"Rogue" Set Visit: Jet Li on "Fearless," "Monk in New York," and Another Fight Breakdown!
RT's "Rogue" set visit culminated with a candid sit-down with the pic's star, Jet Li. Read on to hear what he says about his upcoming "Fearless," ticket prices in China, and getting a director for "Monk in New York."
Since the early 1980s, Jet Li has cultivated a virtual library of Hong Kong-action starring vehicles utilizing his background as a child prodigy in the martial art of wushu. Despite having over thirty star turns in Chinese-language films by the mid-90s, it wasn't until he played a menacing Triad member in 1998's "Lethal Weapon 4" that English-speaking audiences really took notice, and since then Jet has launched himself into Hollywood with his own brand of action (see "Romeo Must Die," "The One," "Unleashed").
With the recent North American successes of action-packed foreign films like "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" and Li's own "Hero," the former wushu world champion will soon be bringing another Chinese-language martial arts epic to Western markets, though he's promised that August opener "Fearless" -- a period biopic of a turn-of-the-century fighting master -- will be his last epic martial arts hero flick. After that, Li hopes to make his long-in-development, light-on-action project, "Monk in New York" (see interview below). But first, he's got "Rogue" to finish -- and, as Senh and Phu witnessed, there's still plenty of action left in him.

Never underestimate the power of a kick to the head...
Senh's Scene Breakdown: As promised in yesterday's Corey Yuen set interview, Jet filmed a fight sequence on the 'Yanagawa Motors' set of "Rogue" that left more than a few blood spatters on the floor (fake blood, of course).
The sequence took place in the mirrored section of the dealership, underneath the elevated offices in which two other scenes had previously been shot -- one with Jet opposite a stern, femme fatale Devon Aoki, and another between Jet and Ryo Ishibashi.
As in the other fight we saw being shot, Jet was battling a few of Ryo Ishibashi's goons downstairs. Before the shot, prop people gave one stuntman a mouthful of liquid right before rolling. Once action began, Jet appeared to land a high kick to one goon's throat, with enough force that the goon was propelled backwards into one of the wall mirrors. The stuntman took Jet's monster kick very convincingly, hitting the wall, causing him to projectile-spew blood.
Red liquid got everywhere, including a few splatters on Jet himself. Once cameras stopped, PAs mopped up the mess, cleaned off Jet, and they did another take! And another! And another! We left the set and they were still shooting the same scene.
------
Rotten Tomatoes: Can you describe your role in the movie?
Jet Li: I cannot say too much. If you know, it's not fun anymore.

A few of our favorite Jet Li pre-Hollywood flicks: "Fist of Legend," "The Legend of Fong Sai-Yuk," and "Once Upon A Time In China"
RT: But you are playing a bad guy?
JL: It really depends on your point of view.
RT: Since the movie pits you against Jason [Statham], who do you think the audience will root for?
JL: I don't know. Ask them! (laughs)
RT: How is it working with Jason?
JL: We worked together before on "The One." But on this film, we haven't met yet because the two characters haven't been in the same scene. In maybe another two weeks we will work together a lot.
RT: You have worked with Corey Yuen for over a decade. What is it about him that made your relationship special?
JL: When you have a friend you work with for 15 years, you become like brothers.

Li's Western-audience breakthrough ("Lethal Weapon 4"), his famous deadly pool ball scene ("Kiss of the Dragon"), and his Freshest English-language pic ("Unleashed")
RT: Why do you think of all the Asian actors, you and Jackie are the more successful?
JL: I should ask you (laughs). You know the American audience better than me, why they watch Jackie Chan and Jet Li movies. The audience makes the decision of what kind of actor they want to watch. I always have said in the last 20 years, the real boss is the audience.
RT: You said you no longer want to do epic martial art movies. Do you want to focus more on action or more on drama?
JL: I really want to retire. (laughs) I think "Fearless" is the last one. I won't do martial arts movies anymore. But in my mind, martial arts movies are martial arts movies and action is action. It's quite different, because martial arts doesn't just have physical form; you have a philosophy, internal and external. A lot of it involves your life. How you see the world. An action film I think is just about the movement. I think it's different.
RT: Why did you decide not to do any more martial arts movies, is it because you've done so many?
JL: I put a lot of energy into "Fearless." I've said what I wanted to say about martial arts in that film; why I learned martial arts, what is martial arts, martial arts in life.

Jet Li as a rogue assassin named, er, Rogue, in "Rogue"
RT: What do you think of the current state of movies in Hong Kong. When you did "Once Upon A Time In China," they were producing 300 movies a year, and now they're doing 30-40 movies a year. What do you think of the current state?
JL: The market is smaller and smaller in Asia.
RT: Even with China?
JL: The last few years have been better, but before there was no market.
RT: Why do you think that is?
JL: We can have a three day discussion about it (laughs). It's too expensive for people to watch a movie in theaters. It costs ten percent of one's salary to watch one movie, how can anyone afford that?
RT: You've been talking about making "Monk In New York" for a while. What is the status on that?
JL: I'm still trying to make it, even with no studio involved. I talk about making a movie with a story about heart, without a lot of violent action in it. Not many studios want to make it. I'm still working on it.
RT: What kind of movies would you like to make in the future after "Rogue"?
JL: I really don't know. "Monk In New York" you already know about. I want to make that. I already found a director, Wayne Wang. He's a wonderful director, and I really appreciate his work. Two years already and we're still putting the pieces together.
Since the early 1980s, Jet Li has cultivated a virtual library of Hong Kong-action starring vehicles utilizing his background as a child prodigy in the martial art of wushu. Despite having over thirty star turns in Chinese-language films by the mid-90s, it wasn't until he played a menacing Triad member in 1998's "Lethal Weapon 4" that English-speaking audiences really took notice, and since then Jet has launched himself into Hollywood with his own brand of action (see "Romeo Must Die," "The One," "Unleashed").
With the recent North American successes of action-packed foreign films like "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" and Li's own "Hero," the former wushu world champion will soon be bringing another Chinese-language martial arts epic to Western markets, though he's promised that August opener "Fearless" -- a period biopic of a turn-of-the-century fighting master -- will be his last epic martial arts hero flick. After that, Li hopes to make his long-in-development, light-on-action project, "Monk in New York" (see interview below). But first, he's got "Rogue" to finish -- and, as Senh and Phu witnessed, there's still plenty of action left in him.

Never underestimate the power of a kick to the head...
Senh's Scene Breakdown: As promised in yesterday's Corey Yuen set interview, Jet filmed a fight sequence on the 'Yanagawa Motors' set of "Rogue" that left more than a few blood spatters on the floor (fake blood, of course).
The sequence took place in the mirrored section of the dealership, underneath the elevated offices in which two other scenes had previously been shot -- one with Jet opposite a stern, femme fatale Devon Aoki, and another between Jet and Ryo Ishibashi.
As in the other fight we saw being shot, Jet was battling a few of Ryo Ishibashi's goons downstairs. Before the shot, prop people gave one stuntman a mouthful of liquid right before rolling. Once action began, Jet appeared to land a high kick to one goon's throat, with enough force that the goon was propelled backwards into one of the wall mirrors. The stuntman took Jet's monster kick very convincingly, hitting the wall, causing him to projectile-spew blood.
Red liquid got everywhere, including a few splatters on Jet himself. Once cameras stopped, PAs mopped up the mess, cleaned off Jet, and they did another take! And another! And another! We left the set and they were still shooting the same scene.
------
Rotten Tomatoes: Can you describe your role in the movie?
Jet Li: I cannot say too much. If you know, it's not fun anymore.

A few of our favorite Jet Li pre-Hollywood flicks: "Fist of Legend," "The Legend of Fong Sai-Yuk," and "Once Upon A Time In China"
RT: But you are playing a bad guy?
JL: It really depends on your point of view.
RT: Since the movie pits you against Jason [Statham], who do you think the audience will root for?
JL: I don't know. Ask them! (laughs)
RT: How is it working with Jason?
JL: We worked together before on "The One." But on this film, we haven't met yet because the two characters haven't been in the same scene. In maybe another two weeks we will work together a lot.
RT: You have worked with Corey Yuen for over a decade. What is it about him that made your relationship special?
JL: When you have a friend you work with for 15 years, you become like brothers.

Li's Western-audience breakthrough ("Lethal Weapon 4"), his famous deadly pool ball scene ("Kiss of the Dragon"), and his Freshest English-language pic ("Unleashed")
RT: Why do you think of all the Asian actors, you and Jackie are the more successful?
JL: I should ask you (laughs). You know the American audience better than me, why they watch Jackie Chan and Jet Li movies. The audience makes the decision of what kind of actor they want to watch. I always have said in the last 20 years, the real boss is the audience.
RT: You said you no longer want to do epic martial art movies. Do you want to focus more on action or more on drama?
JL: I really want to retire. (laughs) I think "Fearless" is the last one. I won't do martial arts movies anymore. But in my mind, martial arts movies are martial arts movies and action is action. It's quite different, because martial arts doesn't just have physical form; you have a philosophy, internal and external. A lot of it involves your life. How you see the world. An action film I think is just about the movement. I think it's different.
RT: Why did you decide not to do any more martial arts movies, is it because you've done so many?
JL: I put a lot of energy into "Fearless." I've said what I wanted to say about martial arts in that film; why I learned martial arts, what is martial arts, martial arts in life.

Jet Li as a rogue assassin named, er, Rogue, in "Rogue"
RT: What do you think of the current state of movies in Hong Kong. When you did "Once Upon A Time In China," they were producing 300 movies a year, and now they're doing 30-40 movies a year. What do you think of the current state?
JL: The market is smaller and smaller in Asia.
RT: Even with China?
JL: The last few years have been better, but before there was no market.
RT: Why do you think that is?
JL: We can have a three day discussion about it (laughs). It's too expensive for people to watch a movie in theaters. It costs ten percent of one's salary to watch one movie, how can anyone afford that?
RT: You've been talking about making "Monk In New York" for a while. What is the status on that?
JL: I'm still trying to make it, even with no studio involved. I talk about making a movie with a story about heart, without a lot of violent action in it. Not many studios want to make it. I'm still working on it.
RT: What kind of movies would you like to make in the future after "Rogue"?
JL: I really don't know. "Monk In New York" you already know about. I want to make that. I already found a director, Wayne Wang. He's a wonderful director, and I really appreciate his work. Two years already and we're still putting the pieces together.
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| Celeb: | Jet Li |
| Movie: | Hero |
| Lethal Weapon 4 |
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The Senhman writes: on Jun 11 2006 07:52 AM Wayne Wang would be an inpired choice - much different other American directors that jet has worked with so far. (Reply to this) |
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RT-SmellyCat writes: on Jun 11 2006 08:08 AM In reply to this comment (#837759) I'm not so sure about Wayne Wang as an action director. I'm not saying that he can't do it, but his current rep is as a talented "woman's movies" director (like a Chinese-American version of Forrest Whittaker) rather than an action director. (Reply to this) |
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The Senhman writes: on Jun 11 2006 02:02 PM In reply to this comment (#837760) Right, but since "Monk in New York" is supposed to be more of a drama, he might be more suitable. (Reply to this) |
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Metroid-hunteR writes: on Jun 13 2006 05:31 AM Hi, Senh! How are you doing? I have a doubt concerning Jet Li, is he stating that this retirement of his is actually plans for not acting never again?? Or is he just going to quit martial arts movies?? I really hope he won´t fade away like that... (Reply to this) |
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Actaphu writes: on Jun 14 2006 05:31 PM In reply to this comment (#837762) Jet Li stated he would like to retire, but I doubt that won't happen for a while since he has a few movies that he wants to work on like the "Monk in New York" and the Jackie Chan collaboration. (Reply to this) |
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Freth writes: on Jun 16 2006 11:45 AM [b]Jet's martial art movie retirement...[/b] I think he'll continue to do movies and has already expressed interest in action movies, but not martial arts movies. I would think as many times as Jet has played a martial arts master that it gets kind of old. One can look back on his movies and see a masterwork of fight scenes (minus the wire-fu). His earlier work was some hard stuff and I think every fan owes it to themselves to check out the early movies in original language, not the Americanized versions. If what he says is true then Fearless will round out his martial arts films quite nicely and give fans his own perspective and what it means to him to dedicate his life to martial arts. I think that should be enough to stand on its own as the end of his martial arts film career. Jet deserves a break. He's done enough. I know fans like myself are insatiable when it comes to seeing him do martial arts films, but he has left us with so many wonderful films and still has three more coming (Rogue, Fearless, Monk in New York). If they're as good as we would hope them to be they should keep us happy for years to come. As for Jackie Chan's films, he's deviated a lot from what I would call martial arts. Jackie uses situational action sequences and stunts; very little martial arts anymore. Like Jet, Jackie has a rich legacy of martial arts period films for fans to choose from. His early films are some of the best martial arts master films available. I think his newer stuff is lacking. As you may have noticed he's been in a lot of films recently, but taken more cameo roles and let the younger Asian stars get the glory. I think Jackie's not far from retirement as well. (Reply to this) |
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ejhark writes: on Jun 21 2006 05:50 PM [b]Where is Jet Li?[/b] In response to Jet Li.....I hope he can still reply to our comments. I know that I have a few questions that i like to ask him (Reply to this) |
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mistersports07 writes: on Jan 22 2007 03:32 PM [b]The best martial artist ever[/b] I have come across this ranking on http://www.rankopedia.com: who's the best martial artist ever? The answer so far is Bruce Lee. (Reply to this) |
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