There will never be someone like Jackie in the movie business. No one will risk their neck and do 350 takes on one single action scene just to make it look perfect. The dedication he has is out of this world!
Yeah and it was on film, which costs money every time you role. Let’s say each take was less than ten minutes that’s a $100. Just on the film running through the camera. At least with digital you could pull it off with no extra cost. Still the dedication and patience is unreal.
@@PlasticFo0ds_0001 agree. but I think they do a different type of stunt, if that makes sense. Jackie is more on the fight action scenes, whereas Tom is on the extravagant stunts like water tanks, army cargo plane, skydiving, pilot etc. You want to pilot a plane, car, bikes with TOM, But you want to be a martial artist with Jackie. Nevertheless, both actors have great action movies. Just my thoughts
Supposedly Jackie Chan would actually never make someone do a stunt he would not do himself, and according to some, there are numerous dangerous stunts done by others on-screen that he himself did first, to show them that it indeed can be done. As for the fights themselves, Jackie Chan has the best quote as to why Hong Kong action sequences work so well: "There's a rhythm to the fights, and the audience don't know it's there, until they know that it's not there." (Relayed by Bey Logan so it's probably a paraphrase)
I love the comment about "zig zagging into frame and then ducking out". It's how Jackie's editing make each scene looks so frantic without having people standing around waiting for their turn to hit.
there was a "stunt" Jackie does in First Strike where he goes down a wall with his back on a brick wall and his feet on this little palm tree. He doesn't even look at the tree and makes it looks so freaking easy. Oddly I never see it in any of these reaction videos, but It was so simple and crazy hard at the same time.
There's a "little" stunt in the middle of a fight scene in Operation Condor, where the bad guy stands on Jackie's chest and tries to stick his head under a moving platform. Jackie's reaction is done for laughs, but it's the kind of stunt that if he'd been 2 inches out of place, he'd have been killed.
A very important point that Jackie and his directors and writers got, that's often missing in movies of late: the villiains have to be super scary and hyper skilled for the hero to look good when he eventually beats them. They really stressed this point in 80s and 90s action movies, and it's particularly visible in Jackie's movies. They always had the best actors and fighters to go against Jackie's characters, and allowed them to shine and show off all their skills.
First saw City Hunter on Japanese TV in 1996 and I brought the house down with my laughing. Then the family saw it was Jackie Chan and understood. I watched a bunch more Jackie movies while living there, loved Armour of God movies, the Young Master, Project A, Police Story, Drunken Master, the one where he has an identical twin & is controlling him like a puppet in a fight... so many! I couldn't believe it. When Rush Hour & Shanghai Noon came out in Australia I was like YES FINALLY people will understand, and the reactions in the cinema to his fight scenes was very gratifying. ☺
As a parkour athlete i can understand how tough it is to execute jackie's parkour moves(specially his underbars) .and he was doing this when it wasnt even invented hats off
Not being a stunt person, I find it fascinating to hear the terminology you give to the various moves. It actually helps to see how the different pieces form an impressive stunt. Thanks!
The part in Armour of God where he switched positions from left to right while still being in the foreground is an excellent use of emphasis so you can see the enemy coming at Jackie while not shifting attention away from him.
Awesome way to kick off my morning. Thanks guys 😊. Fun Jackie Chan fact, the movie you guys were watching first, Armour of God, has the stunt that nearly took Jackie Chan's life when he jumped from the top of a wall and grabbed onto a tree branch and it snapped. I've seen that come up on lists talking about Jackie Chan stunts and injuries he had throughout his movie career.
Damn!! I didn't know action scenes would become so different when looked from a stuntmen's perspective.Its like watching a different movie altogether. Kudos to u guys!!!
You might want to react to Jackie Chan's First strike movie. There's underwater fight scenes, parkour, moving around at the ledge of a tall building, ladder fight scenes and snowmobile etc. Its one of the movies he had with many different environments and settings.
When Jackie was training at young age he will learn to pose after every routine, it’s a device to ‘set the scene’. And the looks and expressions on his face carries over from that era of Chinese theatre to his movies. The strength and conditioning he did was also brutal.
I almost fell down a escalator when he was walking behind me. Then he reached out to grab me, with an expression and hand movement like he does in the movies. 😂 Felt embarrassed but actually a memorable experience.
@@OmarZaki … and around the same period I was alone in an elevator with Michelle Yeoh. She was so friendly, had a very short chat with her. (I worked in a famous hotel in Hong Kong at that time, hence I bumped into them)
When I was a kid, I watched Jackie Chan's movies a lot, and thought these were very normal and ordinary stuff he did in a movie...but I ended up so wrong. After seeing your reactions to those small details, it made me realize how much more difficult the stunts were performed. So crazy...My man Jackie the legend.
i love your reactions! i'm having fun watching jackie and the three of you having fun watching jackie! 😁 also learning from your comments why (t)he(y) do what (t)he(y) does 😎
Keep up the great work, Omar !! Entertaining content for sure and an interesting glimpse into the world of professional stunt people. Stay up stay safe bless up n respect !
If you're interested, I'd say check out Andy Long! He definitely has the potential to become an Action Icon like Jackie Chan! He used to be on JC Stunt team and is now making his own films
What I never realised I loved about Jackies movies is there aren't like 7 cuts jammed into two seconds during the action scene, that other action movies have.
11:03 I’ve said it once and I’ll say it again: Jackie Chan films are one of the only films that I cringe and massage the body part when someone does the stunt of said injury. In this case, the monk slamming his shins against the edge of the table. Knowing what it feels like because I’ve hit my shins on things or have been kicked there, I’m massaging my shins because of it.
The best thing about Jackie Chan in movies, is that he does his own stunts. That's why at the end of every movie during the credits, they always show the stunts that Jackie Chan did and how much he failed by attempting to do those certain stunts. But also, they put in bloopers as well, knowing how funny Jackie Chan is on set working with the cast.
One thing I love about his movies, especially the old ones, is they always included the bloopers at the end which showed just how often he got injured.
Even “The Master of Action Comedy” had to have gotten inspiration from somewhere, or someone. Check out Jackie Chan’s idols, Buster Keaton, and Harold Lloyd! Remember, though, this was from the Silent Era.
The sidekick thingy in 15:53 is actually called "FoShan No Shadow Kick" (direct translate from the Chinese 佛山無影腳). This kick is originated from the 1991 film “Once Upon In China 黃飛鴻“ from Jet Li. This is the scene you can find in that movie. Correct me if you see this kick from any movie earlier than this.
It seems the main reason his old Hongkong movies have such spectacular fights is because the studios there trust him. A Hollywood studio will rarely allow a relatively small moment like the fan spin to be done if it took 2-300 tries. In Hongkong he could spend half a day perfecting a tiny moment like that, where as in Hollywood they would try 5-10 tries at most and then either cut it and move on, or use camera tricks making it less impressive. The trust that it will be worth it in the end is what is needed to make that kind of movie magic, while in Hollywood time and money is generally the only thing that matters.
This is great stuff! I loved watching Jackie Chan flicks. Seeing his martial arts as a kid thinking he was doing Breaking "Breakdancing" moves in his stunts, but learning as I got older that he is really showing how Breaking incorporated Kung Fu and other styles into Breaking. Ground Flare is just a windmill.
A lot of the first fight scene was re-shot with 4 guys from Jackie's stunt team in wigs and (a lot of) fake tan. The women were American competition fighters, who apparently didn't take instructions well because they felt that they knew better.
@@OmarZaki i mean everything from you and the guys reactions to the breakdowns to watching it in full speed, and Jackie's acting style was just on par with what i expected. Not sure if he would be happy with you spilling the insider info but its out there now hahaha
No guys! Jackie Chan actually makes an effort to make his fights the most smoothest! Many other actors can’t pull that off! This is what makes Jackie so special
To be fair to comments in prev vid, y'all were so visceral in your responses to the action it did feel a little like first time viewing. However, I am glad you decided to do more. Also, I agree with y'all's comment, in that I don't think any real stunt person would say they know their job well and also be able to say they don't know who Jackie Chan is. It would be like a basketball player saying they don't know Michael Jordan. LOL
I think it's because we have very new eyes when it comes to watching action as we now create action videos as well as work in Stunts professionally so we have a new understanding and appreciation for these kind of insane stunts and fight scenes that truly are top tier
@@OmarZaki That's the earliest instance of the Power Rangers bicycling side-kick that I'm aware of. Ironically, OUATIC is about a real historical figure whose kung fu style "Hung Gar" is actually a very not-wuxia-looking, grounded boxing and grappling style with no jumping and almost no kicks. The "shadowless kick" is the one kick the style is known for, called "shadowless" because it's so fast... but it's a simple front snap. So because it's a *wuxia* movie, they came up with that bicycle side-kick to be the cinematic representation of it.
Something you didn't mention us that there aren't "turns" at fighting in many of these stunts. Multiple people are actively attacking Jackie Chan simultaneously.
@@OmarZaki in my opinoin i think dreamworks needs to make more kung fu panda with jackie voicing monkey before we lose possible the best comedic martial artist jackie chan in my opinion IS monkey kung fu as he's silly and mischeivous in his films
WTF how could you not analyse the continuing fight scene between Jackie and Richard Norton in City Hunter?? Him with the tonfas, and long silver staff, and bare hands/arms, on casino tables. Best funny scene. And also, you need to explain how did Sammo Hun pull off the tennis racquet double bell ringer in Twinkle Stars!
I absolutely love that fight! That's actually the start of Part 2 of this Reaction :) Currently editing Part 2 now. Part 1 was getting too long haha so we decided to split it up, but don't worry, we watch and talk about the whole fight. Truly HILARIOUS and one of my favorites haha. Jackie is a true genius and master.
That what make him legend, he himself doing it fast not a trick or cameras dude, lmfao y'all better learn who's Jackie Chan is a legend that didn't depend on cameras trick to fool audience but his own martial arts skill itself
You should do his early movies like when he fights Hwang Jung Lee in Drunken Master (which was done in 1 or 2 takes). Or the three sword guys in "The Fearless Hyena" and the movie "Snake & Crane Arts of Shaolin". The acrobatics is amazing.
@@surfdigby He does a similer move in the practice montage in Drunken Master as well. Arms crossed, hits the floor with his head and then back to his feet. Amazing.
He did the same move while singing (i dont remember but i think the song was the one from Police story?) on stage & kept right on singing without missing a beat.
There will never be someone like Jackie in the movie business. No one will risk their neck and do 350 takes on one single action scene just to make it look perfect. The dedication he has is out of this world!
I'd say Tom Cruise is probably on the same level with Jackie in terms of doing thier own stunts
Yeah and it was on film, which costs money every time you role. Let’s say each take was less than ten minutes that’s a $100. Just on the film running through the camera. At least with digital you could pull it off with no extra cost. Still the dedication and patience is unreal.
@@PlasticFo0ds_0001 agree. but I think they do a different type of stunt, if that makes sense. Jackie is more on the fight action scenes, whereas Tom is on the extravagant stunts like water tanks, army cargo plane, skydiving, pilot etc. You want to pilot a plane, car, bikes with TOM, But you want to be a martial artist with Jackie. Nevertheless, both actors have great action movies. Just my thoughts
@@mojahiddianaton yep you're right, Jackie's more of the figt scene type Tom is more of the elaborate set pieces but both impressive though
Agreed. Jackie once jump from a tower 3 times one of which his head landed first, is something i'll never see again in my lifetime
Jackie is the damn godfather of fighting and parkour in hollywood. No one did it like him before. And honestly still no one quite does
Martial Club does. These guys are the future.
And no one will ever will.
You mean Hong Kong. Hollywood doesn't let Jackie do stuff like these due to insurance policies and limited schedules for fight scenes.
It’s the outtakes that makes you really appreciate Jackie chan, the pain he goes through to get it right is off the scale.
100% always so insane to see
"i dont wanna be second bruce lee, i want to be first jackie chan"
he is indeed legend
I dare say Jackie invented physical action comedy as a genre... and nobody's really gonna fight me on it..
You're god damn right
No. Buster Keaton did that
sadly this genre is dying globally, even china can't make such film nowadays.
I wouldn't say created but he definitely took it to a higher level that's unmatched.
Buster Keaton did. Jackie was a huge fan of his and even recreated a cpl of his stunts in his films.
This is art…Jackie Chan was so amazing to watch growing up as a kid, blessed to have been able to witness him 🙏🏾
Supposedly Jackie Chan would actually never make someone do a stunt he would not do himself, and according to some, there are numerous dangerous stunts done by others on-screen that he himself did first, to show them that it indeed can be done.
As for the fights themselves, Jackie Chan has the best quote as to why Hong Kong action sequences work so well: "There's a rhythm to the fights, and the audience don't know it's there, until they know that it's not there." (Relayed by Bey Logan so it's probably a paraphrase)
Yes! I absolutely love that quote! I really try to keep rhythm in the front of my mind when creating and performing fight choreography!
@@OmarZaki Hell's yeah! I did see a couple of vids you made and they were pretty solid, keeping this principle in mind! Good on you man!
Thats what makes him a legend. He do things what stuntmen today wouldnt do.
i mean, back then they had to hustle, but now- too many red tapes.
@@firdauszulkifli21 And CGI. Curse CGI XD
I love the comment about "zig zagging into frame and then ducking out". It's how Jackie's editing make each scene looks so frantic without having people standing around waiting for their turn to hit.
Yes! Truly a huge part about what makes his fights so great
there was a "stunt" Jackie does in First Strike where he goes down a wall with his back on a brick wall and his feet on this little palm tree. He doesn't even look at the tree and makes it looks so freaking easy. Oddly I never see it in any of these reaction videos, but It was so simple and crazy hard at the same time.
We'll have to check that out sometime! Thank you for letting me know!
I distinctly remember that! Its real super mario stuff
There's a "little" stunt in the middle of a fight scene in Operation Condor, where the bad guy stands on Jackie's chest and tries to stick his head under a moving platform. Jackie's reaction is done for laughs, but it's the kind of stunt that if he'd been 2 inches out of place, he'd have been killed.
It gets over looked because of the ladder fight scene, which was crazy.
YESSS!!! I remember that! Absolutely effortless looking! He does it easier than I have seen people do the slide acrost the hood of a car!
City Hunter is one of the funniest movies. Remember actually falling of the sofa laughing back in the day.
A very important point that Jackie and his directors and writers got, that's often missing in movies of late: the villiains have to be super scary and hyper skilled for the hero to look good when he eventually beats them. They really stressed this point in 80s and 90s action movies, and it's particularly visible in Jackie's movies. They always had the best actors and fighters to go against Jackie's characters, and allowed them to shine and show off all their skills.
That's an incredibly great point! Very well said!
Its not just the fighting its everything hes doing at the same time. Jackie is the master
Yeah really. He has changed the world with his action and creativity
First saw City Hunter on Japanese TV in 1996 and I brought the house down with my laughing. Then the family saw it was Jackie Chan and understood. I watched a bunch more Jackie movies while living there, loved Armour of God movies, the Young Master, Project A, Police Story, Drunken Master, the one where he has an identical twin & is controlling him like a puppet in a fight... so many! I couldn't believe it. When Rush Hour & Shanghai Noon came out in Australia I was like YES FINALLY people will understand, and the reactions in the cinema to his fight scenes was very gratifying. ☺
He has truly created something amazing that will live on forever 🙌🏻
I watched this as a kid and I loved these scenes. Thanks for making me love them even more. You guys are great.
As a parkour athlete i can understand how tough it is to execute jackie's parkour moves(specially his underbars) .and he was doing this when it wasnt even invented hats off
Not being a stunt person, I find it fascinating to hear the terminology you give to the various moves. It actually helps to see how the different pieces form an impressive stunt. Thanks!
The part in Armour of God where he switched positions from left to right while still being in the foreground is an excellent use of emphasis so you can see the enemy coming at Jackie while not shifting attention away from him.
pure GOLD!~ Thank you guys for this awesome reaction and cool stunt info. Can't wait til the next episode XD
Awesome way to kick off my morning. Thanks guys 😊. Fun Jackie Chan fact, the movie you guys were watching first, Armour of God, has the stunt that nearly took Jackie Chan's life when he jumped from the top of a wall and grabbed onto a tree branch and it snapped. I've seen that come up on lists talking about Jackie Chan stunts and injuries he had throughout his movie career.
Thank you as always for the awesome support! And yeah that Stunt is so crazy. So glad he was able to make it through that
His stuff is just so good, every single time you watch it
🙏🏻🙇♂️Thank you for the awesome support Hailey!
Damn!!
I didn't know action scenes would become so different when looked from a stuntmen's perspective.Its like watching a different movie altogether.
Kudos to u guys!!!
haha i love that y'all pulled in the classic City Hunter Arcade fight. That movie is absolutely ridiculous in a good way.
the movie starts completely normal and just gets progressively crazier i love how silly it is
You might want to react to Jackie Chan's First strike movie. There's underwater fight scenes, parkour, moving around at the ledge of a tall building, ladder fight scenes and snowmobile etc. Its one of the movies he had with many different environments and settings.
Thank you so much! We actually Reacted to the First Strike Ladder fight scene in our previous Jackie Chan Reaction episode. A true master and genius 😂
Jackie Chan he is a martial arts legend it's amazing....excellent rreaction bro 👍😎👍
Thank you for the amazing support! We love studying and learning from JC!
When Jackie was training at young age he will learn to pose after every routine, it’s a device to ‘set the scene’. And the looks and expressions on his face carries over from that era of Chinese theatre to his movies. The strength and conditioning he did was also brutal.
I almost fell down a escalator when he was walking behind me. Then he reached out to grab me, with an expression and hand movement like he does in the movies. 😂 Felt embarrassed but actually a memorable experience.
No way!! What an amazing story! Thank you for sharing!
I didn’t fall though, he was reaching out to me when i almost fell. Lol.
😮Woooow
@@OmarZaki … and around the same period I was alone in an elevator with Michelle Yeoh. She was so friendly, had a very short chat with her. (I worked in a famous hotel in Hong Kong at that time, hence I bumped into them)
Armour of God is my all time favorite! I love Jackie Chan movies since my childhood and I got to meet the guy in 2019. 😃☺
When I was a kid, I watched Jackie Chan's movies a lot, and thought these were very normal and ordinary stuff he did in a movie...but I ended up so wrong. After seeing your reactions to those small details, it made me realize how much more difficult the stunts were performed. So crazy...My man Jackie the legend.
Thanks for the in-depth comment and feedback! Yeah, Jackie truly is a master on so many levels
i love your reactions! i'm having fun watching jackie and the three of you having fun watching jackie! 😁 also learning from your comments why (t)he(y) do what (t)he(y) does 😎
this was never been so fun before watching this stuff with you guys OZ.
Keep up the great work, Omar !! Entertaining content for sure and an interesting glimpse into the world of professional stunt people. Stay up stay safe bless up n respect !
Thank you so much! That means so much! Gonna do our best 🙌🏻
I just checked if yall did a part 2 lol, a day later you uploaded. Love
Absolute legend of world cinema. Won’t see another like him, Sammo Hung, Yuen Biao ect ever again.
If you're interested, I'd say check out Andy Long! He definitely has the potential to become an Action Icon like Jackie Chan! He used to be on JC Stunt team and is now making his own films
8:12 There is no such thing as watching too much Jackie Chan. 😁
LOL!! There has to be a line somewhere!!
@@OmarZaki I guess so. 😆
That Street Fighter scene from City Hunter really surprised me as a kid. Never saw it coming.
Jackie is the most underrated actor/producer/scriptwriter/director. Grew on his movies, he is a legend.
I agree! He truly did it all
Love finding a channel like this, great to watch and I’m so far behind I’ve got so many 😂
What I never realised I loved about Jackies movies is there aren't like 7 cuts jammed into two seconds during the action scene, that other action movies have.
11:03 I’ve said it once and I’ll say it again: Jackie Chan films are one of the only films that I cringe and massage the body part when someone does the stunt of said injury. In this case, the monk slamming his shins against the edge of the table. Knowing what it feels like because I’ve hit my shins on things or have been kicked there, I’m massaging my shins because of it.
I think if you made a 2 hour compilation of Jackie Chan's best fights then it would be the greatest action movie ever made The man is a legend.
The best thing about Jackie Chan in movies, is that he does his own stunts. That's why at the end of every movie during the credits, they always show the stunts that Jackie Chan did and how much he failed by attempting to do those certain stunts. But also, they put in bloopers as well, knowing how funny Jackie Chan is on set working with the cast.
No sht sherlock.. Lol what? They obviously know that? They reacting to his stunts and fights
he is not only master. He is living legend.
It's kinda crazy to think how many stunts Jackie Chan did himself
Yeah seriously! He truly is incredible!
One thing I love about his movies, especially the old ones, is they always included the bloopers at the end which showed just how often he got injured.
Yeah those seriously were the best part! They really showed just how hard they worked to achieve what they did!
I'm happy you enjoyed this the absolute first time ever of you seeing Jackie Chan.
Even “The Master of Action Comedy” had to have gotten inspiration from somewhere, or someone. Check out Jackie Chan’s idols, Buster Keaton, and Harold Lloyd! Remember, though, this was from the Silent Era.
The sidekick thingy in 15:53 is actually called "FoShan No Shadow Kick" (direct translate from the Chinese 佛山無影腳). This kick is originated from the 1991 film “Once Upon In China 黃飛鴻“ from Jet Li. This is the scene you can find in that movie. Correct me if you see this kick from any movie earlier than this.
It seems the main reason his old Hongkong movies have such spectacular fights is because the studios there trust him. A Hollywood studio will rarely allow a relatively small moment like the fan spin to be done if it took 2-300 tries. In Hongkong he could spend half a day perfecting a tiny moment like that, where as in Hollywood they would try 5-10 tries at most and then either cut it and move on, or use camera tricks making it less impressive.
The trust that it will be worth it in the end is what is needed to make that kind of movie magic, while in Hollywood time and money is generally the only thing that matters.
That’s very well said! They are very different industries for sure and the film industry will continue to change, grow, and evolve
Insurance companies stopped backing him to the point he owns his own insurance film to cover for the stunts of his films 😅
This is great stuff! I loved watching Jackie Chan flicks. Seeing his martial arts as a kid thinking he was doing Breaking "Breakdancing" moves in his stunts, but learning as I got older that he is really showing how Breaking incorporated Kung Fu and other styles into Breaking. Ground Flare is just a windmill.
Jackie Chun-Li is the best Live Action Chun Li ever
Jackie is the best, show me any one who is better in stunts??
Talk about Jackie chan doing stunts, he once broke his foot, and still continued to file with a cast on. (Rumble in the bronx, I think)
a literal MASTER of his Craft.
Best fight scenes is by sir Jackie Chan.
God bless.
Thank you for the awesome support!!
Best Jackie Chan fight? Drunken Master 2 or Wheels On Meals?
Jackie Chan's City Hunter was WILD. And I'm saying that as someone who read the original series of City Hunter!
Thank you so much for making me remember power morphing power ranger! It’s like I unlocked a core memory!
You’re so welcome!! I’ve actually been wanting to do a Stunt Reaction video to some Power Rangers so I’ll have to make that happen 🙌🏻
A lot of the first fight scene was re-shot with 4 guys from Jackie's stunt team in wigs and (a lot of) fake tan. The women were American competition fighters, who apparently didn't take instructions well because they felt that they knew better.
This was ridiculously spectacular!
Wow! Thank you for amazing compliment! Currently working on 3 new Reaction videos as it is! Cannot wait to share them 🙌🏻
@@OmarZaki i mean everything from you and the guys reactions to the breakdowns to watching it in full speed, and Jackie's acting style was just on par with what i expected. Not sure if he would be happy with you spilling the insider info but its out there now hahaha
I love the credits at the end of his movies, they show everything that when wrong....
Yeah it's always the best part! Haha shows how hard they really worked to create their movies
Glad we have two stunt men here that play videogames and know the difference of a Hadoken and a Shoryuken.
No guys! Jackie Chan actually makes an effort to make his fights the most smoothest!
Many other actors can’t pull that off! This is what makes Jackie so special
Oh absolutely! That is one of his specialties! The Flow of his fights are truly incredible and there is no empty space. They all have perfect timing
I like watching professionals respond, because it is nice to know everyone is as astounded by his and Yeoh stunt teams as I am as lay person
Yup! Jackie and his team are Legends for a good reason haha
1:52 Jackie suffered a gnashing cut to the back of his head when taking this kick.
You could spend a week breaking down Jackie Chan movies for stunts and never find an end. Like his fight scenes, they just keep going.
Yeah, they're truly incredible. He will forever be a Legend
I'm surprised you didn't show the part in Armour of God when he cracked his skull
To be fair to comments in prev vid, y'all were so visceral in your responses to the action it did feel a little like first time viewing. However, I am glad you decided to do more. Also, I agree with y'all's comment, in that I don't think any real stunt person would say they know their job well and also be able to say they don't know who Jackie Chan is. It would be like a basketball player saying they don't know Michael Jordan. LOL
I think it's because we have very new eyes when it comes to watching action as we now create action videos as well as work in Stunts professionally so we have a new understanding and appreciation for these kind of insane stunts and fight scenes that truly are top tier
You're not going to believe this, but I'm your guys number 1 fan! More wall front flips please!
Wow! We're honored! Thank you so much!
Wiseman once said "Every scene could be his last scene"
Mate Jackie Chan is the best Stunt Actor from the decade. He is so Professional. The master
Oh trust me, we all know this 😂 We watch him to study and learn
Those amazons was kicking ass until those heels got stuck lol.
LOL! Seriously. Jackie got lucky haha
You guys need to do Jet Li’s Once Upon a Time in China series, and watch his No-Shadow Kicks
That's a great suggestion! Thank you!
@@OmarZaki That's the earliest instance of the Power Rangers bicycling side-kick that I'm aware of. Ironically, OUATIC is about a real historical figure whose kung fu style "Hung Gar" is actually a very not-wuxia-looking, grounded boxing and grappling style with no jumping and almost no kicks. The "shadowless kick" is the one kick the style is known for, called "shadowless" because it's so fast... but it's a simple front snap. So because it's a *wuxia* movie, they came up with that bicycle side-kick to be the cinematic representation of it.
When professional stuntmen go "oh my gosh!! Nooo! Nooo! Nooo!"
It's an epic stunt
That’s definitely true haha
Kudos to the stuntmen!
Always and forever! Action is nothing special without Stunts!
that shot of grandpa from JCA was an excellent choice.
Haha yes!!! So glad you appreciated that moment 😂
15:54 thats the No-Shadow Kick. Jet Li did it first in Last Hero of China
That was awesome
Jackie Chan is the best 🤣
Jackie Chan ❤️
Who am I is so underrated. Especially the rooftop scene.
I completely agree! 🙌🏻
That undercranking example... are they doing the first exchange from the final fight in Gorgeous?
Something you didn't mention us that there aren't "turns" at fighting in many of these stunts. Multiple people are actively attacking Jackie Chan simultaneously.
Yes that's a great point! Very well said
11:30 love the dragon ball reference
Also, for some scenes where they get kicked, FYI sometimes they use a handheld fake leg for impact.
8:14 theres no such thing as too much jackie chan
😂😂😂 I think you’re right about that
@@OmarZaki in my opinoin i think dreamworks needs to make more kung fu panda with jackie voicing monkey before we lose possible the best comedic martial artist jackie chan in my opinion IS monkey kung fu as he's silly and mischeivous in his films
WTF how could you not analyse the continuing fight scene between Jackie and Richard Norton in City Hunter?? Him with the tonfas, and long silver staff, and bare hands/arms, on casino tables. Best funny scene. And also, you need to explain how did Sammo Hun pull off the tennis racquet double bell ringer in Twinkle Stars!
I absolutely love that fight! That's actually the start of Part 2 of this Reaction :) Currently editing Part 2 now. Part 1 was getting too long haha so we decided to split it up, but don't worry, we watch and talk about the whole fight. Truly HILARIOUS and one of my favorites haha. Jackie is a true genius and master.
Need a part three with Drunken Master clips
That what make him legend, he himself doing it fast not a trick or cameras dude, lmfao y'all better learn who's Jackie Chan is a legend that didn't depend on cameras trick to fool audience but his own martial arts skill itself
15:22
That's Shoryuken!
You should do his early movies like when he fights Hwang Jung Lee in Drunken Master (which was done in 1 or 2 takes). Or the three sword guys in "The Fearless Hyena" and the movie "Snake & Crane Arts of Shaolin". The acrobatics is amazing.
Snake & Crane Arts of Shaolin is such an underrated movie. I love where he just casually does an ariel cartwheel without even uncrossing his arms.
@@surfdigby He does a similer move in the practice montage in Drunken Master as well. Arms crossed, hits the floor with his head and then back to his feet. Amazing.
He did the same move while singing (i dont remember but i think the song was the one from Police story?) on stage & kept right on singing without missing a beat.
For the ariel cartwheel in the middle of a song type in Chan sing Hero Story in the youtube search line
Oh BTW...His head is about a foot off the ground when he does it...amazing
15:23 I felt that pain.
the power ranger move or whatever was actually from jet li's huang fei hong series, that was his signature move.
Corridor Crew from WISH
Hilarious!!!!!
If u like Jackie Chan's actions, you should also watch other action legends like Chin Ka Lok, Yuen biu, Yuen hua and their big brother Sammo Hong.
The ladies from Armour of God 😮
Jackie is God of stunt world.
Ha ha ha.ho ho ho huuu⚔️ I love Jackie Chan💕And Chinese martial arts🇨🇳🇺🇲
That's awesome! Yeah, Jackie Chan is awesome!!