Jackie Chan's Who Am I? Movie Script



Soon, we’ll be changing locations and will continue shooting overseas. Before heading to the airport, I had to open all the letters, gifts and donations from my fans. I can see that my fans have put a lot of heart into these gifts.

Not sure if it will follow the original part 2 as close as this one. Daniel Wu plays the chestnut selling boy Jie who is out of place amid the underground violence which they find themselves more and more drawn into. His portrayal in the first hour of the film is fine but in the second half his character has a real quick change of character which is questionable and not really fitting with the guy we saw in the earlier part. The story begins with dozens of Chinese immigrants entering Japan via Wakasa Bay and making their way to Tokyo where they do the less glamourous jobs that the Japanese don’t want to do. Steelhead is an illegal worker hoping to make it in Japan the honest way but his life gradually descends into petty crime and from that he finds himself deeper and deeper in trouble as his crimes to help his people have a future get heavier jackie chan movies and heavier.

His closest brush with death came from a comparatively "safe" stunt in Armour of God when he fell from a tree, fracturing his skull and permanently rupturing one of his eardrums. This being a man who has run along the edges of skyscrapers and crashed through electrical wires, it was a reminder that he can't be casual about anything he does. Among his injuries, he has dislocated his pelvis, broken his fingers, toes, nose, both cheekbones, hips, sternum, neck, ankle and ribs on numerous occasions. Traditionally, Chan does all his own stunts, and in his days of producing low-budget Hong Kong chop-socky, that was the only way it was ever done.

Every time I make a movie, it’s actually one less movie for me to make in my lifetime. That’s why even though my knee is in pain, I don’t want to stop or take time off to fix it. And I hope I can use less time to do more charity, and use every possible opportunity to do more charity. I’d like to take this opportunity to say a heartfelt thank you to Datong for giving me this opportunity to help so many people today.

To give an element of realism, some of Jackie's movies has him running away from a multi-person fight, unless when he's surrounded by objects he can use. LEGO fans who missed Storks can watch The Master on the home video releases of The LEGO Batman Movie. The Foreigner , a Martin Campbell-directed project with Pierce Brosnan based on the novel The Chinaman.

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