8 Asians

  • About us
  • Write for 8Asians |
  • Podcast
  • Events
  • GASP!
  • POP 88
Manny Pacquiao, Filipino Homophobia And MasculinityManny Pacquiao, Filipino Homophobia And Masculinity
Nguyen Girls’ Yearbook Prank: No, We’re Not RelatedNguyen Girls’ Yearbook Prank: No, We’re Not Related
Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg Gets A New Asian Wife!Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg Gets A New Asian Wife!
The Carrie Diaries Trailer Proves That Minorities Do Exist In New YorkThe Carrie Diaries Trailer Proves That Minorities Do Exist In New York

I am Bruce Lee Documentary Trailer & Why We Should Remember His Legacy

By William | Friday, February 3, 2012 | 6 Comments

Bruce Lee. Do I really have to write anymore? Those two words are worth more than anything I will write, mainly because there’s just some many different takes and angles on this incredible person who influenced the world in more ways than one. But too many people don’t realise, he was far more than the punchs and kicks, he was someone who was fully in tandem with how life incorporates both the body and the mind. With the trailer release of the new documentary, I Am Bruce Lee, maybe people might see Bruce as being more than just a guy who can kick ass.

As a kid (some say I still am!) I would often play dress up and run around being my favourite superheroes on tv. Egged on by my sister, I wanted at various times in my life to be the bodyguard of Justice Pao, Jackie Chan (who hasn’t!), the Monkey King from Journey to the West (the Hong Kong series version) and Jet Li. I will always remember my first Bruce Lee movie though, mainly because there was no CG effects, no wild camera angles to add to the fighting, just a clean simple view of Bruce smashing his way through a ton of people. I was pretty mesmerised by it, and since my Dad was a martial arts fan who prodded me in the same direction, I decided to pursue this interest. After 14 years, can I say I understand a bit more of Bruce Lee and his concepts? Definitely not. Even his most famous quote “Be like Water,” simple enough to understand, incredibly difficult to implement.

I remember in primary school, most of my classmates had never heard of Bruce Lee, or quite simply thought Jackie Chan was better. I even heard the blasphemous idea that Chuck Norris could beat Bruce and I considered it to be my responsibility to defend Bruce’s honor (which being small at the time, I often failed). But for many early years, I always saw Bruce in the sense of being a fighter, a person who could beat someone much bigger than him, someone who stood out as defending asians and in the words of one lady from the trailer, “put balls on Chinese men”. He put balls on all Asian men! But what most people miss is the fact that Bruce was more than a guy who could fight. His martial arts was a way of living, the shining example to what it really meant to practice “martial arts.”

Having said that, there are those who discount Bruce as being a fighter, those who discount his achievements and consider his lackluster fight record as proof that he is over-rated. I have even run across those who claim that his body was inherently unhealthy and that he learned his best moves from other martial art practitioners. A publication on letters to the superstar in Dear Bruce Lee show the animosity demonstrated by many people who discounted Bruce and his ideas. I say his lack of fighting record only further shows how he considered it to be empty to be fighting without reason. He wasn’t out to show he had balls. Looking back now, his name is remembered for a reason while others are not.

Whatever the truth, I feel there’s no point arguing over something that is gone. What cannot be denied is the legacy that exists, the impact he had and the continued effects. Do we question the legacy of something great, merely because the person behind it was flawed? I think more than anyone, Bruce realised that progress cannot be made without debate and discussion, that without new input the evolution of martial arts will stop and that the journey never ends, even in death. He may have died before his time, but his influence in the world today has never been stronger.

Thanks for rating this! Now tell the world how you feel via Twitter.
(Nah, it's cool; just take me back.)
MOODTHINGY
How does this post make you feel?
  • Excited
  • Fascinated
  • Amused
  • Bored
  • Sad
  • Angry

Categories:

Current EventsEntertainmentHistoryMovies
Tweet

NOTE: 8Asians.com is a community, and we thank you for being a part of it. While we welcome and appreciate differences in opinion, if you're rude or you're promoting spam, we have a right to edit or delete your comment. Read our comment policy for more information.

If you see a comment that violates the 8Asians.com comment policy, you may flag the comment by mousing over the comment and clicking "FLAG."

Facebook Comments (Beta)

  • Phantom

    One person says in that video clip that Bruce Lee was “the superhero of the Asian community.” Funny, but back before he was rich & world famous, back when he studied Wing Chun in Hong Kong, his Asian classmates refused to train with him because he was 1/4th white! (His maternal grandmother was German.)

    Eurasians rock! (Or in this case, “Kick a–!”)

    Hybrid vigor FTW! ;)

  • Phantom

    Who better to be the Founding Father of Mixed Martial Arts (MMA), than someone of mixed racial heritage? Who more likely to teach non-Asians in America the kung fu, than an Eurasian who had be discriminated against in Hong Kong due to his white ancestry? Who more likely to dismiss ancient dogma for the practical (“Be like water, my friend”)?

    Initially & primarily, Bruce mixed Western boxing and Western fencing (IIRC, via his older brother Peter) with Wing Chun in developing the foundation of his hybrid martial — Jeet Kune Do. Smaller bits & pieces of Judo (Jesse Glover), Jujitsu (Wally Jay), various Western wrestling styles, and more were later grafted in.

    Plus, he married a blond haired, blue-eyed white gal….

    Oops! He can’t be an Asian superhero, he’s a “Race Traitor!!!” (rolls eyes) LOL!

  • IsaacKojima

    “Put ball in Chinese men”?!!? WTF? Really, this statemente made afraid of this doc.

  • Author

    @IsaacKojima Explain

  • http://www.erniehsiung.com/ Ernie H.

     @Author  @IsaacKojima I mean, technically, he put balls in white women, ifyouknowwhati’msayin.

  • moye

     @Ernie H.  Was Bruce Lee into something kinky or have I been missing out on some new form of penetration?

 
Google
Custom Search
Advertise on 8Asians
Recent Posts
  • Rolling Stone Releases List Of 10 Kpop Groups Most Likely To Break In The US
  • Watch Yul Kwon’s “America Revealed” PBS Series Online
  • LA County Supervisor To Announce Repeal Of 1942 Resolution On Japanese American Internment
  • Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg Gets A New Asian Wife!
  • Koji’s Top 10 Favorite 8Asians Comments
  • Nguyen Girls’ Yearbook Prank: No, We’re Not Related
  • Long Delayed K-Town Reality Show To Be Released On YouTube In July
Recent Comments
  • relmneiko: ahaha this post is hilarious - my dad is white as a swan but he does the long pinkie nail thing too! He's a musician... – Asian Guys and that One Long Pinky Fingernail
  • Whateverman1: I think it's weird that you posted Asian wife rather than "wife" these labels segregate sometimes... – Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg Gets A New Asian Wife!
  • moye: You realize I was kidding, right? – Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg Gets A New Asian Wife!
  • waffleater:  is it the model minority site i just hate and is amused by that website at the same time – Koji's Top 10 Favorite 8Asians Comments
  • Emily Elaine Dzenowski: I don't think she qualifies as a trophy wife. Considering her education and status, she doesn't really need anyone. I think giving her that description is... – Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg Gets A New Asian Wife!

APA Events

  • Oct 14: (Seattle, WA) From Fields to Family: Asian Pacific Americans and Food
  • Mar 1: (Atlanta, GA) The Art of Gaman: Arts and Crafts from the Japanese American Internment Camps, 1942-1946
  • Apr 26: (New York, NY) June 4, 1989: Media and Mobilization Beyond Tiananmen Square
  • Apr 26: (New York, NY) America through a Chinese Lens
  • Apr 27: (Seattle, WA) SEX IN SEATTLE 20: HAPPILY EVER AFTER. . . (the series finale!)
  • May 24: (San Jose, CA) Sake San Jose
  • May 24: (New York, NY) A Conversation with artists Arthur Ou, Hai Zhang, and Julie Quon in Conjunction with America through a Chinese Lens
  • May 24: (San Francisco, CA) Literasians 2012: Writers Converge on the APIA Literary Continuum
Add Your Event
www.8asians.com

Staff and Contributors

  • Editors
  • Moye Ishimoto

    Co-Editor, Editorial
  • Jocelyn "Joz" Wang

    Co-Editor, PR & APA Outreach
  • Contributors
  • John L.

    LATEST POST: Watch Yul Kwon’s “America Revealed” PBS Series Online
  • Edward Hong

    LATEST POST: Uploaded: The Asian American Movement Review From 2012 LAAPFF
  • Jeff S.

    LATEST POST: Winner Of The 2012 “B A Hero” Hepatitis B PSA Video Contest
  • Mihee Kim-Kort

    LATEST POST: Nguyen Girls’ Yearbook Prank: No, We’re Not Related
  • Koji Steven Sakai

    LATEST POST: Koji’s Top 10 Favorite 8Asians Comments
  • Tina Tsai

    LATEST POST: Arizona’s Immigration Law, Lewd Chinese Women, and API History
  • Dino-Ray Ramos

    LATEST POST: The Mindy Project Makes Mindy Kaling Even More Hilarious
  • Tim Chiu

    LATEST POST: Suicide Prompts Chinese To Reconsider Coming To U.S.
  • Efren B.

    LATEST POST: Manny Pacquiao, Filipino Homophobia And Masculinity
  • Founder
  • Ernie Hsiung

    Founder
View all Authors

Other Links

  • AsianFashion.com
  • Get your very own 8Asians merchandise here!
GASP!: A Shopping Blog
  • Chibi Silver Charm Bracelet
  • LollaCup Sippy Cup
  • Guilty Pleasures T-Shirt
  • What The Pho T-Shirt
  • Ninja Rider Threadless T-Shirt
POP88: A J-Pop and K-Pop Podcast
  • POP 88 #51 – I’m READY, 2012 – Non-Stop Mix
  • POP 88 #50 – Special Non-Stop FemBOTmix
  • POP 88 #49 – Somewhere Between – Interview with dir. Linda Goldstein Knowlton
  • POP 88 #48 – Mixed Bag: Chinese, Japanese, Korean and French (!?) music
  • POP 88 #47 – Back and Ready for 2011
8Asians Tumblr: Beautiful Things
  • winterartwork: “Tiger!”Imaginary tiger uppercut!!now on...
  • neaato: wtf of the day. azn version of ‘are you mom enough’...
  • Truth.
  • laughingsquid: Typographic Chalk Art by Dana...
  • oatmeal: The primary difference between North and South Korea
Advertise | Contact Us | Twitter | Facebook | Tumblr | Privacy Policy