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But still, the Brucesploitation craze continued, thanks to the success of Game of Death especially in Japan and two years later, Golden Harvest yet again raided their vaults of Lee footage and created Game of Death II in 1980. The actual footage of Lee in his now iconic yellow jumpsuit in the final act is worlds away from the rest of the film and his battle with a surprisingly nimble Abdul-Jabaar hints at what we could have had.
For example, when Roper is golfing and Williams is getting hassled by the cops, there are segments during the scenes that look so different in quality they appear as if they are from different sources.Low bass is pretty limited, but there is enough to give the action and score some appreciable weight. His own brother (Tae-jeong Kim) takes up the investigation into a deer blood drinking western martial artist (Roy Horan) and his one-armed manservant and comes across all manner of strangely trained peacocks, a lion attack using a lion suit that makes Bert Lahr’s in The Wizard of Oz look scarily authentic and a Bond villain underground lair that’s a direct copy of your local Rollerama from back in the day.
The revenge flick mostly follows Lo's younger brother Bobby (Tong Lung) trying to avenge his older brother's death, and as good as Lung is in the role, especially in the fight sequences, the character's sleuthing skills are laughably bad, mostly stumbling from one ridiculous clue or lead to another and chatting with hilariously dubious characters that don't actually contribute anything to the plot.If you’re on the fence, pick up Enter the Dragon on DVD and try streaming a few of the set’s films on Arrow Player, the company’s streaming service.