
Hong Kong Entertainment: Kung Fu Superstar 1981
About This Novel
"Mr. Zhang Yang, someone once called you the second Bruce Lee. What do you think of this?" "Mr. Li is a pioneer, and there will never be another one of him in the world." "You mean you can never surpass Mr. Li?" "No, I mean Mr. Li is unique, and I... Too!" "Thank you Mr. Zhang Yang for your answer, then let us warmly congratulate you again..." "Mr. Zhang Yang, the epoch-making kung fu superstar from Hong Kong Island, the current president of the Grand Fighting Alliance, the promoter of mixed martial arts, and the uncrowned king in the boxing ring, won this year's Oscar Lifetime Achievement Award!"
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(17)Scraped 17d ago
A reborn person traveled to Hong Kong in the 1980s and had good kung fu to act in movies. It is acceptable to make movies. The key is the process of acting in movies, just like ordinary people, climbing up step by step. So why bother with the concept of rebirth? Why not just write about the life of an ordinary Hong Kong Islander!
I can't stand the brainless protagonist. The protagonist's IQ and personality are designed to be killed by the villain in the movie. The role is only to allow the protagonist to seek revenge.
It's good to read. There are very few Kung Fu Superstar novels, but this one is top-notch.
The layout is too small and not interesting.
Is that all?
It's very well written. Why is it so bad? Such a pity?
The bullets are noisy and mixed, and big and small beads fall on the jade plate.
The trash can, Bruce Lee, and Jackie Chan didn't succeed, and Bruce Lee didn't join the gang either.
Well written, the Hong Kong Entertainment Martial Arts Master route is quite interesting! Come on, come on, come on!
First of all, the author is very thoughtful. Although in order to prevent the protagonist from joining the underworld, he found a tiger skin to protect him from the wind and rain. This kind of forbearance somewhat weakens the sense of fun, but it does have a bit of Hong Kong entertainment flavor. Aren't their group just being oppressed and arrogant at the same time? Fighting descriptions and related competition layouts are the strengths of this book, but they are also obvious shortcomings. There are too many. The commercial layout limits the protagonist's way of thinking to movies + fighting + leagues, and occasionally there are a little embarrassing emotional lines. There is passion and heroic spirit in Qian Yun, but not much. This fucking makes people uncomfortable.
The first seven pictures are so addictive. The protagonist is chosen by nature to be a worker. You are a champion, pure and pure🤡, and you say you are not a gangster, but the result is different from being someone else's little brother. You are better off cutting the ground by yourself than being a four-nine brat. The writing is so outrageous. If you have the ability, it is better to open a martial arts gym than to live under someone else's roof.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(17)Scraped 17d ago
A reborn person traveled to Hong Kong in the 1980s and had good kung fu to act in movies. It is acceptable to make movies. The key is the process of acting in movies, just like ordinary people, climbing up step by step. So why bother with the concept of rebirth? Why not just write about the life of an ordinary Hong Kong Islander!
I can't stand the brainless protagonist. The protagonist's IQ and personality are designed to be killed by the villain in the movie. The role is only to allow the protagonist to seek revenge.
It's good to read. There are very few Kung Fu Superstar novels, but this one is top-notch.
The layout is too small and not interesting.
Is that all?
It's very well written. Why is it so bad? Such a pity?
The bullets are noisy and mixed, and big and small beads fall on the jade plate.
The trash can, Bruce Lee, and Jackie Chan didn't succeed, and Bruce Lee didn't join the gang either.
Well written, the Hong Kong Entertainment Martial Arts Master route is quite interesting! Come on, come on, come on!
First of all, the author is very thoughtful. Although in order to prevent the protagonist from joining the underworld, he found a tiger skin to protect him from the wind and rain. This kind of forbearance somewhat weakens the sense of fun, but it does have a bit of Hong Kong entertainment flavor. Aren't their group just being oppressed and arrogant at the same time? Fighting descriptions and related competition layouts are the strengths of this book, but they are also obvious shortcomings. There are too many. The commercial layout limits the protagonist's way of thinking to movies + fighting + leagues, and occasionally there are a little embarrassing emotional lines. There is passion and heroic spirit in Qian Yun, but not much. This fucking makes people uncomfortable.
The first seven pictures are so addictive. The protagonist is chosen by nature to be a worker. You are a champion, pure and pure🤡, and you say you are not a gangster, but the result is different from being someone else's little brother. You are better off cutting the ground by yourself than being a four-nine brat. The writing is so outrageous. If you have the ability, it is better to open a martial arts gym than to live under someone else's roof.
Featured in 3 Booklists
Official(3)
I found it by scanning the rankings two days ago, and it's better than I imagined. Hong Kong entertainment article. As a UFC world champion, the protagonist travels through Hong Kong in 1981, meets Chen Huimin, seizes the opportunity to make a movie, and convinces Billy Chow to recruit him. He copied "Black Fist" to enhance the martial arts scenes and changed it into a refreshing plot, becoming a new force in the Spring Festival release. At the same time, he will open a martial arts gym and prepare to promote mixed martial arts. It seems that the movie and WWE will follow the path of both hands. Currently, Sammo Hung is following Sammo Hung and inviting him to join the cast because of his box office performance and new style of martial arts films. Why read this book: In fact, I have seen more than one copy of this mixed martial arts + movie dual-route routine, but they are all Hollywood books, and generally the response is average. This time, I actually saw someone opening a new map and turning to Hong Kong Island. It seemed that they were preparing to play a real kung fu martial arts movie in the style of copying Ten. At least I'm quite satisfied so far. The plot is exciting and the characters' IQs are online. The route is relatively novel and not an old-fashioned one, and the protagonist's character is pretty likable. I look forward to the follow-up. Why not read this book: I haven't found any flaws yet. I have to say that the author had read part of the last book before and then stopped reading it. I just read it and it seemed like a eunuch. Generally speaking, food and grass will be reassessed later depending on the situation.




Hong Kong entertainment article. A champion boxer travels across Hong Kong Island, meets the boss of a dynamic social organization, and makes an action movie.




(Latest evaluation, eunuch, changed to 3 stars) Bruce Lee's spiritual sequel. Kung Fu + Hong Kong Entertainment. As a future UFC champion, he traveled back to Hong Kong in 1981. The main plot is to make a movie, and the branch plot is to compete in martial arts. The male protagonist has the advanced fighting concept of later generations, that is, unlimited fighting. This concept originated from Bruce Lee. I like Bruce Lee very much and often lament his untimely death. Reading this novel is a way to make up for my regrets. 4.5 Stars. (Personal grass jelly)













