I Am Bruce Lee
If someone says, "I can't watch
a Bruce Lee film," I can't talk to 'em.
Bruce Lee is a worldwide fighting icon.
He was a 130-something-pound
lethal weapon.
Bruce and his fighting style
changed the game.
In the beginning I had no intention
that what I was practising,
and what I am still practising now,
would lead to this.
Bruce Lee, Bob Dylan, Ali,
Jay-Z, Tiger, Kobe, Jordan,
they all have the same spirit.
No stunt coordinator coordinated
his sh*t. He did it himself.
The guy you see in Bruce's films
is the way Bruce was in person.
He could lose his temper.
Bruce Lee is my idol. Wha-aa!
He was directing, writing, acting.
I don't even look at him
as being Asian. He's my idol.
When you think of Bruce Lee, you don't
think about the Asian karate guy.
You think about a legacy.
you were wondering
if they were speeding up the camera.
Bruce Lee was like the superhero
of the Asian community.
You had Muhammad Ali.
You had Malcolm X.
Bruce Lee represented
that same kind of radicalism.
Technically brilliant choreography.
You get mysticism, hyper-masculinity.
This guy is like, bang!
He's put balls on Chinese men.
There's some cool stuff.
You're like, "Wow.
That supercool guy is my dad. "
- There'll never be another Bruce Lee.
- Baby, here I am, man.
How does a small Chinese guy become
the greatest martial artist of all time?
Production 263-05-224-10.
Test X1, take 1.
Bruce,
just look right into the camera
and tell us your name,
your age and where you were born.
My last name is Lee, Bruce Lee.
I was born in San Francisco
in 1940. I'm 24 right now.
There was controversy about me
taking him back to the United States.
But he loved his time that he lived
in Seattle before all of this.
It was important for my children
to know where their father was.
I just intimately just started crying.
I think I literally cried after
the funeral all the way from Seattle,
all the way to the California border,
all the way up to Sacramento.
That was a very difficult time
to leave Hong Kong
and... take their favourite son away.
Bruce's childhood
is interesting to look at
from the standpoint
First of all, Hong Kong
in the early '40s
was occupied by Japan
during World War ll,
and this had an influence on Bruce.
It was very important to him as a child
from the get-go to be self-sufficient,
and in doing that, you have to shoulder
a lot of personal responsibility.
There's bad blood historically
between China and Hong Kong and Japan.
His mother used to tell me how Bruce
would hang over the side of the balcony
and shake his fist at the Japanese
planes coming to land in Hong Kong.
If anyone said a word against
the Chinese, he would rebel.
And you work
in motion pictures in Hong Kong?
Yes, since I was around six years old.
under his father's influence,
his father being an actor
in the Chinese opera
and then in Cantonese films as well.
Tell the crew what time
they shoot the pictures in Hong Kong.
Well, it's mostly in the morning
because it's kind of noisy in Hong Kong,
you know,
around three million people there,
so every time when you have a picture,
it's mostly, say, around
A lot of people
don't touch on this,
but he was the biggest childhood star
in Hong Kong.
He made 20, 20-something movies
as a child star.
He was like
the Macaulay Culkin of that era.
And then you have the fact that
Hong Kong was governed by the British.
They targeted the British.
You are crazy.
But there's a lot of competition
between the British people living there
and the Chinese living there.
He's also part Caucasian.
I think he saw
a lot of adversity racially,
not only around him but within himself.
And he had run-ins with English
schoolboys and that kind of thing,
so there was always
that feeling of resentment
of others dictating his future.
Then, of course, when he was 13,
he went to study with Yip Man.
As human beings, fighting's in our DNA.
We get it and we like it.
Yip Man trained Bruce in wing chun,
and Yip Man
was a fabulous kung fu master.
Bruce had many run-ins
with the law
and other teenagers in Hong Kong,
and he had fights.
He loved the street fights. He loved
other people who can street-fight.
Bruce's style
is made for street survival.
He grew up fighting fights
in Hong Kong on the rooftop.
Bruce had some of the films, 8mm,
that he used to show us,
where they get
into the old traditional stance
and one guy would come in
and the other guy would back up
and fall down over the plant pot.
There were two clans usually,
the choy li fut clan
and the wing chun clan
by Yip Man and his students,
and they would have battles.
Although this stuff about the choy
li fut and wing chun rooftop fights
is the stuff of legend, it is true.
I was in Hong Kong.
The sentiment, the animosity between
wing chun and choy li fut still exists.
So Yip Man
was a great influence on Bruce
and leaned him in the direction
of philosophy.
Yip Man would not be a legend
without Bruce Lee.
Wing chun was
a very, very minor martial art style,
and now it's global,
and that's all because of Bruce Lee.
Ultimately, martial art means
honestly expressing yourself.
Now, it is very difficult to do.
A lot of that warrior spirit,
to me, it's really honourable.
It's really pure.
It breaks through to every culture,
every language, every colour.
It's all about getting respect back,
you know.
If you're gonna hurt me, you're gonna
have to earn it, motherf***er.
I was the youngest
of three boys.
I got obsessed
with Bruce Lee and martial arts.
I wanted to kick my brothers' asses
and prove my worthiness.
When a good fight breaks out,
you can't help but be excited.
You can't help but show emotion.
It took a while, but as many times
as each of my brothers beat me up,
each one of them got one ass-kicking
from me and that was it.
I didn't do so well talking sh*t back,
so I don't see the point in talking
about it. Let's just go there.
But then you feel bad and embarrassed
afterwards, "That was childish. "
"I could have handled that better. "
But you also feel good.
If you couldn't get laid,
you got in a fight.
Let me punch this ugly motherf***er.
In Youngstown.
It was a nice place to live.
Fighting has taken over
my mind and my being.
It's not what I do. It's who I am.
My father told me fighters are born,
not made. Bruce Lee was a born fighter.
When you do punch,
now I'm leaning forward a little bit,
hoping not to hurt any camera angle.
I mean, you gotta put the whole hip
into it and snap it
and get all your energy in there,
and make this into a weapon.
When Bruce Lee was a young boy,
maybe 13 or 14, training in wing chun,
had Caucasian blood.
- I believe it's one fourth German.
- Well?
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"I Am Bruce Lee" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 26 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/i_am_bruce_lee_10445>.
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