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Thread: I am Jackie Chan; my life in action

  1. #1
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    I am Jackie Chan; my life in action

    I recently just finished reading this. I have always had a large amount of nothing but the utmost respect and admiration for Jackie Chan. But now that I have read this autobiography. That has been multiplied by about one trillion. Jackie is the man. There will NEVER be another stuntman with his courage, skill, and outlook on life. He may not be the best fighter around, he may not be the best actor around, but Jackie Chan is the best around at what he does. Just curious what impact this book has had on fans of the man after they read it. Your new outlook on him compaired to your old one. Before you knew about his training and childhood.
    A man has only one death. That death may be as weighty as Mt. Tai, or it may be as light as a goose feather. It all depends upon the way he uses it....
    ~Sima Qian

    Master pain, or pain will master you.
    ~PangQuan

    "Just do your practice. Who cares if someone else's practice is not traditional, or even fake? What does that have to do with you?"
    ~Gene "The Crotch Master" Ching

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  2. #2
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    Great book...I read it a few years back. I especially enjoyed the chapters where he was in the Peking opera school and breaking into the stunt scene.
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  3. #3
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    Fully, I dont think anyone can truly appreciate or understand Jakie Chan until they read this book.
    A man has only one death. That death may be as weighty as Mt. Tai, or it may be as light as a goose feather. It all depends upon the way he uses it....
    ~Sima Qian

    Master pain, or pain will master you.
    ~PangQuan

    "Just do your practice. Who cares if someone else's practice is not traditional, or even fake? What does that have to do with you?"
    ~Gene "The Crotch Master" Ching

    You know you want to click me!!

  4. #4
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    I remember getting this book in hardcover when it came out. At that time, I was heavy into collecting kung fu movies (this was before they were readily available in U.S. stores -- most of them I had to order from friends in HK) and so I had snapped up any movie with Jacky, Sammo Hung, or Yuen Biao. And from reading a glut of magazine and Internet articles, I was pretty familiar with at least the story of his childhood and the rigors of his opera school days. But it was still fascinating to hear Jacky discuss in detail the training regimen and how it shaped his future career. I remember laughing at how Sammo was pretty much the bully of the class and some of his antics. I still think Jacky's best movies were the ones made with Sammo and Yuen (Project A, Wheels on Meals, Dragons Forever).

    Sammo made a movie in 1998 called Painted Faces which basically dramatizes the opera school days of those 3, although the focus of the movie is on the teacher and not the pupils. Sammo actually plays his old teacher, so it's rather bizzare to see the real Sammo in his teacher's role, barking orders to a kid who is playing the young Sammo, if that makes any sense. There is a neat analogy made in the movie between the teacher's pet turtle and the young pupils, but I don't want to spoil it for you -- check it out!
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  5. #5
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    I am Jackie Chan

    That book captured Jackie at 45. If you liked it, you should catch up to the Chan man and see him now in his mid 50s.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
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  6. #6
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    Make that 58

    HBD Jackie!
    A very happy birthday for Jackie Chan
    From Cinema Online Exclusively for Yahoo! NewsroomBy Peter Chai | From Cinema Online Exclusively for Yahoo! Newsroom – Mon, Apr 9, 2012 5:57 PM SGT

    A very happy birthday for Jackie Chan

    9 Apr – Jackie Chan celebrated his 58th birthday with 500 guests, together with his wife Joan Lin and son Jaycee Chan at a party held in his Sai Kung film studio in Hong Kong.

    At the birthday party, Jackie share his joy with friends including Sally Yeh, Liu Chia-Chang, Daniel Wu, Leo Ku, Willie Chan, Alex Law, Mabel Cheung, Stephen Fung, Andrew Lau, Hu Xia, Ko Chen-Tung and others.

    Jaycee had reportedly rushed back to attend the party and gave his father the tickets of his new movie "Double Trouble", which will be released in Beijing and Taiwan, as his birthday gift.

    Jackie also showed his appreciation for his fans on Weibo, "Saw the birthday wishes from so many friends, thank you everyone, I love you all."

    "I will return your wishes with the best movies, wait for my "Chinese Zodiac". I can't believe I would receive hundred thousands of birthday wishes. I resend there blessings to all mankind," the Kung Fu star added.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  7. #7
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    58 @ TIFF from NPR

    Jackie has been working that 'How can we different than Bruce Lee?' story since when, '78?

    Jackie Chan: Portrait Of The Action Star At 58
    04:05 pm
    September 14, 2012
    by Will Sloan

    Actor Jackie Chan appears at the Toronto International Film Festival.
    Enlarge Jemal Countess/Getty Images

    Actor Jackie Chan appears at the Toronto International Film Festival.

    Onstage at the Toronto International Film Festival, Jackie Chan describes his first visit to the United States. "I speak no English at that time — I do not even know how to order breakfast. Everyone know ... you know the story?"

    "No," says the audience, almost in unison.

    "No? Wow!" The 58-year-old action star is being feted in TIFF's "Mavericks" program, but most of his fans in the audience are unfamiliar with this anecdote. In his imperfect English, Chan begins: "When I first in U.S., my company ... they want me to only speak English. I was first there in U.C.L.A. in hotel, I sit there, I was hungry, I don't know how to order breakfast ... I went down to the lobby, I see — ah, in the morning, everybody went on the line for the breakfast. And I look inside: 'How can you order?' I don't know how to order! And I go back to the room to practice: 'Milk, egg, bacon, toast ...'" — he extends fingers to enumerate each item.

    The story continues, as Chan describes practicing the simple refrain of "milk, egg, bacon, toast" over and over for two days before summoning the courage to head to the hotel restaurant. "The waiter: 'What you order?' I said, 'Milk, bacon, toast, egg!'" Chan closes his eyes and flashes a beaming smile, pausing for maximum comic effect. Then, Chan assumes the role of the waiter: "How would you like your eggs?"

    The audience laughs, and Chan's eyes widen in exaggerated terror. "Egg!" he exclaims. From his facial expressions to his animated gestures to his wide-eyed naivete, the real-life Jackie Chan comes across like a character in a Jackie Chan movie.

    Earlier this year, the world's most famous martial artist made headlines by announcing his retirement from "big action movies," and his intention to focus on straight drama — or, in his words, to become "the Asian Robert De Niro." That declaration might seem awfully unlikely to stick, but then again, Jackie Chan is getting to an age where it's no longer easy to crawl across fiery coals (as he did in Drunken Master II), or fall from a clocktower and land on his head (as he did in Project A).

    Still, there will be one last extravaganza: Chinese Zodiac, opening worldwide on December 12. At his TIFF event, Chan shows several trailers, in which, among other feats, he races down the side of a mountain in a rollerblade suit.

    "When you fight on the screen, it looks like it's a real fight, like you could get hurt," observes moderator Cameron Bailey.

    "Oooh ... hurt too many!" says Chan. "Because at that time, we don't know special effect, we just know: one shot, camera, boom, pa-pa-pa-pa-pa ..." He waves his fists in the air. "This day — boom-kah! Ka-ka-ka-ka!" — he twists his hands in such a way as to suggest fast editing — "Is so easy this day!"

    Chan, who began his career as a stuntman in two of Bruce Lee's films, first attempted to become a leading man by playing Lee-like tough-guys. When Chan scowls and strikes a heroic pose, the audience laughs. "I'm not this kind of person! I'm just me!" His breakthrough came with 1978's Drunken Master, where he subverted the kung-fu genre by adding humor. "Every night, we say, 'How can we different than Bruce Lee? Okay: opposite Bruce Lee!' When he do, aahh!" — he mimes a punch — "then I do, owww!!!!" — he mimes shaking his fist in pain. "Everything opposite. Bruce Lee never get hurt — I get hurt!"

    Though he was a star in Asia throughout the '80s, most Americans first encountered Chan via Rumble in the Bronx (1995). On the publicity trail, he summersaulted onto Leno's couch, did kung-fu tricks for Letterman, and immortalized his nose in cement outside Mann's Chinese Theater. In Asia, he could be cheeky and Chaplinesque, but in America, he excelled in the role of a small, smiley, slightly confused foreigner.

    He solidified this persona in Rush Hour (1998), playing the culture-shocked straight-man to Chris Tucker. Tucker, who is also at TIFF, makes a surprise appearance onstage with Chan, and more or less reprises his role. "I said to Brett Ratner, the director, 'Does Jackie speak English? How'm I gonna do this movie? He didn't say one word to me, did he like me, did he want Wesley Snipes, does he know who I am?"

    Chan is also seemingly in character. "The whole time when I see him he just keep talking! I don't even know one word out of your mouth!"

    In the west, Chan has a peculiar kind of celebrity: not exactly an object of worship, difficult to accept as "the Asian Robert De Niro," but regarded with affection by practically everyone. Perhaps this is because more than most stars, his cheerful, slightly goofy onscreen persona seems virtually indistinguishable from his offscreen one. He's the kind of celebrity whose very name causes people to smile fondly, as if remembering an amusing coworker, classmate, or relative.

    At 58, Chan may be the most famous Asian entertainer in the world, but in Hong Kong — the territory where he was born, and the one that first embraced him — his popularity has recently cooled. In 1999, his squeaky-clean image was punctured when he fathered a child with a former Miss Asia, and in 2006, he drunkenly interrupted a concert and cursed at the audience. His close relationship with the Mainland Communist government, and his controversial suggestion that "We Chinese need to be controlled," led to him being voted one of Hong Kong's "least trusted" public figures in a Reader's Digest poll.

    But those stories are difficult to process seeing him onstage at TIFF, flashing his Jackie Chan smile and singing Edwin Starr's "War" on request. He's Jackie Chan. And on this afternoon, everybody likes Jackie Chan.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
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  8. #8
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    The update

    Growing Old Before Growing Up - A new autobiography by Jackie Chan

    No word on an English translation yet. We'll take that up on this new thread.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

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