BH Tilt | Release Date: August 25, 2017
4.5
USER SCORE
Mixed or average reviews based on 28 Ratings
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8
Mixed:
9
Negative:
11
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8
DotTheEyesAug 25, 2017
This is a fun and interesting film. It deserves more positive reviews than it will inevitably receive. It utilizes Bruce Lee the way A Hard Day's Night and Help! utilized the Beatles; "Bruce Lee" is a character here in a martial-arts actionThis is a fun and interesting film. It deserves more positive reviews than it will inevitably receive. It utilizes Bruce Lee the way A Hard Day's Night and Help! utilized the Beatles; "Bruce Lee" is a character here in a martial-arts action film, not a definitive and reverent biopic. Set in San Francisco in the mid-1960s, it lifts elements from Lee's biography—his controversial teaching of kung fu to Caucasians, his mysterious and contested private fight with Shaolin master Wong Jack Man—but it also includes entirely fictional characters and passages, including a scene in which Lee and Wong elaborately fight their way through a Triad-owned restaurant. (The choreography here and elsewhere is excellent.) The end result, I believe, nicely plays as an extension of Lee's pop mystique and brand, and I half suspect the man himself, no stranger to self-mythologizing, would smile and nod in approval. He is played by a convincing Philip Ng, a Hong Kong-born actor who achieves an appropriate combination of arrogance and charisma. Even better is Xia Yu as Wong; his is an absolutely magnetic variation on the he-doesn't-want-any-trouble warrior-pacifist archetype, and it is a pleasure to lean into his every delectably inscrutable line of kung-fu philosophizing. Expand
3 of 6 users found this helpful33
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8
sbolonAug 27, 2017
This is an enjoyable movie that brings Bruce Lee back into the spotlight for a new generation. This movie is more like the Ip Man movies, in that they were highly dramatized re-imaginings of actual events in Ip Man's life. The first andThis is an enjoyable movie that brings Bruce Lee back into the spotlight for a new generation. This movie is more like the Ip Man movies, in that they were highly dramatized re-imaginings of actual events in Ip Man's life. The first and third acts are pretty good, while the second is a little clunky. For a more in-depth breakdown you can see my full review here:

https://www.martialjournal.com/birth-dragon-martial-arts-breakdown-review/

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1 of 2 users found this helpful11
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