Hong Kong action star Donnie Yen recently recalled two separate occasions when he was nearly blinded by legendary martial arts actor Jet Li. Since the early 1980s, Lee has established himself as one of Hong Kong cinema’s top action stars, starring in films such as Born to Protect and Shaolin Temple 3: Martial Arts of Shaolin. Lee established himself as an icon of the genre with his historical fantasy epic Once Upon a Time in China as folk hero Wong Fei-hung.
In a conversation with GQ, Yen admitted that Lee almost blinded him while filming two different films with him. Yen details his famous fight scene in 1992’s Once Upon a Time in China 2, when Lee cut his left eyebrow with a large bamboo staff, requiring him to need stitches.
Ten years later, the pair starred in the epic film Hero, where Lee again cuts Ian, this time above his right eye. Here’s the full quote below:
RELATED:
Jet Li vs Donnie Yen Wushu vs Wing Chun
” [Discussing Once Upon a Time in China II] The most significant experience working…was one time that I had an injury [that] almost blinded me. So what happened was there was a shot where Jet Li was wired up and we both have these poles, these bamboo poles about this thick. And they’re quite heavy. Now, if they hit you in the head, they’ll knock you out. There was a move where he spun around 360 degrees, he swings at me and I block it. After about 30 takes, he missed. Instead of coming across, and I’m supposed to block it like this, he comes across horizontally. He whacked me right on my eyebrow, right? I got knocked back about eight feet. Five seconds later I said, “Wait!” Drop my hands. And blood was spilling. I kid you not, it was spilling like shower spray. It was like…Kill Bill.
[Discussing Hero] I remember there was another choreography where he was wired up with a sword. Now, although these are prop swords, they are still quite pointy. This whole shot was one take, about 50 moves or something. At the end of the 50 movies, maybe the 48th, 49 moves, he strikes down with his sword. He went, “Boop!” And I back up, Jet said, “Donnie, there’s blood spilling out of your face.” I said, “Really? Let me take a look.” He whacked me on one side and 10 years later, he whacked me on the other side. Six stitches again, two times, both sides close to my eyeballs. I could have been blind.”
Like Li, Yen began his martial arts action career in Hong Kong in the mid-1980s with the Yuen Woo-Ping-directed film Drunken Tai Chi. Although Yen had a steady career throughout the decade, he didn’t truly make a name for himself until his role in Li’s Once Upon a Time in China II. The actor subsequently scored big hits including Butterfly and Sword and Wing Chun, with Everything Everywhere All at Once star Michelle Yeoh.
The 2000s saw Yen transition to Hollywood with appearances in Blade II as Snowman and Shanghai Knights opposite Jackie Chan. Although his success in the West has been inconsistent, arguably Yen’s most well-known role outside of Hong Kong is Chirrut Îmwe in Rogue One: A Star Wars Story.
With only one film in the massive long-running franchise, Yen’s role as the blind fighter proved to be one of the more popular characters since Star Wars’ return to cinema with Star Wars: Episode VII – The Force Awakens.
Meanwhile, Yen continued to produce quality martial arts films in Hong Kong, creating an international hit as the titular kung fu master in Ip Man. Yen went on to lead three successful sequels featuring the likes of Sammo Hung and Mike Tyson, making the actor a household name all over the world. Yen is next set to appear in the highly-anticipated John Wick: Chapter 4 with Keanu Reeves and Sleeping Dogs, an adaptation of the popular video game of the same name.