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Watch Full Movies with Jet Li Online

About

Birth Name: Jie, Li Lian
Birth Notes: 26 April 1963, Beijing, China
Height: 168 cm
Family: * 'Qiuyan Huang' (1987 - 1990) (divorced); 2 daughters
* Nina Li Chi (19 September 1999 - present); 2 children
Biography: Jet Li was Wushu (a martial art) national champion in China several times. He got his first part as a shaolin disciple in the film Shaolin Temple. His first attempt at directing, Zhong hua ying xiong (1986) (Born to defend), met with failure. It was good film regardless, because it was the first time Li directed and had more realistic fight scenes. Jet Li started training at the Beijing wushu academy (wushu is China's national sport, largely a performance version of various martial art styles) at age eight. He won five gold medals in the Chinese championships, his first when he was only 11. In his teens, he was already a national coach, and before he was 20 he had starred in his first movie: _Shao Lin tzu (1979)_ (Shaolin Temple), which started the 1980s Kung-Fu boom in mainland China. He relocated to Hong Kong, where he was the biggest star of the early 1990s Kung-Fu boom as well.

Filmography

Cradle 2 the Grave (2003) as Su
Hong Xi Guan: Zhi Shao Lin wu zu (1994) as Hung Hei-Kwun
Kiss of the Dragon (2001) as Liu Jian
Lethal Weapon 4 (1998) as Wah Sing Ku
Sat sau ji wong (1998) as Fu
The Expendables (2010) as Ying Yang
The Forbidden Kingdom (2008) as The Monkey King/The Silent Monk
The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor (2008) as Emperor
The One (2001) as Gabe Law/Gabriel Yulaw/Lawless
Da ba gua (1992)  
Danny the Dog (2005) as Danny
Dong fang ju long (1988)  
Fong Sai Yuk (1993) as Fong Sai-Yuk
Fong Sai Yuk juk jaap (1993) as Fong Sai Yuk
Gei ba ba de xin (1995) as Kung Wei
Haiyang tiantang (2010) as Sam Wong
Hak hap (1996) as Tsui Chik/Black Mask
Huo Yuan Jia (2006) as Huo Yuanjia
Jian guo da ye (2009) as Chen Shaokuan
Jing wu ying xiong (1994) as Chen Zhen
Long xing tian xia (1989) as Jet
Long zai tian ya (1989) as Jimmy Lee
Mo him wong (1996) as Chow Si-Kit
Nan bei Shao Lin (1986) as Zhi Ming
New Dragon Gate Inn (2012) as Chow Wai-On
Romeo Must Die (2000) as Han Sing
Shao Lin Hai Deng da shi (1988)  
Shao Lin xiao zi (1984) as San Lung
Shao Lin zhen gong fu (1994)  
Shaolin Si (1982) as Chieh Yuan
Shu dan long wei (1995) as Kit Li
Tai ji: Zhang San Feng (1993) as Junbao
Tau ming chong (2007) as General Pang Qingyun
War (2007) as Rogue
Wong Fei Hung (1991) as Wong Fei-hung
Wong Fei Hung II: Nam yi dong ji keung (1992) as Wong Fei-Hung
Wong Fei Hung ji saam: Si wong jaang ba (1993) as Wong Fei-hung
Wong Fei Hung: Chi sai wik hung see (1997) as Wong Fei-Hung
Wong Fei Hung: Chi tit gai dau neung gung (1993) as Wong Fei-hung
Xiao ao jiang hu zhi: Dong Fang Bu Bai (1992) as Ling Wu Chung
Yi tian tu long ji: Zhi mo jiao jiao zhu (1993) as Chang Mo Kei
Ying xiong (2002) as Nameless
Zhong hua wu shu (1983)  
Zhong hua ying xiong (1986) as Jet
Zhong Nan Hai bao biao (1994) as Allan Hui Ching-yeung/John Chang
Zhong hua ying xiong (1986)  

Trivia

  * Won Chinese national championship in the acrobatic martial art wushu when he was 11; his prize was a trip to Washington D.C. to meet President Richard Nixon .
* He studies English with a tutor for 4 hours a day.
* (19 April 2000) Jet & wife Nina Li Chi became parents to a 6 lb. 13 oz. daughter, Jane.
* Was originally cast in the role of the character Li Mu Bai in Ang Lee's martial arts blockbuster Wo hu cang long (2000) (Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon), but turned it down. The decision was prompted by a promise to his wife Nina Li Chi that he would not work while she was pregnant. The role of Li Mu Bai went to actor Yun-Fat Chow. Li said this himself during an appearance on "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno" (1992) promoting Kiss of the Dragon (2001).
* Other than providing voice-overs for Kit Yun in Rise to Honor (2003) (VG), he also did the motion-capture for his fight scenes.
* Injured his foot while escaping the tsunami that followed a 9.0 earthquake in the Indian Ocean. Li and his four year old daughter were on vacation in the Maldives on December 26th, 2004. The two were in the lobby of their hotel when the wave came ashore. Scooping up his daughter and running for higher ground, a piece of furniture hit his foot, causing the injury.
* Has claimed his upcoming martial arts film Huo Yuan Jia (2006) (Fearless) will be his last period kung-fu film, and that he will concentrate on other matters in the future. One of those matters is apparently a documentary about Buddhism.
* His Mandarin name is Li Lianjie. His Cantonese name is Lei Lin-Git (or Lee Lin-Kit).
* Has played both real life legend Huo Yuan Jia (in Huo Yuan Jia (2006)) and his semi-fictional student Chen Zhen (in Jing wu ying xiong (1994)).
* Sustained bruised ribs while filming the fight stunts with Anthony Anderson for Romeo Must Die (2000).
* One of 105 people invited to join AMPAS in 2008.
* Chinese Director Jing Wong worked with Jet on 4 films. They were: Last Hero in China (1993), Kung Fu Cult Master, (1993), The New Legend of Shaolin (1994) and High Risk (1995).
* Worked with Chinese Director Tsui Hark on 5 films. This was: The Master (1989), Once Upon a Time in China, Once Upon a Time in China 2, Once Upon a Time in China 3, Black Mask.
* Has played both an attempted assassin of the First Emperor of China (in "Ying Xiong"), and the First Emperor of China. (In Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor).

Quotes

  * I can feel very brave through all the action scenes in front of the people who are on the set, but when a girl comes close to me my face turns red because I'm so shy.
* I have met Jackie Chan about 6 times up 'til now . . . and even though many people think we are natural enemies, I personally think he is a cool bloke and would honestly love to work with him in a film one time - that would a well brilliant movie!
* You can beat me up, but don't touch my hair, I will kill you!
* [on Ying xiong (2002)] Usually action films have a formula: good guy gets in trouble, his wife dies, friends have problems, so he goes to the mountain, learns martial arts, comes back, and kills the bad guy. But on this film, we talked about a totally different angle to see my character.
* [on Ying xiong (2002)] In the past two years, somebody tried to recut it the American way, looping English, but I'm glad right now we still keep the original way. I think the way the director shot [the movie] was not a normal action film.
* I stepped into the martial arts movie market when I was only 16. I think I have proved my ability in this field and it won't make sense for me to continue for another five or 10 years. Huo Yuan Jia (2006) is a conclusion to my life as a martial arts star.
* We are a global family. The religion is different, the languages are different but we are human beings and we need to help each other.

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