
Enter the Dragon
Their deadly mission: to crack the forbidden island of Han!
A martial artist agrees to spy on a reclusive crime lord using his invitation to a tournament there as cover.
- 7.4
- 1973
- Released
- 1h 42m

Bruce Lee
Lee
John Saxon
Roper
Jim Kelly
Williams
Sek Kin
Han
Ahna Capri
Tania
Robert Wall
Oharra
Angela Mao Ying
Su Lin
Betty Chung
Mei Ling
Bolo Yeung Sze
Bolo
Geoffrey Weeks
Braithwaite
Roy Chiao
Shaolin Abbott
Yuen Biao
Tournament Fighter
Marlene Clark
Secretary
Sammo Hung Kam-Bo
Shaolin Fighter
Jackie Chan
Guard
Mang Hoi
Chinese Junk Crew (uncredited)
Mars
Guard Executed by Bolo (uncredited)
Peter Chan Lung
Party Guest (uncredited)
Paul Chung Fat
Guard Executed by Bolo
Tai Bo
Ohara's Crew Who Attacks Su Lin
Tony Liu
Tournament Fighter
Yuen Wah
Tournament Fighter
Peter Archer
Parsons
Lam Ching-Ying
Tournament Fighter (uncredited)
Mickey Caruso
L.A. Cop
Wong Tin-Lam

Robert Chan Law-Bat
Wachmann
Stephen Tung Wai

Ng Yam-Chuen
Banquet Guest - Han's Prisoner
Niki Wane
Williams' Girl #1












Released
en
$850,000.00
$400,000,000.00
- #island
- #martial arts
- #kung fu
- #temple
- #monk
- #spy
- #shaolin
- #sister
- #hong kong
- #shaolin monk
- #east asian lead
- #martial arts tournament
- #crime lord
Reviews

Really fun martial arts action-thriller with Bruce Lee doing great work as usual in his final film. Not usually a big fan of the genre but still found this thoroughly enjoyable and engaging from beginning to end. **4.0/5**

In British-administered Hong Kong, "Braithwaite" (Geoffrey Weeks) seeks to engage the services of renowned martial arts expert "Lee" (Bruce Lee) to help the authorities thwart the heroine running activities of local, gloved, kingpin "Han" (Kien Shih) - who looks like a man straight out of "Dr. No" (1962). Luckily, this villain is organising a tournament on his island and that might provide for an

Back in the good ol' days, my big brother - a HUGE fan of "Karate movies" - would take me (every other weekend) to the legendary State and Lake theater to see all of the so-called "low budget" martial arts films that many in society (during that time) were tempted to wrinkle their noses at, but which soared, nonetheless, in the urban communities of America. And it had been while I was seated in th











