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  1. Jul 1, 2002 · As a project to place Bruce Lee's final, unfinished 1973 film, "The Game of Death," in its proper context, "Bruce Lee: A Warrior's Journey" is up to the task. And as a docu explaining for the ...

  2. Oct 8, 2001 · The actual footage of Bruce Lee that appears in the film is only about eleven minutes worth. When in fact there was over one hundred minutes of footage Bruce had shot. Most of which is outtakes and re-takes. Bruce Lee: A Warriors Journey focuses on Bruce's rise to fame in both the Martial Arts world and the film world.

  3. May 21, 2019 · Bruce Lee: A Warrior’s Journey (2000) “Game of Death” has long been regarded as the lost diamond of Bruce Lee ’s all-too-brief career, a film he intended as the ultimate illustration of his martial arts philosophy before his untimely death. True, we did get A version of “Game of Death ”, one laden with transparent reshoots and ...

  4. - A WARRIOR'S JOURNEY reveals the soul of Bruce Lee for the first time. This 97 minute documentary includes 33 minutes of continuous action footage that was shot for "The Game of Death" but had been lost; this rediscovered footage, which is the best martial arts footage ever filmed of Lee, appears for the first time in this film.

  5. This 97 minute documentary includes 33 minutes of continuous action footage that was shot for "The Game of Death" but had been lost, but has been rediscovere...

  6. A Warriors Journey reveals the soul of Bruce Lee for the first time. This 97 minute documentary includes 33 minutes of continuous action footage that was shot for "The Game of Death" but had been lost; this rediscovered footage, which is the best martial arts footage ever filmed of Lee, appears for the first time in this film. 1 h 35 min 2000.

  7. Bruce Lee: A Warrior's Journey. Bruce Lee: A Warrior's Journey is a 2000 documentary on the martial artist Bruce Lee. It includes the original footage of his incomplete movie The Game of Death (1972). [1] With Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Ji Han-jae, Linda Lee Cadwell, Taky Kimura, Ted Hanulak. Directed by John Little and distributed by Warner Home Video .

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