An asian chineseman hair style but widened toupe, designed to cover tripple widened asian bald schpots.
Wow I always thought all Chinese were Asian.

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An asian chineseman hair style but widened toupe, designed to cover tripple widened asian bald schpots.
Wow I always thought all Chinese were Asian.![]()
Maybe 5 minutesThat Bruce Lee character probably wasn't on screen 20 minutes
Now his entire legacy is ruined?
People love to exaggerate
Bruce had already established his legacy decades ago. Nothing Tarantino can make or do will destroy Lee's legacy.![]()
I wonder why he chose to play bruce like that though?
Naw, brotha. Some chinesemen were really black. Don't you watch hidden colors?
God damn dude what type of black magic are using to constantly escape my ignore list![]()
God damn dude what type of black magic are using to constantly escape my ignore list![]()
His daughter would get some dick
I need picsfirst she could get it ....well since she is a trained martial artist she could take it from me
second Bruce is one of my personal heroes
three - its just a movie
The movie was not based on a true story. Get over it.Another CAC trying to rewrite history![]()
What's there to like about this?Do.cats here like ANYTHING ?
No but was based on a true event...the Tate Murder and Bruce Lee was a good friend to Sharon Tate. after the mansons killed the tates bruce moved his family from the area from fear of more killings happening there.The movie was not based on a true story. Get over it.
Another CAC trying to rewrite history![]()
No but was based on a true event...the Tate Murder and Bruce Lee was a good friend to Sharon Tate. after the mansons killed the tates bruce moved his family from the area from fear of more killings happening there.
Her father already had a bad reputation in the fighting world while he was alive...
He wasn't known as a fighter, but more of an actor. This is first hand knowledge coming from a very reputable source.
no but he's doing fictional stories of real events or people..or do you think if he did inglorious bastards where the jewish soldiers were anything less than fierce and heroic do you REALLY believe some jewish people wouldn't take issue with it. How about if he did Malcolm X as a crossdresser in his private time (its fiction remember)Now all of a sudden Tarentino is a scholar and his movies are factually accurate.
"It is pretty easy to read between the lines. Chuck Norris thinks he could have beat Bruce Lee if they were to really fight. He clearly has a lot of respect for Bruce, especially because he helped him get his career in film launched".
https://muaythaiauthority.com/chuck...-lee-never-competed-or-fought-professionally/
You don't think he answered that question in a respectful way?Chuck Norris pussy ass couldn’t whup a flea off a dogs back dude! Fuck him too! Ol cocksucking mf
Bruce Lee trained so many actors in his martial art training, no one back there dared to infer they could take him.
Ask Chuck Norris.
Bruce Lee’s Protégé Recalls His Humility Amid ‘Once Upon a Time’ Criticism
By AUDREY CLEO YAP
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CREDIT: COURTESY OF DIANA LEE INOSANTO
When it comes to martial arts and cinema, Bruce Lee is an icon. But his depiction in Quentin Tarantino’s “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” as an arrogant blowhard who brags about being able to “cripple” boxer Muhammad Ali could not be further from the truth, according to those closest to the real Lee.
For one, Lee revered Ali and other boxers, often telling his martial students to mimic the ease and flow of Ali’s movements and footwork, according to Dan Inosanto, Lee’s protégé and training partner, speaking to Variety exclusively.
“Bruce Lee would have never said anything derogatory about Muhammad Ali because he worshiped the ground Muhammad Ali walked on. In fact, he was into boxing more so than martial arts,” says Inosanto, one of only three martial artists who were trained by Lee to teach Jeet Kune Do at Lee’s martial arts institutes. Jeet Kune Do is a philosophy of martial arts drawing from different disciplines invented by Lee that is often credited with paving the way for modern mixed martial arts (MMA).
Inosanto continues to practice and teach it today. The now 83-year-old was featured alongside Lee in his final film, “Game of Death,” and was a frequent companion of Lee’s on TV shows and movie sets throughout the 1960s and up until Lee’s death in 1973 — sets including that of “The Green Hornet,” on which Lee played the sidekick character Kato.
Incidentally, in Tarantino’s film, it’s outside of that set where Lee (played by Mike Moh) is shown bragging about his fighting prowess, only to be bested by ageing white stuntman Cliff Booth (Brad Pitt).
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Dan Inosanto and Bruce Lee at Lee’s martial arts academy in Los Angeles’ Chinatown.
(COURTESY OF DIANA LEE INOSANTO)
Inosanto has not yet seen the film but says that from his memories of Lee on a working set, he never saw the San Francisco-born, Hong Kong-raised actor being braggadocious or engaging in scraps for the sake of showing off. He did, however, push back on portraying Asians practicing martial arts in a stereotypical way, what Inosanto calls the “chop-chop Hollywood stuff.”
“He was never, in my opinion, cocky. Maybe he was cocky in as far as martial arts because he was very sure of himself. He was worlds ahead of everyone else. But on a set, he’s not gonna show off,” recalls Inosanto, adding that it’s highly dubious that a stuntman could have gotten the best of the “Enter the Dragon” star.
Lee’s daughter, Shannon, calls the depiction of her late father disheartening and adds that, despite Tarantino drawing on aspects of her father’s films for use in his own (Uma Thurman’s yellow jumpsuit in “Kill Bill” is a nod to Lee’s outfit in “Game of Death”; the yakuza army, the Crazy 88, also don Kato-like masks), she doubts he is an actual fan of Lee’s.
“I have always suspected that [Tarantino] is a fan of the kung-fu genre and a fan of things that kick ass in cool and stylish ways, which my father certainly did,” says Shannon Lee, who was 4 years old when her father died. “But whether he really knows anything about Bruce Lee as a human being, whether he’s interested in who Bruce Lee was as a human being, whether he admires who Bruce Lee was as a human being, I’m not really sure that I have any evidence to support that that would be true.”
![]()
Dan Inosanto and Bruce Lee on the set of “Game of Death.”
(COURTESY OF DIANA LEE INOSANTO)
Tarantino did not consult the Lee family prior to or during the making of “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.” Tarantino’s rep has not yet responded to Variety‘s request for comment.
For both Inosanto and Lee, preserving Bruce Lee’s legacy — through martial arts or by developing the projects Lee himself was unable to pursue — is something they continue today. Inosanto teaches at his Inosanto Academy of Martial Arts while Shannon Lee works as a caretaker of her family’s estate and charity foundation and develops projects inspired by her father’s writings, like Cinemax’s “Warrior,” based on a treatment her father wrote and pitched (unsuccessfully) to Warner Bros. Lee is an executive producer of the show, which was renewed for a second season in April.
She sees Tarantino’s film as another way Hollywood has, historically, tried to diminish her father’s accomplishments as one of its first prominent Asian Americans.
“He was continuously marginalized and treated like kind of a nuisance of a human being by white Hollywood, which is how he’s treated in the film by Quentin Tarantino,” says Lee. “I hope people will take the opportunity to find out more about Bruce Lee because there’s a lot more to find out and a lot more to get excited about. This portrayal in this film is definitely not that.”
Adds Inosanto, who says he received an outpouring of letters from fans all over the world following Lee’s death, “Bruce Lee broke ground for Asian Americans. Breaking in as an Asian was very, very difficult at that time. He paved the way for all the action stars.”
You don't think he answered that question in a respectful way?
What has he said or done to disparage Lee's legacy?Nah he did but just knowing how Norris actually is as opposed to his legend. Used to like him long ago but not now.
So do you think you can beat a Tasmanian devil with your bare handsYeah because 80lb Bruce would be able to beat someone twice his size.