The Game of Clones: Bruceploitation Collection Volume 1 (1974-2023) Severin Blu-ray Review

Verdict
4

Summary

Honestly, Severin’s massive and intimidating Game of Clones box set with its 15-film offering is a wonder to behold for fans of “B” martial arts movies. While not all the films are great or even very good, some of them are real gems, and the documentary itself is a fun diversion.

Disc One:
Enter the Clones of Bruce Lee (2023) Plot:
A documentary on the phenomenon that was the “Bruce-sploitation” subgenre of action and martial arts cinema.

Review:
The moment Bruce Lee died, exploitation filmmakers jumped into a slew of what has become known as the “Bruce-sploitation” genre where a host of imitators and imitations blasted into the film market to capitalize on Lee’s immense popularity and enormous influence on the world of action and film. Enter the Clones of Bruce Lee chronicles the rise of Hong Kong movie factory that was the Shaw Brothers and how that led into Bruce Lee’s introduction into mainstream consciousness with his role on the TV show The Green Hornet, and then very quickly became Hong Kong’s biggest star with his three films The Big Boss, Fist of Fury, and The Way of the Dragon, but everything changed when his movie Enter the Dragon was released the month after he died. That film catapulted him into superstardom and legendary status, but by that time he was already gone, but he’d left one more filmed fight scene for a film called Game of Death that the producers held onto for several years. In the interim, every exploitation filmmaker around the world put their best and cheapest feet forward, trying to fool audiences into believing that Lee had made one last movie before he died, which created a micro industry all of itself, putting new similar looking “clones” of Lee into the mainstream, guys like Bruce Li, Bruce Le, and Dragon Lee, among others. Some of the films that were produced during this lucrative period were indeed very entertaining, but many of them were absolute garbage, but the fact remains all throughout that each and every one of these movies were suspiciously strange and icky in that they exploited the death of Lee, sometimes to the point of downright criminal means, by using unauthorized footage of Lee (or even footage from his funeral), or by making sequels to his movies that were never officially sanctioned. Despite all that, this movie has a loving attitude towards those who made these films, and it tracks down quite a few of the original players and filmmakers, interviewing them at length. My favorite aspect of the film is the candid interviews with Dragon Lee, Bruce Le, and Bruce Li, who all reflect quite nicely about their time portraying the real Bruce Lee, and the filmmakers allow them to take their time to say what they’ve been wanting to say for many, many years. Filmmaker David Gregory and producer Michael Worth (who was an action star in his own right) do a pretty entertaining job of keeping things interesting and fascinating with this documentary, and I saved it for last on this set to watch so that I could appreciate it properly.

 

Disc Two:
The Clones of Bruce Lee (1980) Plot:
When Bruce Lee dies, a scientist is tasked with cloning him … to fight crime!

Review:
Bruce Lee – the world famous martial arts legend – dies on the operating room table, and not a minute goes by when a covert government agency makes a desperate phone call to a mad scientist to use Lee’s DNA to clone him – not once, but three times simultaneously – to do what the real Bruce Lee was never tasked with: Combating crime! The cloning process is swift: Bruce Lee One (Ryong Keo), Bruce Lee Two (Bruce Le), and Bruce Lee Three (Il-do Jang) are created, and they’re put to work immediately! Their training is handled by a muscle bound thug (played by Bolo Yeung in a casting coup that is as meta as you can get), and once they’ve got the basics down, they separate and get to work. One dabbles with filming a movie to step into the real Bruce’s shoes to complete an unfinished film, while the other two are dispatched elsewhere to fight goons and smugglers. Eventually, the three Bruce’s team up when they go up against a megalomaniac who has devised a vegetation-killing chemical as a way to take over the world, and when that doesn’t pan out he creates an army of men made of bronze! The only way the three Bruce’s can stop them is to forcefeed them a poisonous plant (!), and then they’re able to get to the Big Boss! When that’s done, the mad scientist goes completely crazy and forces the three Bruce’s to fight each other to the death … and once that’s done, he’ll be the master of the masters!

An eye-opening chop sockie fight film that is enormously entertaining despite its lurid exploitation element on which it’s founded on, The Clones of Bruce Lee has a weird, dirty feeling to it because of the way it treats Bruce Lee and his unfortunate death, but it’s also insanely hilarious and fun. The three Bruce’s each bring their own flavor to Lee’s inimitable style, and the movie’s bonkers plot is so stupid it hurts, but it doesn’t matter because it just sticks with it and never wavers. The film also has a ton of jaw-dropping nudity in it just for the hell of it, with full-frontal Asian beauties cavorting around a beach for no good reason, and there more later on when the cackling Big Bad Boss forces young women to dance naked for him. The reaction of the Bruce’s to the nudity is pretty hilarious, and the gonzo, nonstop fights are pretty funny with all their monkey-fu vibes and Police Academy sound effects. It’s a howler, but this is what it’s all about!

Enter Three Dragons (1978) Plot:
Three “dragon” martial artists help a guy out by fighting his fights for him.

Review:
A down-on-his-luck hood named Sammy (Samuel Walls) runs afoul of some smugglers who harass him, and despite the fact that he’s a fairly formidable martial artist in his own right, Sammy needs help. He seeks out Dragon Hung (Bruce Lai), but instead finds Dragon Yeung (Bruce Thai), and to make matters worse and more confusing, there’s another “Dragon” around town, a guy named Bruce Hung (Dragon Lee), and all three of these guys look and behave a lot like Bruce Lee, which no one seems to acknowledge except the producers of this movie. With thee four of these guys on one team, the smugglers (one thug is played by Bolo Yeung) are going to face the ultimate challenge!

Much more of a comedy than a straight-ahead martial arts film, although there’s plenty of that to enjoy as well, Enter Three Dragons has a wacky sense of humor and nonstop shenanigans that give the movie a buoyant vibrancy that’s pretty fun if you can get on its wavelength. It steals Georgio Morodor’s score from Midnight Express for a key workout montage, but it works for the film’s benefit. This film is perfectly paired with The Clones of Bruce Lee, and they bear a remarkable resemblance (haha) to each other.

 

Disc Three:
Enter the Game of Death (1978) Plot:
A secret agent is tasked with revenge and espionage.

Review:
Chinese secret agent Chang (Bruce Le) gets ready to undertake his most challenging mission yet (to a key music cue from The Spy Who Loved Me): infiltrate a high rise building and dispatch all bosses, culminating in a final do–or-die fight with someone who poses a threat to both Chinese and Japanese governments. Chang’s enemies include a tournament fighter (Bolo Yeung who has a pretty significant role and plays both a Chinese assassin and a Japanese thug … same character? I’m not sure!), a black badass (played by Samuel Walls), a snake sorcerer, and a shifty master of the martial arts. Chang also wears a yellow jumpsuit throughout.

What a wild and wacky movie this is! Honestly, I lost the plot maybe 10 or 15 minutes into it, and just went with it. There’s a subplot of Chang’s cousin (or sister?) who is raped and he defends her honor by going after the guys who did her wrong. My favorite part of the movie is when Chang fights a bunch of guys in a forest, and one of his opponents knows he’s beat, but he runs away, only to have to face Chang again because Chang runs faster than he does! It’s hilarious. The movie didn’t make any sense, but it was enjoyable and entertaining, especially if you can just shut the brain off and soak in the goofiness.

Goodbye, Bruce Lee: His Last Game of Death (1975):
A guy is hired to finished Bruce Lee’s unfinished film, but doesn’t realize it’s a trap.

Review:
Lee (Bruce Li) is approached by some crooks to help them finish Bruce Lee’s unfinished film The Game of Death, and after finishing it the crooks demand that Lee return the cash to them, but he refuses. They kidnap his girlfriend and threaten to throw her from the top of a huge tower to her death if he doesn’t show up and pay her ransom. Lee shows up and begins dispatching the bad guys one at a time on his way to the top floor where the ultimate bosses await him.

Shot before anyone had seen The Game of Death, Bruce Lee’s unfinished film (where the only scene he shot was the big fight scene with Kareem Abdul-Jabbar), Goodbye, Bruce Lee is a rushed exploitation effort that tried to be first out of the gate, and while it certainly “copies” a movie no one had seen yet, it ultimately feels pretty thin despite sticking to the plot (more or less) of Lee’s film. Bruce Li is on screen almost every moment of the movie and some of the fight scenes are fun (the one between him and an Indian swami is the highlight), but even as paltry as the real Game of Death would end up becoming, this film pales in comparison.

 

Disc Four:
The Dragon Lives Again (1977) Plot:
Bruce Lee dies and goes to hell where he’s pitted against a slew of heroes in order to prove that he should get a second chance on earth.

Review:
Bruce Lee (played by Bruce Leong) dies, and his spirit and body ends up in hell, slightly altered in appearance. The ruler of hell is a power-hungry, horny overlord who gets nervous when his harem of concubines begin pining over Lee, whom everyone in hell has heard of and is scared of. The overlord throws every hero in his realm at him (even if they’re fictional) to stop him from making his way to him, including The Man With No Name (the Clint Eastwood character), James Bond, Kane (the character David Carradine played on Kung Fu), Popeye, Zatoichi, The One-Armed Swordsman, The Exorcist, and even Dracula. While Hell’s Overlord is having sex with Emmanuelle (the character that Sylvia Krystal originated), Bruce Lee is making his way closer and closer to Hell’s big boss in order to force him to send him back to earth for one more try at life.

Played for laughs, The Dragon Lives Again might’ve appealed to kids at one point, but it’s filled with raunchy (and quite explicit) sex scenes and nudity, but usually it’s a goof with silly scenes of Popeye chugging down spinach in order to help Bruce fight off a legion of Dracula’s mummies and zombies, or having Lee fight Zatoichi in one-on-one fights. Lee even fights himself in a weird scene and defeats himself using “Fingers of Fury.” Aside from the eye-opening sex and nude scenes, this one is a wacky effort that feels like a Mad Magazine smash up of pop culture heroes of a certain time and place.

Bruce and the Iron Finger (1979) Plot:
A serial killer with a particular signature kill style is hunted by a tough cop with some special skills of his own.

Review:
Men and women are being found murdered on the streets with strange but very identifiable puncture marks on their necks, and the case ends up in Detective Chen’s periphery. Chen (Bruce Li) and his team investigate. The killer is a practitioner of a singular martial art that uses fingers to puncture and press into pressure points on the human body, and while Chen visits dojos around town he notices some martial arts dummies (wood and / or plastic figures) with pressure points on them, leading him to assume that the killer is using these exact points to make his kills. Chen has a suspect: a badass red jumpsuit-wearing dynamo with a bad attitude named Ling (Bruce Leung), but it turns out that he’s not the guy. Ling joins Chen on his quest to find the killer – who has a hatred for anyone who looks at his wife – or looks like her – and when Chen and Ling finally catch up to him, the fight with him will be epic.

A pretty straightforward chop sockie cop movie with tons of violence, sexual assault, and sex and nudity, Bruce and the Iron Finger is basically a variation of Dirty Harry but with almost nonstop fight scenes. It works, and as a “Bruce-sploitation” exercise, it elevates itself by not really drawing attention to the fact that Li and Leung are more or less dead ringers for the real Bruce Lee, and for that alone the movie is pretty solid. Li is really good in his hero role, and Leung matches him in every way. This is one of the good ones.

 

Disc 5:
Challenge of the Tiger (1980) Plot:
Two secret agents team up to stop a villain from sterilizing the population.

Review:
A maniac steals a serum that is can sterilize the human population, which is enough of a threat to call in the best secret agents around: Huang Lung (Bruce Le), a loose cannon with his quick temper and borderline unhinged martial arts skills, and ladies’ man Richard Cannon (Richard Harrison), who prefers bubble bath Jacuzzi trysts with random babes to having to dress up to save the world. With these two partners on the case, sterility is definitely off the menu!

A prologue that sets up Le and Harrison’s characters includes topless women playing tennis and then skinny dipping, and completely insane fight scenes where Le demolishes everyone he comes in contact with sets up a highly entertaining action adventure in the men’s adventure arena, Challenge of the Tiger gets my vote for the most fun you’ll have out of this Blu-ray box set. The movie is a nonstop parade of naked women, gonzo fight scenes where Le launches himself in the air for insane kicks and tireless beat downs. Harrison effortlessly coasts through the whole movie while engaging in sex with pretty women, and the film reminds me of the best the exploitation genre (circa the late ’70s and early ’80s) has to offer. Le co-directs with Harrison, along with uncredited work by Luigi Batzella.

Cameroon Connection (1984) Plot:
A Nigerian cop teams up with an unpredictable Asian martial arts instructor to solve some murders.

Review:
Inspector Baiko (Alphonse Beni, also the director) is a respected, if too-tough sometimes, cop in Cameroon, who is called in to investigate the death of a young woman. Right away, Baiko runs into resistance from local thugs who seem to be operating under the thumb of a shot-caller whose murky motives will eventually be revealed. Baiko is a formidable martial artist (though which particular disciplines he practices are not clear) who teams up with an unexpected ally in Bruce (Bruce Le), a local dojo master whose skills far outmatch Baiko’s own. With these two guys together, the goons of Cameroon will have a force to reckon with … but Bruce is ultimately revealed to be the shadowy figure that is behind all of Baiko’s frustrations.

A regional African / Nigerian genre flick that has some very earnest fight scenes with scores of bad guys against Baiko and Le (watch for one fighter rip the seams of his pants at the crotch but continues to fight regardless), Cameroon Connection is a bit languid with its pacing with a long, complicated murder plot, but it does occasionally come to life when guys are being kicked around. There’s a car / motorcycle chase too, which is only remarkable for being presented as the film’s big centerpiece thrill, but measured up to any middling Hollywood or European production it’s merely a blip as far as chase scenes go. There’s some late-but totally unnecessary nudity from the leading lady who takes a gratuitous bubble bath, but if you’re watching the film for that you’re in this for the wrong reasons. Le is the best reason to watch the movie, and it’s worth it to see him play the villain. Other than that, this one is a bit of a slog.

 

Disc 6:
Super Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story (1974) Plot:
A retelling of the life and death of Bruce Lee.

Review:
No one could have known that a humble paperboy / practitioner of martial arts named Lee Jun Fan (Bruce Li) would one day become Bruce Lee, the most famous Asian box office star in the world. After a martial arts tournament victory catches the eye of a Hollywood producer looking to cast a TV show called The Green Hornet, Lee embarks on a journey of self-discovery, romance, and fame. His stardom quickly rises, but working in Hollywood doesn’t quite put him in the place he wants to be, so he goes to China to try to become a movie star. He finds that the process of working in Chinese films is very humbling and difficult, making only $200.00 a month, but his abilities and magnetism stun everyone around him. Without getting a break in between films, he works himself to the breaking point, and when he suffers a casual injury (according to this movie), he dies unexpectedly and shocks the world.

Made very quickly before facts and truths were known about Lee’s life and death, Super Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story is remarkably cast with Li, who at least resembles Lee and manages to capture something of Lee’s persona. The movie is very rough and has a jagged exploitation element to it that relegates it to the basest exploitation level, and it glosses over so many aspect of Lee’s life that it unfairly fibs and fabricates itself through its telling. It’s interesting on a nominal level from a historical perspective, but if you’re looking for a proper bio, look elsewhere, possibly to Rob Cohen’s Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story.

The Dragon Lives (1976) Plot:
A biopic (with embellishments) of the life and death of Bruce Lee.

Review:
A good omen in the heavens alerts the prognosticators that a child of great import is to be born, and indeed it happens: Bruce Lee (played by Bruce Li) is born unto the world. Bruce, bullied and harassed, grows up to be tough, using incredible fighting skills that he seems to have taught himself. He astonishes his elders with his skills, and soon he’s attending and closely observing martial arts tournaments where he brazenly enters the ring to challenge the undefeated black champion, where he has a rough start. He gets knocked around and beat up, but he ultimately uses the champion’s strengths and weaknesses against him, defeating and humiliating him in front of everyone. This gets him noticed by a Hollywood producer who is making The Green Hornet for TV, and when Bruce gets the gig, he’s deeply offended by the racist quality the show has against Asians. Despite that, he forges forward and eventually has enough success and notoriety to try to become a movie star in Hong Kong, where he flips the script and defies every cliché and standard, even by Hong Kong’s difficult rules. He becomes a big box office star in no time and marries a white woman, has a child, and has an affair. When he dies unexpectedly at a young age, the world thunders in travail at the loss.

Slightly better and more entertaining than Super Dragon at least has a lot of good fight scenes and a pretty solid portrayal of Lee by Li, who does his best in his first attempt (of many later ones) at playing Lee, or a variation of Lee. The movie movies quickly, and while it’s as goofy and wonky as so many “Bruce-sploitation” flicks, it’s not half bad and should make a pretty solid viewing experience for fans. From director Hsing-Lai Wang.

 

Disc 7:
The Dragon, the Hero (1980) Plot:
The inheritor of a unique martial arts ability meets his match … and the fight of his life.

Review:
A young vagabond warrior named Tong Chia Liu (John Liu) believes himself to be sole inheritor of the Strike Rock Fist martial art, which his father passed down to him, but when he encounters a small but powerful smuggling cartel operating out of a local village, his skills are put to the test. He also discovers that there’s another inheritor to the same special martial art, which throws his whole life for a loop as the other young man challenges him to become the sole inheritor. Meanwhile, the smuggling cartel has another wild card working against them, a wild dark horse (played by Dragon Lee, the film’s highlight) who doesn’t play by anyone’s rules and only cares about his own path.

A stylish Godfrey Ho martial arts film with freakish characters and some crazy magical elements, The Dragon, the Hero is a grab bag of awesomeness with laugh-out-loud hilarity (watch for Bolo Yeung with some really crazy body hair) and a league of bad guys, including the big boss who has a pasty white face and is wheelchair bound. The fights are interesting and inventive, with some whooshy camerawork and a score that sounds very, very familiar. The film is bound to make fans of the genre happy, and if this is the first movie you watch from this collection, prepare yourself for a fun time.

Rage of the Dragon (1980) Plot:
A young warrior’s father is murdered, and with the help of his uncle, he’ll get his revenge.

Review:
A respected member of the community is murdered, leaving his son Lei Lung (Dragon Lee) angry and vengeful. It doesn’t help that an attempt is made on his life as well, and after surviving (rather unscathed), he treks back to the village and declares his rage to his uncle Kwan (Carter Wong), who vows to help him find out who killed their beloved patriarch and why. Turns out a priceless statue is the cause of all the trouble, and after hunting down clues and suspects (and getting into one elaborate fight after another), Lei Lung realizes – almost too late – that his own uncle Kwan is the culprit behind his anguish and rage. Time for a final showdown!

From Godfrey Ho, Rage of the Dragon resembles an old (well, to be fair, it’s close to 50 years old!) kung fu movie shot on the cheap with bad dubbing, but it’s saving grace is Dragon Lee who marvels with his chiseled physique and technique. He plows through scores of opponents, eliminating masked ninjas, and in one moment uses a vest full of mirrors to blindside the final boss. It’s no classic, but it’s fun for fans of corny kung fu movies with lines like, “Prepare to die!” Dragon Lee really was something back in his prime. The dude was ripped!

 

Bonus Disc:
The Big Boss Part II (1976) Plot:
The brother of an incarcerated hero goes on the warpath for revenge.

Review:
I’m rusty on the events of the original Big Boss with Bruce Lee, but this one takes place immediately after the events of that film. The character that Lee played is now played by Bruce Le, and he’s stuck in prison for what he did in the first film. He pines for one more act of vengeance, but that will now be up to his brother Cheng Chao-Chun (Lieh Lo) to do. There’s a new boss in town, a lady gangster who covets a stash of gold she was promised from the boss from the first film. She sleeps with Chao-Chun to see if he knows anything about the gold (no word on that, sorry), but she hires him as a mercenary thug to defeat the original boss, leading to a series of fights and encounters. There’s some character development as he falls in love with another woman, visits his mother’s gravesite (which is being watched by some thugs in case he comes around), and the film ends with him being carted off to prison, just like his brother.

Apparently, The Big Boss II is a very, very rare (until now) film, long thought lost, but Severin resurrected it as a bonus title in this set, sourced from the only 35mm print known to exist from a private collection, so that’s cool in itself. The movie pushes the two-hour boundary, so it goes on too long, and as a “Bruce-sploitation” movie it’s merely a curiosity as Bruce Le only has a glorified cameo in it as the character Lee played in the first one. If I’m not mistaken, this sequel was unauthorized, and it also uses a ton of music from other films, including 007 music for a long boat chase where bad guys are unloading clips of machine guns, firing all over the place for several long minutes. From director Chi Chen.

The Black Dragon vs The Yellow Tiger (1974) Plot:
A bad bet on a great fighter goes wrong, resulting in an attempt on his life.

Review:
Tang (Lung Tang, a.k.a. Bruce Lung) – the character Bruce Lee played in The Way of the Dragon – has won his fights in Rome, angering a crime organization that bet against him. To get revenge, the cigar-chomping crime boss sends a cadre of fighters to whop him real good, but Tang is just too good. Their big challengers include a Hitler ‘stache grinning goon and a bunch of incompetent underlings, but the final fight with a lanky black fighter – a “black dragon” – might be Tang’s Waterloo.

Fun from beginning to end with laugh-out-loud moments that might classify it as a comedy, The Black Dragon vs the Yellow Tiger has some great fights in it, and star Lung looks pretty incredible with a ripped frame and a charismatic attempt to ape Bruce Lee. The transfer here by Severin is pretty scratchy and murky looking, sourced from the best elements available, but the film itself is much more entertaining than many of the other titles included in this set.

 

Honestly, Severin’s massive and intimidating Game of Clones box set with its 15-film offering is a wonder to behold for fans of “B” martial arts movies. While not all the films are great or even very good, some of them are real gems, and the documentary itself is a fun diversion. Special features are endless, but my favorite feature on each disc for each film was Michael Worth’s entertaining intro where he basically does a TCM-style “Kung Fu Theater” walk-on with some interesting factoids and comedy bits about each movie before it begins. There’s a thick booklet and a sturdy hardback shell case for the set as well. All said and done, this first collection of “Bruce-sploitation” movies is a winner.

 

Bonus Materials

  • Audio Commentary For ENTER THE CLONES OF BRUCE With Co-Executive Producer/Director David Gregory; Co-Producers Frank Djeng, Vivian Wong And Michael Worth; And Director Of Photography Jim Kunz
  • Working At Shaw Brothers – Outtakes With Godfrey Ho, David Chiang, Yasuaki Kurata, Lee Chiu, Lo Meng, Mars And Phillip Ko
  • Bruce Lee And I – Outtakes With Sammo Hung, Phillip Ko, Yasuaki Kurata, Mars, Angela Mao, Andre Morgan, Lee Tso Nam And More
  • The Lost World Of Kung Fu Film Negatives – Outtakes With Godfrey Ho, Joseph Lai, Angela Mao, Lee Tso Nam And Film Preservationists
  • Bruce’s Hong Kong – Location Tour With Frank Djeng
  • Severin’s Kung Fu Theater On ENTER THE CLONES OF BRUCE With Actor/Director/Bruceploitation Expert Michael Worth
  • Audio Commentary For THE CLONES OF BRUCE LEE With Michael Worth, Frank Djeng, Brandon Bentley, Chris Poggiali, Matthew Whitaker, Mike Leeder, John Kreng And Rick Benn
  • The Big Boss Remembered – Interview With Actor Jon T. Benn
  • Severin’s Kung Fu Theater On THE CLONES OF BRUCE LEE With Actor/Director/Bruceploitation Expert Michael Worth
  • THE CLONES OF BRUCE LEE Trailer
  • Severin’s Kung Fu Theater On ENTER THREE DRAGONS With Actor/Director/Bruceploitation Expert Michael Worth
  • ENTER THREE DRAGONS Trailer
  • Partial Audio Commentary For ENTER THE GAME OF DEATH With Actor/Director/Bruceploitation Expert Michael Worth
  • Scene Specific Commentary With Actor Chiu Chi Ling
  • Kung Fu Movie Hustle – Interview With Chiu Chi Ling
  • Talking A Good Game – Roundtable Discussion With Martial Artists/Kung Fu Film Experts Tatevik Hunanyan, John Kreng, Ron Strong And Michael Worth
  • Severin’s Kung Fu Theater On ENTER THE GAME OF DEATH With Actor/Director/Bruceploitation Expert Michael Worth
  • ENTER THE GAME OF DEATH Trailer
  • Audio Commentary For GOODBYE, BRUCE LEE: HIS LAST GAME OF DEATH With Frank Djeng, Co-Producer Of ENTER THE CLONES OF BRUCE, With Contributions From Chris Poggiali, Co-Author Of These Fists Break Bricks
  • The Last Kung Fu Picture Show – The Bay Area’s Movie Theater Era
  • Deleted Scenes For GOODBYE, BRUCE LEE: HIS LAST GAME OF DEATH
  • Severin’s Kung Fu Theater On GOODBYE, BRUCE LEE: HIS LAST GAME OF DEATH With Actor/Director/Bruceploitation Expert Michael Worth
  • GOODBYE, BRUCE LEE: HIS LAST GAME OF DEATH Trailer
  • GOODBYE, BRUCE LEE: HIS LAST GAME OF DEATH Radio Spot
  • Audio Commentary For THE DRAGON LIVES AGAIN With Michael Worth And Frank Djeng, Co-Producers Of ENTER THE CLONES OF BRUCE
  • Deleted Scenes From French Version Of THE DRAGON LIVES AGAIN
  • Audio Essay On THE DRAGON LIVES AGAIN By Cult Cinema Critic Lovely Jon
  • Severin’s Kung Fu Theater On THE DRAGON LIVES AGAIN With Actor/Director/Bruceploitation Expert Michael Worth
  • THE DRAGON LIVES AGAIN Trailer
  • Audio Commentary For BRUCE AND THE IRON FINGER With Actor/Director/Bruceploitation Expert Michael Worth
  • My First Bruceploitation – Roundtable Discussion With Martial Artists/Kung Fu Film Experts Tatevik Hunanyan, John Kreng, Ron Strong And Michael Worth
  • Deleted Scenes For BRUCE AND THE IRON FINGER
  • Severin’s Kung Fu Theater On BRUCE AND THE IRON FINGER With Actor/Director/Bruceploitation Expert Michael Worth
  • U.S. Trailer For BRUCE AND THE IRON FINGER
  • Hong Kong Trailer For BRUCE AND THE IRON FINGER
  • Audio Commentary For CHALLENGE OF THE TIGER With Actor/Director/Bruceploitation Expert Michael Worth And Film Historian C. Courtney Joyner
  • Severin’s Kung Fu Theater On CHALLENGE OF THE TIGER With Actor/Director/Bruceploitation Expert Michael Worth
  • CHALLENGE OF THE TIGER Trailer
  • Audio Commentary For THE CAMEROON CONNECTION With Writer/Criterion Reflections Podcast Host David Blakeslee
  • Lights… Cameroon… Action! – The Life And Films Of Alphonse Beni
  • 2022 Q&A With Alphonse Beni At Cine Club N’Kah
  • Severin’s Kung Fu Theater On CAMEROON CONNECTION With Actor/Director/Bruceploitation Expert Michael Worth
  • Partial Audio Commentary For SUPER DRAGON: THE BRUCE LEE STORY With Actor/Director/Bruceploitation Expert Michael Worth
  • Severin’s Kung Fu Theater On SUPER DRAGON: THE BRUCE LEE STORY With Actor/Director/Bruceploitation Expert Michael Worth
  • SUPER DRAGON: THE BRUCE LEE STORY TV Spot
  • SUPER DRAGON: THE BRUCE LEE STORY Trailer
  • Audio Commentary For THE DRAGON LIVES With Actress Caryn White Stedman And Actor/Director/Bruceploitation Expert Michael Worth
  • Audio Interview With ‘He’s A Legend, He’s A Hero’ Songwriter Anders Gustav Nelsson
  • The Taiwan Connection – Interview With Caryn White Stedman
  • Bruce Biopics – Roundtable Discussion With Martial Artists/Kung Fu Film Experts Tatevik Hunanyan, John Kreng, Ron Strong And Michael Worth
  • Severin’s Kung Fu Theater On THE DRAGON LIVES With Actor/Director/Bruceploitation Expert Michael Worth
  • THE DRAGON LIVES TV Spots
  • Audio Commentary For THE DRAGON, THE HERO With Director Godfrey Ho And Actor/Director/Bruceploitation Expert Michael Worth
  • Godfrey, The Hero – Interview With Director Godfrey Ho
  • Deleted Scenes For THE DRAGON, THE HERO
  • Severin’s Kung Fu Theater On THE DRAGON, THE HERO With Actor/Director/Bruceploitation Expert Michael Worth
  • THE DRAGON, THE HERO Trailer
  • Audio Commentary For RAGE OF THE DRAGON With Actor/Director/Bruceploitation Expert Michael Worth With Contributions From Chris Poggiali, Co-Author Of These Fists Break Bricks
  • Kung Fu Theaters – Roundtable Discussion With Martial Artists/Kung Fu Film Experts Tatevik Hunanyan, John Kreng, Ron Strong And Michael Worth
  • Severin’s Kung Fu Theater On RAGE OF THE DRAGON With Actor/Director/Bruceploitation Expert Michael Worth
  • RAGE OF THE DRAGON Trailer