's. And so is Kareem Abdul Jabbar all 7 feet of him playing a martial arts bodyguard to Jagger. His fight scene with Lee and whoever else was quite something.

Still I don't think the results justified the effort.

Reviewed by Leofwine_draca4 / 10

Disjointed and embarrassing

Although this is best viewed as a curiosity piece, it still manages to pack in some fun martial arts fights during the running time - most of which take place within the last twenty minutes. Up until then, the "entertainment" comes from watching a poor double of Lee trying to hide his face from the camera in any way possible (wearing hats, helmets, huge dark sunglasses, and a fake beard),scenes which are occasionally interspersed with poor stock footage and clips of Lee from other movies to make it look as it he is in the film...at one point his face being pasted onto another actor!

Inevitably, due to the fact that Lee was dead before this film was made and that they had to base the story around 11 minutes of fights he had previously filmed, it's a muddled and disjointed affair, but considering what they were up against, I think the editing guys did a fairly good job with this. The best that they could have, at least. Robert Clouse (who had already made his mark with ENTER THE DRAGON) isn't a particularly good director, but he keeps the action flowing smoothly and ensues that things never get boring.

Kicking off with some neat self-referencing (Lee fights a young Chuck Norris, in a scene actually filmed for an earlier movie of his yet ripped off here),we are immediately introduced to a diverse group of multi-cultural bad guys for Lee to fight. Yes, the plot is simplistic in the extreme and consists of mostly action-orientated scenes, but it's a solid basis for what is basically a martial arts movie like this. The actors and actresses drafted in to make sense of the plot are totally wasted - Colleen Camp appears and disappears as Lee's on/off girlfriend - yet the fact that they have never actually acted with Lee is quite well hidden.

For the first hour, things are pretty average, including the martial arts scenes. The viewer sits arounds waiting until Bruce Lee himself shows up, battling a couple of experts before fighting the basketball star Kareem Abdul Jabbar (the difference in their sizes is incredible),which is a superb fight scene and the best part of the movie. After this, Lee reverts back to a double for the ending. Fans with a morbid interest in Lee's death will be interested to see a brief-but-real shot of his corpse in the film - he had a public funeral with an open coffin, and you might have guessed that somebody with a camera would happen to be there at just the right time.

Reviewed by MartinHafer4 / 10

A Bruce Lee movie that appears to have been edited by Ed Wood, Jr.!!

Let me explain the above comment. In the horrible movie PLAN 9 FROM OUTER SPACE, writer/director Ed Wood, Jr. incorporated some footage he'd shot of Bela Lugosi just before Bela's death. While the footage had nothing to do with the script for PLAN 9, Wood decided to "cleverly" use this film and hash out Lugosi's role by having a much taller guy (a dentist by the way) hold a cape over his face in all the Lugosi scenes not available in the original reel of footage! The result, not surprisingly, is horrid. Now all of the reason for PLAN 9 being named the worst movie ever made wasn't all due to the Lugosi footage, but it was one of the main factors contributing to the pure crappiness of the film.

In the case of GAME OF DEATH, some initial footage had been shot back in 1972 but was temporarily shelved in order to finish another Lee film. But, Lee's untimely death left about 30 or 40 minutes of unusable footage. So, the studio big-shots decided to "pull an Ed Wood" and use the old footage and write an entire movie around it--using extras and irrelevant footage to make a "coherent" film. Well, the result wasn't great but at least it was a good bit better than PLAN 9! As far as integrating a dead guy into a movie, the results were often pretty pathetic. Now I am NOT saying they shouldn't have made the movie. Instead, they should have just admitted that they were using a double and not even bothered trying to fool the audience--it just wasn't possible! Having an extra wearing sunglasses inside and out just looked stupid and playing the part straight, without stupid tricks, would have been better. A couple other stupid "tricks" they tried to make a coherent film included cutting closeup shots of Lee into scenes where he obviously wasn't acting! His clothes and the backgrounds just didn't match the double! The worst case was near the beginning when Lee was supposedly almost killed by a falling light. The close up was of the Real Lee--standing outside against a brick wall. But, the scene was filmed INSIDE and there was no brick wall! This was true Ed Wood editing!!! Even worse was one scene where they literally pasted Lee's face over another person's face for a very brief scene! Clutch Cargo episodes were constructed better than this! Probably the creepiest aspect of all this was that Bruce's son, Brandon, also died prematurely while filming THE CROW and the studio did pretty much the same trick (though with modern computer techniques it did look better). In addition, to add another creepier element, Brandon was killed in an on-set accident where he was killed by a prop gun---something that is in the plot of GAME OF DEATH--when a bad guy pretends to be using a prop gun but really shoots Bruce in the face!!!! This is just so surreal and sick. Also surreal and sick is seeing Gig Young in his final film--just months before he killed himself and his partner! This truly seemed like a cursed production! While I am trashing the film, I may as well point out a few other things before I actually go on to praise the film. First, while I greatly enjoyed watching Chuck Norris BRIEFLY at the beginning of the film, somebody should have told him to shave his back hair!!! Chuck just looked like some sort of missing link with all that hair--a major turn off and something I am surprised made it into both this film and another Lee picture, RETURN OF THE DRAGON. Second, the female co-star Colleen Camp very ably sang the final song in the film but when they show her singing earlier in the movie, she's obviously out of sync with the music.

Now apart from the MANY serious flaws with the film, let's talk about the good. While a tad cheesy, the overall production values were pretty good (apart from the way they dealt with Lee)--especially for a kung-fu movie. Seeing the American supporting actors (especially a foul-mouthed elderly Dean Jagger) was pretty interesting and the music for the film was exceptional. The opening titles were highly reminiscent of a James Bond film and the recurring strains throughout the film were very clearly inspired by the music from ON HER MAJESTY'S SECRET SERVICE. Plus, the effects and fight scenes were pretty good throughout.

Despite occasionally seeing tiny glimpses of Lee in the first 2/3 of the film, he is the clear star of the final portion of the film--the only portion of the movie that should have included Lee in my opinion. Here, he does perhaps his best stunt-work ever and the battles are well worth seeing for fans of the genre. In particular, seeing Lee fight Kareem Abdul-Jabbar was majorly cool. It really is a shame that such great material was never used the way it was originally intended. For fans of Lee, this is STILL a must-see film, but for most others it's a mixed bag--a lot of good and a lot of really, really, REALLY bad editing.

FYI--In the wonderful kung fu comedy, SHAOLIN SOCCER, the goalie is clearly meant to look and act just like Bruce Lee. In fact, his yellow outfit is a copy of Lee's in the finale of GAME OF DEATH. This was a cute little homage to Lee.

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