
I am in the process of getting iktaPOP.media set up and, once that's done, this Locals will become somewhat less about my publishing, and more about my own interests, as well as my own writing. (I'll still make books available for subscribers, same as over at iktaPOP.)
As part of holding myself to that, I'm going to blog some movies, starting with the Brucepoloitation epics contained on Severin Films' Game Of Clones: Bruceploitation Vol. 1, which is an amazing boxed set.
I confess that, as a lifelong kung fu movie fan, I have always been more than a bit sniffy about Bruceploitation. The genre's very existence was tacky and, at least at times, insulting both to Lee's memory and to his fans. I remember pointedly giving Bruce Le videotapes a wide berth in the rental stores I haunted as a teen.
So when Severin announced this box set, my reaction was "Really?"
Then I listened to Severin's podcast about the genuinely impressive project that the box set (and documentary) was, and I started figuring out how to scrounge the money to pre-order it.
A few things sold me on it. First, they made a good argument that the people who actually worked on the films, not least the "clone" actors, did work that deserved better than to vanish into the ephemeral pop culture ether, whatever other factors might make the films disreputable.
Second, something the podcast got more detailed about than the set itself (at least so far), they appealed to my archivist nature. One of the reasons I republish public domain pulp, even the bad stuff, is that I think if something has been created, it should be preserved. The producers of Bruceploitation movies, for the most part, did not even respect what they had made enough to preserve them, some of them destroying their film negatives once the films had a video tape copy. (I about had a heart attack at that tidbit.) That made me realize that I had to have this set.
The cherry on top was one movie on the bonus disc: The Big Boss Part II, starring the man who would soon take the stage name Bruce Le. Not only is it one of the few Bruceploitation films that is a direct sequel to an actual Bruce Lee film, but it is a film that has never been released on any home media, anywhere in the world(!!!). No VHS release, no DVD, no BetaMax, nothing, ever, anywhere. And if you think that didn't act like catnip to my archivist's nature, think again.
I have now watched the documentary, Enter The Clones Of Bruce, as well as four and a half of the actual movies (out of fourteen). Likely I will post thoughts on each movie first, re-watch the documentary, and then post on that.
So, more to come. Not necessarily every day, but more often than to date.