This paper proposes that future Jackie Chan studies should always present films in order of production , not release, because his healing time between injuries dictates the narrative rhythm.
| Year | Title (English) | Phase | Key Stunt/Significance | |------|----------------|-------|------------------------| | 1962 | Big and Little Wong Tin Bar | I | Child extra | | 1971 | Fists of Fury | I | Killed by Bruce Lee | | 1976 | New Fist of Fury | I | First lead (flop) | | 1978 | Snake in the Eagle’s Shadow | II | Breakthrough | | 1978 | Drunken Master | II | Signature style born | | 1980 | The Young Master | II | First outtakes reel | | 1982 | Dragon Lord | II | Shuttlecock kick | | 1983 | Project A | III | Clock tower fall | | 1985 | Police Story | III | Mall pole slide | | 1986 | Armour of God | III | Skull fracture | | 1994 | Drunken Master II | III | Coal crawl | | 1995 | Rumble in the Bronx | IV | US breakthrough | | 1998 | Rush Hour | IV | Buddy cop formula | | 2017 | The Foreigner | V | Aged realism | | 2023 | Ride On | V | Meta-elegy | jackie chan movies in order
At age 8, Chan appears as a child actor in Big and Little Wong Tin Bar . But the crucial order is behind the camera: his training at the China Drama Academy (age 7-17) precedes every kick. In Fists of Fury (1971), Chan is a thug who gets his neck snapped by Bruce Lee—a humiliation he will spend 20 years avenging by inverting Lee’s model. The first true “Jackie Chan movie” is New Fist of Fury (1976), but it fails because it copies Lee. Imitation is death. Phase II: The Schlock Years & The Director’s Awakening (1976–1982) Order Key: Snake in the Eagle’s Shadow (1978) → Drunken Master (1978) → The Young Master (1980) → Dragon Lord (1982). This paper proposes that future Jackie Chan studies
The Police Story series in order shows Chan’s character (Kevin Chan) evolving from a reckless cop to a man who cannot keep a girlfriend or a partner. The stunts become his only language of love. Phase IV: Hollywood Compromise (1995–2004) Order Key: Rumble in the Bronx (1995) → Rush Hour (1998) → Shanghai Noon (2000) → Rush Hour 2 (2001) → The Tuxedo (2002) → New Police Story (2004). In Fists of Fury (1971), Chan is a
In this late order, Chan confronts age. The Foreigner (2017) is the masterpiece: he plays a 60-year-old grieving father who uses guerrilla tactics, not acrobatics. The fight scenes are short, brutal, and joint-locking—a recognition that his body has a final order.
Yet Rush Hour 2 contains a masterpiece of order: the “massage parlor fight” is edited in long takes, forcing Western editors to keep Chan’s rhythm. The lesson: Hollywood cannot tame him, but it can dilute him. Order Key: The Myth (2005) → The Forbidden Kingdom (2008) → Chinese Zodiac (2012) → The Foreigner (2017) → Ride On (2023).
This sequence is tragic for purists. Rumble in the Bronx (shot in Canada, set in NY) succeeds despite Hollywood’s meddling. But Rush Hour introduces Chris Tucker—the talkative partner. In order, you see Chan’s screen time shrink. The Tuxedo (2002) uses CGI to replace his stunts. New Police Story (2004) reboots his character as a depressed alcoholic—a meta-commentary on his own fatigue.