A sequel to the 19th Century-set series Kung Fu (1972-75), The Legend Continues returns David Carradine to the role of wandering Shaolin priest Kwai Chang Caine, but with a twist. This Kwai Chang Caine is actually the grandson of the original Caine and he lives in modern times. This modern Caine is somehow still half-American and half-Chinese two generations later, and he retains his grandfather's stoic manner, slow halting speech, and willingness to provide help to anyone who asks for it. Executive producer (and, I'm assuming, showrunner) Michael Sloan uses the Caine character to fashion a semi-remake of his short-lived buddy-ninja series The Master (noteworthy for being hilariously mocked on Mystery Science Theater 3000) by teaming Caine with a long-lost wiseacre son, Peter (Chris Potter), who has become a lone-wolf cowboy cop (is there any other kind?). The nearly-60-year-old Carradine is still clearly not a kung fu master, but his slow, measured movements fit well with Caine's character and leave room for Caine's son to get in there and shoot some of the bad guys that the old guy isn't busy slowly kicking.

Kung Fu: The Legend Continues is a spin-off of the 1972-1975 television series Kung Fu. David Carradine and Chris Potter star as a father and son trained in the martial art of kung fu. The series aired in syndication for four seasons from 27 January 1993 to 1 January 1997. Filming took place in Toronto.


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Caine is highly intelligent, wise, and honorable, as well as a master of kung fu. However, as the series progresses, we find out that his extensive training and mastery of many various arts and skills allow him to perform impressive and often impossible superhuman feats, including opening locked doors, extinguishing flame with the wave of a hand, going without oxygen for extended periods of time, and even using forms of pyrokinesis and psychokinesis.

Kung Fu told the story of Kwai Chang Caine, a half Chinese and halfAmerican young man. Raised in China, he was forced to flee to the American West after killing amember of the royal family. Unlike most western heroes and despite his mastery of the martial arts(kung fu), Caine was a man of peace and avoided violence whenever possible.

As I've said it was also a chase show along the lines of The Fugitive orThe Incredible Hulk. Caine spent the run of the show traveling from western town to western townsearching for his brother, helping people along the way and being pursued at the same time bypeople still miffed about that whole "royal family killing" thing. And although he tried to avoidusing violence just like David Banner tried to avoid becoming the Hulk, you just knew every weeksome idiot would provoke him into kicking some major kung fu ass! But again, the show managed tobe more than just a cheap action western. It managed to convey a level of intelligence rare insuch a show.

Caine was played by David Carradine, a white actor and a member of afamous acting family. He did a good job but it is sad that he had the part. Why? Well martialarts legend Bruce Lee helped conceive the show and by all rights should have played Caine. Onlybecause of when the show was made, the networks didn't want a Chinese lead. They wanted a whitestar. The same sort of logic that brought you Charlton Heston as a Mexican lawyer in Touch OfEvil. Ironically, nowadays the networks would KILL to have a series with a non-white lead to quellcomplaints by the public about the lack of ethnic diversity in prime time. Bad timing man. Yearslater some justice was done when Bruce Lee's son Brandon appeared in a Kung Fu reunion TV movie.

Kung Fu - The Legend Continues centered on the new Caine who, like his grand dad, was a Shaolinpriest, as well as on his police detective son Peter. Together they fought crime kung fu style. There waslots of supernatural goings on as well: magical villains, magical powers, evil spirits, timetravel... Here's the thing. I don't remember any of this crap in the original show. All itsmysticism was of the philosophical and real sort, not of the hack fantasy adventure variety.

KF:TLC online fandom started up on Usenet, on rec.arts.tv and alt.tv.kungfu. By August 1994, it had started the move to mailing lists, when Laurie Salopek started up the KFTLC-L discussion list[15]; the KFFIC-L fiction list soon followed, owned by Camille Bacon-Smith.

Students are drawn to the area around the temple by the famous film and popular kung fu novels that celebrate Shaolin. Many study for years in hopes of earning a college scholarship that will lift them out of rural poverty.

Nearly 15 centuries ago, an Indian monk named Bodhidharma came to Shaolin and began teaching a form of Buddhism that became known as Zen. Depending on the legend, the monks either developed their unique style of martial arts to unwind after hours of motionless meditation or to fend off robbers.

jackie Chan is, bar none, the world's greatest action hero. The most popular star in Asia, in the U.S. he was the exclusive property of art-house brats and kung fu buffs until 1995, when "Rumble in the Bronx" was spruced up for American release, paving the way for three more recycled releases (so far) and a promising new career in Mountain Dew commercials. Now 43, the Hong Kong legend still does all his own stunts, which range from impressive to insane, and is blessed with a near-flawless sense of comic timing. He maintains an impish, regular-Joe air that makes his more absurd plot devices or goofy schticks forgivable. Most endearing is his habit of adding a montage of bloopers to the end credits, showing him bumping into pillars, making funny faces to get a baby to laugh for the inevitable stroller-in-traffic scene or falling from a great height and injuring himself. e24fc04721

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