Zitat:
Hope you all had lovely long weekends! Now I'm
feeling refreshed, I can tell you a bit more info about the Bruce
Lee bonus feature The Final Game of Death, signed off and delivered
(at last!) on Thursday.
As there's been some confusion, I thought I'd clear up a few things
about what it is, and isn't. For one thing, it's no longer just
"three hours" long; it came in at a whopping 223 mins (!). A
testament to hubris run amok or my inability to properly delegate?
Quite possibly so!
Brace yourself and sit comfortably, this thread is going to be
almost as long as the film...
Anyway, what is it exactly? A documentary? There's no interviews so
I'm not sure it qualifies. "Video essay" sounds more correct,
though at what point does it become a "video dissertation" given
the runtime? Either way, it's kind of weird, but I hope you dig
it.
It came about basically by accident: having assumed the elements
were lost in Japan somewhere, we found out last summer L'Immagine
Ritrovata were sitting on a scan of an interpositive of all the
rushes, and got approval to access them. It seemed to me a unique
opportunity...
.. not only to give the most comprehensive rundown yet of the
original GoD project, but to forensically examine Bruce's
filmmaking and choreography choices in a style similar to one of my
favourite ever documentaries, coincidentally about my favourite
film...
I am of course referring to Robert Gitt's magnificent Charles
Laughton Directs The Night of the Hunter, which you should seek out
immediately if you haven't seen it (after Laughton's film, of
course!). Though there are major differences here: the GoD footage
has no sound...
... and its status as an "unfinished" film means there is no
complete version to compare it against for context. So it became
something else: less about the making of The Game of Death, than
its un-making.
The majority of the runtime is the full 123 minutes of raw footage
filmed for The Game of Death in 1972, meaning the pagoda fights
with Dan Inosanto, Ji Han-jae and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, as well as
exterior footage filmed in the New Territories with Dan, Ji and
Hwang In-shik.
The Inosanto footage finally includes the 'log fight' with Chieh
Yuan and the start of his fight of James Tien, basically the whole
first reel of rushes prior of Lee's on-screen entrance.
As I've been asked more than once: no, there are no fights with
Bruce filmed outside. Any photos showing this are just
behind-the-scenes poses or rehearsals, nothing more. It is an
extension of the footage seen briefly in Bruce Lee: The Legend,
only now in its full 'scope ratio.
The rushes play with music and, for the most part, narration
written by myself,
@OldPangYau & Wing-Ho Lin, and read aloud by yours truly. (No,
I wasn't my first choice, but given the amount of material and how
late we were making changes, it was the only feasible
option...
... besides which, if you don't like my voice or the narration in
general and decide to mute it while you watch the raw footage,
technically that's actually the purest way to see Bruce Lee's The
Game of Death since he never lived to edit or dub it!)
The footage has been arranged into shooting order (meaning the
Kareem fight comes first) and is bookended with chapters discussing
Bruce as a writer/director and how the project came to be, and
finally Bruce's death and how the project mutated into a
Bruceploitation film in 1978.
My favourite bits? The flashes in between each take - sometimes
only a handful of frames - of Bruce and the crew setting up and
talking among themselves. The closest we'll ever come to seeing
behind-the-scenes footage, and often slowed-down in other parts of
the essay.
(Yes, I'm aware there's oft-bootlegged video footage shot by Bruce
and Robert Lee showing a fight rehearsal in Bruce's garden with Dan
and Wu Ngan, as well as the photo shoot with Bruce, Kareem and
James Tien. No, we couldn't access it.)
As well as info about the planned plot of the film, the production,
Bruce and the rest of the cast, the narration attempts to parse
rumour and legend from fact as much as possible, though a ten-hour
film couldn't possibly address every mad theory that's been floated
about GoD.
If you're wondering how two hours of raw footage could ever be fun
to watch, bear in mind that the film was 'edited in-camera', which
means there's very little in the way of extraneous material. Many
times, there's only one take of a shot; once they got it right,
they moved on!
But wait, there's more! In addition to the video essay section, we
couldn't pass up the opportunity to do a whole new assembly and dub
of the footage into a 'finished' form. It's not A Warrior's
Journey, or Bruce Lee in G.O.D., or Redux - it's something
else.
Another huge thanks to @OldPangYau for working with me on the short
film edit, especially given his exhaustive knowledge of prior
versions of the material. Brandon's the best!
Our aim was to present a 'complete' short film that feels as much
as possible like it was made by Golden Harvest in the break between
Way of the Dragon and Enter the Dragon. Obviously (as the narration
takes pains to point out) it is not Bruce Lee's vision of
TGOD...
... and it would be dishonest to say any assembly/dub is
'finishing' the film as he would. We will never know what that
would be. But we can emulate the style and tone of films made in
Hong Kong in 1972, so that the spirit of something resembling Lee's
intent can be evoked.
To that end, we've used music by Joseph Koo (such as his 'Game of
Death theme' as heard in the opening credits of Bruce Lee: The
Legend) and sound effects from other contemporaneous Golden Harvest
films, including The Way of the Dragon.
Big shoutout to Þorsteinn Gíslason (not sure if he's on Twitter)
who has done an extraordinary job on the sound effects, which
include authentic Bruce yelps and cries matching the on-screen
action.
We've commissioned a brand new animated opening credits animation
sequence in the style of credits from the period, brilliantly
executed by the geniuses at
@gazelle_inc Justin at Gazelle also did some excellent voiceover
work for us! Speaking of which...
A round of applause for the other very talented voice actors, who
all did a terrific job: @BrianRandomVA as Bruce, @Jason21608030 as
James,@ItBeMeMrButts as Chieh, @GriffinPuatu as Dan,
@TheThorntonWay as Kareem - thank you!
This may be controversial: we also dabbled in some Bruceploitation
of our own by filming a short prologue that condenses the
pre-pagoda exposition Bruce never got to film. MASSIVE thanks to
@neerdowellfilms, @Jimmythenut, @RussWould for helping put this
together!
If you want to skip all the video essay stuff and just go straight
to the short film, you can do so by going ahead to Chapter 8,
titled "Life After Death". Only a few minutes of me yammering then
you're in business.
So that's The Final Game of Death! It's an odd duck and I'm much
too close to it to say whether it's any good or not, and it may
well be an acquired taste. But I think it's pretty cool, and I hope
some of you do too. Though I don't recommend watching all 223 mins
in one sitting!