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Jet Li: A Biography by James Robert Parish β€” book cover

Jet Li: A Biography

by James Robert Parish
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Overview

Jet Li is part of a crew of new Asian stars taking Hollywood by storm. Along with Chow Yun-Fat, Michelle Yeoh, Jackie Chan, and Maggie Cheung, Jet Li has kicked and punched his way out of the cult-film underground and into mainstream superstardom. With his performance in The One, Li becomes the first to prove his power as the top-billed draw. Jet Li, the first book published in English about the thirty-eight year-old "Gene Kelly of the action film," follows him from his days in Hong Kong as an extraordinarily successful actor in classics like Once Upon a Time in China and his overlooked work as a director and producer. Special attention is given to his Hollywood debut alongside Mel Gibson in Lethal Weapon 4; his recent star turns in the gangland fable Romeo Must Die and the sci-fi blockbuster The One. Jet Li looks at the actor's fiercely protected private life and explains the broad appeal of Hollywood's new Bruce Lee to fans of all agesβ€”from Hong Kong chop-socky cultists to Blockbuster families, to the new Hollywood that has eagerly embraced him. A complete filmography of Jet Li's screen work in Hollywood and Asia as well as 30 never before published color and black-and-white photographs are included.

Synopsis

Jet Li is part of a crew of new Asian stars taking Hollywood by storm. Along with Chow Yun-Fat, Michelle Yeoh, Jackie Chan, and Maggie Cheung, Jet Li has kicked and punched his way out of the cult-film underground and into mainstream superstardom. With his performance in The One, Li becomes the first to prove his power as the top-billed draw. Jet Li, the first book published in English about the thirty-eight year-old “Gene Kelly of the action film,” follows him from his days in Hong Kong as an extraordinarily successful actor in classics like Once Upon a Time in China and his overlooked work as a director and producer. Special attention is given to his Hollywood debut alongside Mel Gibson in Lethal Weapon 4; his recent star turns in the gangland fable Romeo Must Die and the sci-fi blockbuster The One. Jet Li looks at the actor’s fiercely protected private life and explains the broad appeal of Hollywood’s new Bruce Lee to fans of all ages—from Hong Kong chop-socky cultists to Blockbuster families, to the new Hollywood that has eagerly embraced him. A complete filmography of Jet Li's screen work in Hollywood and Asia as well as 30 never before published color and black-and-white photographs are included.

Publishers Weekly

Once a fledgling Hong Kong actor and now a martial arts Hollywood superstar, Jet Li has been called the new Bruce Lee. Parish (Gus Van Sant) delves into the 39-year-old's life and career in this biography, analyzing his films from the little-known The Shaolin Temple to blockbusters like Lethal Weapon 4 and Romeo Must Die. Li was born in Beijing with the birth name Li Lian-jie. He began studying wushu (martial arts) at age eight and still adheres closely to traditional Chinese customs, which dictate complete respect for the martial arts school and its master. The book includes dozens of color and b&w photos. (Aug.) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

Once a fledgling Hong Kong actor and now a martial arts Hollywood superstar, Jet Li has been called the new Bruce Lee. Parish (Gus Van Sant) delves into the 39-year-old's life and career in this biography, analyzing his films from the little-known The Shaolin Temple to blockbusters like Lethal Weapon 4 and Romeo Must Die. Li was born in Beijing with the birth name Li Lian-jie. He began studying wushu (martial arts) at age eight and still adheres closely to traditional Chinese customs, which dictate complete respect for the martial arts school and its master. The book includes dozens of color and b&w photos. (Aug.) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

What Bruce Lee was to kung fu, Jet Li is to wu shu. The star of Romeo Must Die and The One was born into humble surroundings as Li Lian-jie. Small for his age, he had a gift for martial arts and stayed the course in the brutal Beijing Sports and Exercise School. He was already winning major competitions by the age of 12 and by 17 would emerge as Jet Li, Action Hero, in Chinese film. But he did not become widely known to Western audiences until he starred opposite Mel Gibson in Lethal Weapon IV. Parish, the author of several books on Hollywood, does a good job of chronicling Li's early career but does not reveal much about his private life. Yet as with books on Bruce Lee, there is a big audience for this type of well-illustrated title (it includes 30 color and black-and-white photographs, never before published), especially among YAs.-Rosellen Brewer, Monterey Cty. Free Libs., Salinas, CA Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Detailed overview of the Chinese martial-arts actor's life and career, from veteran Hollywood chronicler Parish (Gus Van Sant, 2002, etc.). Born in Beijing in 1963, Li Lian-jie was the youngest of five children raised by a single mother following her husband's early death. The cherished baby of his family, Li grew up in a sheltered, strict environment; his maturity and self-discipline were evident even as a small child. He excelled at school, showing natural charisma and leadership abilities as well as athletic grace and prowess. Placed in a program devoted to traditional Chinese martial arts, Li proved himself a bantam master, winning numerous competitions and awards. In 1974, at age 11, he became something of a national hero when he traveled to America and performed in a martial-arts exhibition at the White House. President Nixon said he hoped the boy would someday become his bodyguard; Li replied that he would never be happy protecting just one person but wanted to help safeguard all Chinese people. Tapped as a teenager for martial-arts films, he scored international success with The Shaolin Temple (1982), Once Upon a Time in China (1991), and various sequels. His major breakthrough to US stardom arrived in 1998 with Lethal Weapon 4; Romeo Must Die (2000), The One (2001), and Invincible (2001) cemented his status. Li is widely seen as the last of the Asian action-movie stars in the tradition of Bruce Lee, from an authentic martial-arts background and thus not dependent on animation or computerization to complete his fight sequences. Parish is knowledgeable about martial-arts films and does a good job of depicting Li's one-in-a-billion rise from obscurity. He includes a full filmographyas well as valuable background and commentary on many Li films not well-known here, including those made with legendary Hong Kong producer Tsui Hark, such as Dr. Wai in the Scripture With No Words (1996) and Black Mask (1996). Serviceable.

Book Details

Published
June 1, 2002
Publisher
Da Capo Press
Pages
214
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781560253761

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