Although
Manor On Movies originated earlier,
my first national pro bylines came
in martial arts magazines. Once you start
to cappice the arts, it's pretty tough
NOT to put Bruce Lee on your Heroes List.
That would be akin to taking up the guitar
but failing to be impressed by Jimi Hendrix
(born November 27th in Seattle
same as Lee!)
Count me in as one who developed
a strong admiration for Bruce. I've got
an ENTER THE DRAGON tracksuit and GAME
OF DEATH nunchakus; two framed lithos
of Lee have hung on my bedroom wall for
decades; when ghouls opened a "Bruce
Lee Theater" locally playing
nothing but third-rate garbage, none of
which contained a single frame of Bruce
I contacted widow Linda Lee so
her suits could run the creeps out of
town; and as a vid shop employee, I refused
to rent customers the despicably titled
BRUCE LEE FIGHTS BACK FROM THE GRAVE.
Why, I even hung around
a notorious gin joint called the B&L
(you know, as in Bruce & Linda) Tavern
until the state shut the dive down...
albeit there was absolutely no correlation
between haunting that particular asylum
and my interest in jeet kune do...
except, perhaps, in the number of punches
thrown per night.
As in the case of Hendrix,
Dr. J, Bruno Sammartino et al, I'm no
fanatic, but obviously take those on my
Heroes List pretty seriously. Having gone
through all the above to establish that,
I give you this issue's feature presentation,
BRUCE LEE IN NEW GUINEA.
HUUUUUUH??? "But, Stately,
how can someone who professes to be a
staunch defender of 'the Dragon's' legacy
tout such an obvious rip-off?" I'll
tell you how: because this pic is so enjoyably
goofy, I can't be offended by it!
BRUCE
LEE IN NEW GUINEA stars Chan Sing, and
concerns the adventures of anthropologist
Wong Lee on Snake Worship Island. So much
for truth in advertising. But why quibble?
It's not every day one witnesses a jilted
suitor declare "Princess, you're
a slut!" or a man in a gorilla suit
defending bare Oriental bathing beauties.
(Mmm, naked Chinese chicks.)
Wong Lee and his buddy Chin
Sehk journey to S.W. Island (no relation
to S.W. Manor) to study its people and
their martial arts. There, they discover
the nice Snake tribe has come under the
rule of devious bullies from the Devil
Sect, their main meanie being the Great
Wizard (no relation to the Grand Wizard),
a kung fu killer with a poisonous pinkie
ring.
Pretty Princess Ankawa finds
Wong unconscious, a victim of the Wizardâs
venomous right hook. Cleverly counteracting
the deadly drug, Ankawa slips into the
sack with the fallen fighter. I'd like
to see Dr. Quinn M.D. top that.
After several doses of Ankawa's
antidote, the World's Happiest Patient
must leave the isle for a while. Upon
his return, Princess A. presents him with
a surprise "Welcome back" package
their illegitimate son! In a completely
unpredictable finale I mean, you
would NEVER have guessed this was going
to happen Wong whips the Wiz, making
Snake Worship Island a safe place for
Wong Junior and potential fast food chain
investors.
SELECTED SHORTS:
I can't blame Wong for taking a shine
to Ankawa. Dolled up in her leopard skin
miniskirt and matching platform boots,
she has the appearance of a leftover groupie
from the last Mott The Hoople tour. (Mmm,
babes dressed in slutwear.)
Although Bruce has dozens
of noteworthy scenes, one in particular
is a real standout. The Wizard's dimwit
son places a curse on the baby by attaching
a tiny snake to the kid's face. Rather
than waste a couple hundred yen on makeup,
the filmmakers superimposed a squiggly
Magic Marker line to represent the reptile.
This innovative technical effect is most
convincing when the line remains in the
same place onscreen even though the child
moves his head.
And what's the film's superextratoocool
bonus? Videos and DVDs in this genre are
readily available for $4.95 or less. Taking
the title's initials into account, that
means you can get "BLING" for
under a five-spot thousands of
times less than your favorite hip-hoppers
lay out!!!
Incidentally,
if you're in the mood for an intentionally
funny martial arts offering, get an eyeful
of KUNG POW: ENTER THE FIST. Clever Caucasian
Steve Oedekerk, clearly very familiar
with m/a period pieces, not only did the
old "Overdub with laugh-laden dialogue"
routine, but also used modern technical
tricks to place himself in the heart of
the storyline (and add visual gags like
a Hooters sign over the entrance to a
19th century Chinese establishment.)
The integration between
Oedekerk's 2002 footage and the original
is so seamless, I'd bet many viewers didn't
even realize what they were witnessing;
and the tone is affectionate rather than
ridiculing.
Best of all, KUNG POW is
nutty enough that even those not familiar
with so-called "chop-socky"
films should get a gaggle of giggles out
of it. In fact, I strongly suggest tracking
down both kickathons for a rib-tickling
(and -cracking) double feature. Otherwise,
I may have to give you the mysterious
dim mak delayed death touch.
Oh, you heard the death
touch is only a myth, something shilled
to suckers in the ads on inside covers
of comic books, next to the sea monkeys
and X-ray specs? Maybe you think this
stuff is all a big joke, a bunch of ancient
Asian mumbo-jumbo to mock and deride.
Sure, you can write off dim mak,
ninjutsu and the like as so much
"kung-phooey." But do you R-E-A-L-L-Y
want to take that risk... especially considering
we know where you live?