Jackie Chan First Movies -
Jackie Chan’s first movie wasn’t an action film. It was a tearjerker. Born Chan Kong-sang in 1954, Jackie was the son of poor parents who worked for the French ambassador in Hong Kong. As a hyperactive child, he was enrolled at the China Drama Academy, a Peking Opera school run by the brutal Master Yu Jim-yuen. There, he endured ten-hour days of acrobatics, singing, martial arts, and, most importantly, pain.
At age seven, Master Yu loaned out a group of his “Seven Little Fortunes” (Jackie’s performance troupe) to a film studio. They were needed for a cameo in a black-and-white Cantonese opera film called Big and Little Wong Tin Bar (also known as The Seven Little Fortunes ). jackie chan first movies
These were the days of no safety gear. If a director wanted a child to jump from a roof onto a moving cart, the child did it or got hit with a cane back at the school. Jackie learned to fall before he learned to act. The breakthrough came when Jackie, now 17, was hired as a stuntman for Bruce Lee’s Fist of Fury . This is where the famous story occurs. In the climactic fight at the Russian school, Bruce Lee’s character, Chen Zhen, kicks a man so hard he flies backward through a wooden doorway. Jackie Chan’s first movie wasn’t an action film
This was the birth of “Jackie Chan comedy kung fu.” He got hit in the face, ran away, hid behind furniture, and used buckets, brooms, and ladders as weapons. The audience laughed with him, not at him. The film was a monster hit, breaking box office records in Hong Kong and Asia. Riding the wave, Yuen Woo-ping and Jackie immediately made Drunken Master (1978) the same year. This time, Jackie played the real-life folk hero Wong Fei-hung—but as a mischievous, disrespectful teenager who gets trained in the taboo “Drunken Boxing” by a vicious master. The final fight, where Jackie fights the killer “Thunderleg” while simulating drunkenness with staggering precision, is a masterpiece of physical storytelling. As a hyperactive child, he was enrolled at
After Drunken Master , he would go on to direct The Young Master (1980), form his own stunt team, and eventually break every bone in his body for films like Police Story and Project A . But the complete story of his first movies is not one of early glory—it is the story of a boy who learned to fall, failed spectacularly as a copycat, and then got up, laughed at himself, and invented a new way to fly.
That man was Jackie Chan.
