THE JET LEE STORY
The Jet Li Story
(Article taken from "Jet Li and His Movies" Homepage)
(Article originally from the May 1998 issue of the Wushu/Kungfu
Magazine)
The West is posed for a new Chinese hero. For three decades
America has embraced the charismatic power and awe of Bruce Lee's
kungfu and movies, and the 90's finally illuminate the screen
with the physical comic genius, amazing stunts, and unyielding
charm of Jackie Chan. But Jet Li is a different kind of hero. Not
unlike Chow Yun Fat, his characters embody the values of loyalty
and justice, imbued with a reflective depth and sensitivity. His
kungfu serves a purpose, perhaps even a moral lesson, as his
screen personas range from martial arts folk heroes Zhang San
Feng to Wong Fei Hung to Ching Woo defender of Chen Zhen. Despite
a few less than successful comic outings, we've come to view Jet
Li as the archetypal hero, whether Shaolin monk or modern day
cop, whose difficult journey triumphs in good over evil.
Triumph is certainly a word that belongs to the Jet Li story.
Cinephiles often overlook the fact that Li Lien Jie is also one
of China's all-time greatest wushu stars and national sports
heroes. But it seems inevitable that Li's wushu history is what
shaped both his own character and those that he plays on screen.
Determination and will made him the top star of the Beijing Wushu
Team at age eleven, when he won All-Around Champion National
Wushu Championships. He went on to take it again four more
consecutive times, breaking records and making martial arts
history.
Wushu Childhood
Li was eight years old when his Physical Education teacher in the
Changqiao Primary School of Beijing discovered the young boy's
jumping, agility and grace. He sent Li to the Beijing Amateur
Sports School for wushu training, where he fell under the
tutelage of Coach Wu Bin. Attending classes during the day, the
eight-year-old soon became one of the hardest working and most
determined. Leg presses, bending and somersaults were only part
of each evening's curriculum, and the young athlete went home
tired, yet inspired, every night.
Perhaps Wu Bin became a kind of father figure to Jet Li, who lost
his own father when he was only two, and as a wushu coach he
certainly saw the potential of a future star, both in natural
talent and in perseverance. He designed extra training for Li. Wu
Bin was pleased with the speed and agility of his pupil, but
found that Li lacked strength for kicking and striking. He
visited the Li home and discovered that the family did not eat
meat because at one time the grandmother has fallen ill and the
doctor advised her to avoid it. The entire family followed in the
habit, but Wu Bin told them that Lien Lie needed the protein to
develop his strength, and he in fact continued to bring food to
the struggling Li household for years.
Li's natural talent in gymnastics soon was wedded to a deepening
love of the martial arts. In three years, his sophistication grew
substantially. Many other children in the Beijing Amateur Sports
school wushu program dropped out due to the mental and physical
rigors. Li, instead, continued to practice punching and kicking,
agility and flexibility, and swords and spears late into every
night.
"Not a Prodigy"
People often speak of Jet Li as a prodigy and a child wushu
genius. Li himself answers this sharply in a short memoir where
he writes: "I am not a prodigy and newspaper reports about
my having consciously trained and practiced wushu since I was a
child often annoyed me beyond measure. It was simply not true.
Like everyone else, I came across numerous problems in the course
of training and many a time I wavered and thought of dropping
out. It was my coach Wu Bin who helped me steer clear of all
obstacles and encourage me never to give up. His admonitions and
his patience in guiding me along will always remain in my heart
of hearts."
There are inevitably historical points of convergence, moments of
those being in the right place at the right time. Luckily for
wushu, both Jet Li and Wu Bin were joined in a vision that
emerged as the Beijing Wushu Team. After three years of serious
wushu training with Wu Bin, and becoming a national junior
champion, Li became a member of Beijing's professional team in
1974. For many eleven-year-olds, the pressure might have been too
much, but for Li it seemed to raise him to another level. For one
thing, the physical training intensified greatly. For another,
and perhaps more important, it broadened his vision of the
martial arts. Running around a 350 meter track 20 times in 25
minutes took discipline, but studying the characteristics of
different martial arts styles, and assimilating them, took both
an artistic and a martial arts intelligence. Li began to blend
free gymnastics exercise, boxing and weapons together with his
own highly skilled jumping and speed. He was able to take
advantage of many martial arts masters gathered in Beijing, and
he studied their different points and qualities, soaking up all
they had to offer.
Li looked for the essence of martial arts. And then at his first
National Wushu Championships in 1974 he demonstrated his
knowledge of it. As one writer noted, "His interpretation of
the requirements set for the contest was based on a thorough
study as well as a clever combination of the characteristics of
various schools: the flowing Chanquan, the free Chanquan, the
brisk and light Monkey Boxing, the graceful Tongbeiquan, the
rhythmical and bombastic Gun Boxing, the inner energy of the
Taichiquan, etc. Thus the most important thing, in his mind, was
the integration of the forms of running, springing and leaping
with a sense of beauty." Li took first in the compulsories,
and then went on to win the highest marks in swordsplay,
spearplay, routine boxing, Pu swordsplay and two men sparring,
making him All-Around Champion.
With Wu Bin
The glamour of international travel and exhibition must certainly
have punctuated those five years of relentless work, training and
dedication that a champion had to maintain in order to win. The
many stories of Wu Bin's hard discipline towards the team are
perhaps underscored by Li's own remembrance:
"What my teammates did once in training session I did
thrice. To make the most of my time, I worked in the gym even on
Sundays, when everybody else was resting.
"My coach, however, didn't seem to appreciate my efforts. He
was always kind and patient when he explained the essentials of
all the movements to my teammates and pointed out the them where
they went wrong. When he saw they were too tired, he advised them
to take a break. But he seemed to be quite another person when he
talked to me. Often he would snap at me, 'Do you think that's the
correct movement?' How come the more you practice the worse you
become?' and so forth.
"To be frank, I didn't quite like the way he treated me. But
now I understand he did it all for my good. Whenever he took on a
new trainee, the first thing he did was get to know his character
so he could deal with him accordingly. Seeing that I was a bit
'ambitious' and proved a willing trainee, he applied the rigorous
method of training towards me. This was described by him as:
"A resounding drum must be struck with a heavy hammer."
Quest for Knowledge
One thing that set Li apart from other competitors was the
creativity in his routines and the fact that he continued to set
higher standards for himself each year. His
"specialties," once performed, were no longer secrets,
and as one observer remarked, "Judges all praised him for he
was never content, for he was ever advancing, for he had brought
the traditional art to a new high." Many others who knew him
as a competitor corroborate this, and Li took every possible
opportunity to gain experience from all the wushu masters he
encountered, including Beijing opera actors and dancers. Having
this insight into Li's kungfu epistemology again confronts the
sometimes popular prejudice that "wushu" is mere
performance, divorced from "real" martial arts and
martial art history; instead, the high level contemporary wushu
stylist's education is not unlike Bruce Lee's philosophy of
taking what is useful from the different martial arts and finding
your own way and your own individual expression.
Depth is what characterizes Jet Li's wushu. The combination of
abstract mental understanding coupled with a fluid, powerful
physical interpretation makes his performances compelling. But
the beauty and grace inherent in his wushu finally comes from the
soul. What sets apart genius from mere intelligence? Perhaps
nothing we can measure in a quantitative sense. But when you
watch Li perform there is an extra dimension to his wushu which
does set him apart, a spirit which created life in the form
itself.
"See the Real Jet Li"
The days of Jet Li's performance are long past, but for those
curious of see the young competitor there is a kungfu documentary
call Dragons of the Orient (available from Tai Seng). Despite the
film's dubious narrative devices, it offers us a glimpse of Jet
Li's style, both training and performing. There we see the White
House lawn, as the eleven-year-old Li dressed in a bright red
outfit performs a two man fighting set with his teammate Chu Shi
Fai. He is also shown at twelve, practicing and competing,
wielding a broadsword at lightning speed. Cut to Jet Li at
nineteen, handsome, muscled and strong, with long hair in his
face. He gives the camera a taste of the double broadsword, the
whip chain, the three-section staff, the spear and the pu dao.
This is no Jet Li of the movies with camera angles and special
effects - bit it is equally engrossing, because it is real. The
footage even becomes a bit surreal as we watch him celebrate his
mother's fiftieth birthday party with dumplings and cake, and
walk along the Great Wall where he used to practice as a child.
The film's narrator is quick to tell us, "Don't think he is
a rude guy. Besides competing in kungfu, he's good at literature
and art, too," They then give us a poem Li composed, in what
is most likely a terrible translation: "There is always a
mountain/So there are always good fighters/Therefore one must
know his strengths and weaknesses to become perfect."
Li the master becomes Li the student as the camera captures him
learning and refining taiji elements from the 97-year-old Wu Tu
Nan, and then Paqua Fist from the equally sage Li Si Min. Then
watch a series of Li's training, and a dynamic exercise done
hanging from a pine tree developing "Paqua legs," which
is described, "like a dragon on a tree, kicking hard."
Finally we see Li training with a device of his own invention
doing an exercise called "Beating Stars." Surrounded by
a group of soccer balls suspended between trees with taut ropes,
Li strikes the different balls as they rebound and created a
surrounding web of continuation motion. In this way, "one
attacks from all four sides and protects from four sides too. It
practices the hands, eyes, body and feet to be swift and fast,
turning and responding."
Finally, the last shots of Li capture him doing a drunken sword
form. In a sunlit, open field, surrounded by pine trees, Li's
movements are strong and subtle, stylized to perfection, exuding
the grace and beauty that has become his signature.
Hong Kong Hero
A number of excellent period pieces followed this success,
including The Legend of Fong Sai Yuk, Swordsman 2, and especially
The Tai Chi Master, which ranks as one of the top martial arts
film classics of all time. Directed by Yuen Woo Ping, and
co-starring Yuen Biao and Michelle Yeoh, the film imagines the
early years of Zhang San Feng and his creative development of
taichi. Li's kungfu and acting are both dynamic and elegant, used
to their greatest potential by the director. The design of the
martial arts choreography is complex, shifting from one style to
another, with a pace that builds to the emotional climax of the
film.
Li's acting, by this point, was fully mature, and he had spent
quite a bit of time in the Hong Kong film industry. Still looking
for the right modern day kungfu movie, he finally scored with two
gems showing off his contemporary style. Bodyguard from Beijing,
a re-make of the American Kevin Costner film, sweetly combined
romance with action. And then My Father is a Hero, co-starring
Anita Mui, took the usual undercover cop story and combined it
with the kungfu kid motif to create fun and suspense, yet
maintaining the Jet Li hero trademark of inner struggle.
1995 presented Li with a new challenge with Fist of Legend. a
remake of Bruce Lee's Fist of Fury, Li was playing the Ching Woo
hero Chen Zhen, but in the shadow of another martial arts hero of
Bruce Lee himself. Li told Logan, "(Bruce Lee) Li Shao Lung
is a hero over there (Mainland China), just like everywhere else.
Many young Chinese admire him and want to be like him. I'm not
doing this film to say: 'Hey look, here is the new Bruce Lee!'
No, it's to show my respect for his memory. Like the American
movie Dragon." It was essential that the martial arts in
this film be outstanding, and with Yuen WooPing choreographing
them, it was. Li's own homage to Bruce Lee combined the right
amounts of humor and seriousness, and the dramatic buildup of the
fighting to the film's climax is completely compelling. The film
received critical and box office success in Hong Kong, and Yuen
Woo Ping reports that the martial arts in it was also a popular
hit with the local kungfu cognoscenti.
The Leap to Hollywood
Hollywood continues to prove itself an unknown quantity to Hong
Kong stars and filmmakers. Li is now in the middle of shooting
Lethal Weapon 4, playing the head villain. Certainly this role is
a departure for the man who we have never imagined as anything
but a hero, but it also offers him a new thespian challenge, not
to mention huge exposure in a mainstream American action film,
and quite possibly, some good fun. If the media plays it right,
they'll trot out that old White House lawn newsreel and show the
public once again the real kungfu of Jet Li. Quentin Tarantino, a
huge Jet Li fan, has bought the rights to several of Li's best
Hong Kong films and Miramax will be distributing them later this
year. Like Chow Yun Fat, Li has worked hard on his English to
help Americans with that peculiar accent block which prevents us
from enjoying a fuller spectrum of global acting talent. But most
important, Jet Li is fluent in that universal language of action
and emotion, and especially in the vernacular of martial arts
that speaks to our collective imagination. Jet Li continues his
tour as ambassador of wushu, this time not to the White House but
to Hollywood, and Eastern hero on his journey to the West.