Fist of Fury
| Fist of Fury | |
|---|---|
Hong Kong film poster | |
| Traditional Chinese | 精武門 |
| Simplified Chinese | 精武门 |
| Literal meaning | Jingwu Tradition |
| Hanyu Pinyin | Jīngwǔ Mén |
| Jyutping | Zing1 Mou2 Mun4 |
| Directed by | Lo Wei |
| Written by | Lo Wei Ni Kuang (uncredited) |
| Produced by | Raymond Chow |
| Starring | Bruce Lee Nora Miao Chikara Hashimoto |
| Cinematography | Chen Ching-chu |
| Edited by | Peter Cheung |
| Music by | Joseph Koo |
Production company | |
| Distributed by | Golden Harvest |
Release date |
|
Running time | 107 minutes |
| Country | Hong Kong |
| Languages | Mandarin Cantonese |
| Budget | US$100,000 |
| Box office | US$100 million |
Fist of Fury (Chinese: 精武門; lit. 'Jingwu Tradition') is a 1972 Hong Kong martial arts film directed by Lo Wei and produced by Raymond Chow for Golden Harvest. The film stars Bruce Lee in his second major role after The Big Boss (1971), along with Nora Miao and Chikara Hashimoto. Lee also worked as the film's action choreographer. He portrays the character Chen Zhen, a student of Huo Yuanjia, fights to defend the honor of the Chinese in the face of foreign aggression and also exact vengeance responsible for Huo's death.
The film was Lee's second kung fu film and also touched on sensitive issues surrounding Japanese colonialism. It also featured fairly realistic fight choreography for its time and also differs from other films in the genre for its historical and social references, especially to Japanese imperialism.
Fist of Fury grossed an estimated US$100 million worldwide (equivalent to over $800 million adjusted for inflation) against a budget of $100,000. It was the highest-grossing Hong Kong film until Bruce Lee's following film The Way of the Dragon (1972).