In the 1970s, the martial arts craze swept the world. The early seventies saw an increase in the exploitation of black metal in cinema, but the original audiences for these films—often blacks from urban centers—felt too limited in terms of profit margins. Enter the kung fu movie. Along with a young male protagonist who was not white, he stood up to the rich at the head and used his fists and legs to administer justice. Five Fingers of Death, starring Lo Lie, started North America’s obsession with all things kung fu.
It was a new spectacle for the American public that many non-whites, especially those in the cities,
could understand even if they were not Asian. But at the same time, it helped create a legacy of representation in film that had both good and bad consequences. Even today, films such as Shang-Chi and The Legend of the Ten Rings are based on this legacy, though it has also trapped Asian Americans in stereotype. Regardless, the martial arts films of the 1970s were a unique, cultural phenomenon that made men like Bruce Lee and Jackie Chan. Here are the best martial arts movies of the seventies.