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Jackie Chan First Movies Here

The choreography called for him to leap backward, crash through thin balsa-wood panels, and land on a mattress. But Bruce Lee was a perfectionist. The first two takes, Jackie’s timing was off. On the third take, Lee connected slightly harder than intended. Jackie flew through the door, landed on his neck, and was knocked unconscious for a few seconds. When he woke up, Bruce Lee was leaning over him, genuinely concerned. “Are you okay, kid?” Lee asked. Jackie, dizzy and ecstatic, said, “Yes, Mr. Lee! Again!”

Jackie’s role was minuscule: he played a poor, starving orphan boy who collapses in the snow. The scene required him to lie motionless while “snow” (shredded paper) fell on him. Terrified of Master Yu, who stood just off-camera with a bamboo cane, Jackie did not dare to flinch. He held his breath, tears freezing on his cheeks, not from acting but from genuine fear. The director yelled “Cut!” and Master Yu gave a curt nod. Jackie had done his first job. He was paid a bowl of rice and a piece of fish. He never saw the film—it is now considered lost. For the next several years, Jackie and his opera brothers (including Sammo Hung and Yuen Biao) became the go-to child stunt performers for Shaw Brothers and other studios. They played dead bodies, kicked-up dust, and fell down stairs. In the musical The Love Eterne (1963), Jackie is an unidentifiable face in a crowd of schoolchildren. His first real “stunt” came in King Cat (1967), where he performed a backward somersault off a low wall. He got fifty dollars and a bruised tailbone. jackie chan first movies

After Drunken Master , he would go on to direct The Young Master (1980), form his own stunt team, and eventually break every bone in his body for films like Police Story and Project A . But the complete story of his first movies is not one of early glory—it is the story of a boy who learned to fall, failed spectacularly as a copycat, and then got up, laughed at himself, and invented a new way to fly. The choreography called for him to leap backward,

Lee smiled and patted his head. That moment—the respect from the biggest star in Asia—cemented Jackie’s obsession with cinema. He later said, “I wanted to be Bruce Lee. But I couldn’t kick that high. So I decided to be the opposite.” After Bruce Lee’s sudden death in 1973, every studio in Hong Kong scrambled to find “the next Bruce Lee.” Jackie, with his lean physique and opera training, was an obvious candidate. Director Lo Wei (who had directed Lee in The Big Boss ) signed Jackie to a contract and gave him a new stage name: Sing Lung (成龍), meaning “Becoming the Dragon.” On the third take, Lee connected slightly harder

His first starring vehicle was New Fist of Fury (1976), a quasi-sequel to Lee’s film. Jackie played a student avenging Bruce Lee’s character. The problem was catastrophic. The film forced Jackie into a grim, scowling, cold-blooded killer role. He wore tight bell-bottoms and a flat cap, trying to imitate Lee’s snarls and one-inch punches. But Jackie wasn’t intimidating; he was boyish and likable. When he tried to glare, he just looked constipated. The action was stiff, the story a carbon copy, and the film flopped hard.

This was the birth of “Jackie Chan comedy kung fu.” He got hit in the face, ran away, hid behind furniture, and used buckets, brooms, and ladders as weapons. The audience laughed with him, not at him. The film was a monster hit, breaking box office records in Hong Kong and Asia. Riding the wave, Yuen Woo-ping and Jackie immediately made Drunken Master (1978) the same year. This time, Jackie played the real-life folk hero Wong Fei-hung—but as a mischievous, disrespectful teenager who gets trained in the taboo “Drunken Boxing” by a vicious master. The final fight, where Jackie fights the killer “Thunderleg” while simulating drunkenness with staggering precision, is a masterpiece of physical storytelling.


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