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Julian Jung Lee filmography |
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Little Bear and the Master (2003)
When Jung Lee shows up on the Ute reservation, he seems out of place. A teacher of the martial arts far from his own home and culture. As far as Jung is concerned, the desert mountain is a place where a man can escape the responsibilities of the future...and the disappointements of the past. But Jung soon discovers that a man's destiny follows him, wherever he goes. First, the Ute boy, John becomes his friend, then the people of the Ute tribe become his friends. Then the ruthless money hungry Seaton becomes his bitter enemy. Now Jung Lee must face the destiny he came to escape. |
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Kudzu Christmas (2002) The recently divorced Nina Taylorson (Chrystale Wilson) and her young son Mason move to small Georgia town to start a new life. Mason befriends Gaitus Stevens (John Lawhorn) a lonely recently widowed older gentleman, together they attempt to save several abandoned puppies hiding in the thick Kudzu bush. Their love, faith and determination help them cope with loss and separation and realize the blessings they share during the holiday season. Julian plays the Korean shopkeeper, Mr. Kim. |
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Dragon and the Hawk (2000)
Julian Jung Lee stars as martial arts master, Dragon Pak, who comes to America searching for his missing sister, Cindi. Dragon battles his way past hoods in search of clues to his sister's fate. He encounters dead ends and people who obviously know something but refuse to talk. He meets police detective, Dana "Hawk" Hawkins, who is investigating a string of similar disappearances. When the clues begin to lead to Edgar Dante's club, The Inferno, Dragon is suddenly arrested and threatened with deportation. What has Dante been doing with these girls? Is Cindi still alive? What is the Ophidian Order? To answer these questions, Hawk frees Dragon and together they infiltrate the Inferno and follow Cindi's trail through its dungeons to the laboratory of the sinister Therion.
theatrical trailer:
[Real-1.35M] [MPEG-4M] [Quicktime-4M]
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Tiger Street (1998)
Julian Jung Lee stars as Tae Kwon Do master Tiger Sun who travels to the US where he is reunited with his old friend, Ray Carver, now a science teacher at an inner-city high school plagued by drug use and violence. After one of Carver's students commits suicide in the classroom, Carver realizes that he must try something new. He reaches out to Tiger Sun and convinces him to teach a Tae Kwon Do class at the school. Though Sun struggles with the memory of his Korean students, many of whom were tortured and killed for their study of the martial art form, he decides to teach again after he and Carver are confronted with opposition from local gang lords. When one of the school's major drug dealers takes Tiger Sun's class and changes as a result, his drug dealing partner becomes extremely upset and persuades the drug lord to eliminate Tiger. After the drug lord makes several attempts to kill Tiger, he finds himself face to face... in the ring. Will Tiger beat the drug lord and maintain the progress made against the school's war on drugs, or will the evil drug lord prevail? trailer: [Real-2.3M] [Quicktime-4.8M] Visit the official movie site at www.tigerstreet.com for release schedule. |
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| My Samurai (1993)
In "My Samurai" Lee plays Young Park, a martial arts master who must protect a boy who witnessed a gang murder. Co-stars were Mako, Bubba Smith and Terry O'Quinn. "My Samurai" was released internationally in 1993. trailer: [Real-2.2M] [Quicktime-4.5M] |
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Ironheart (1992, executive producer)
Starring Britton K. Lee, Bolo Yeung, and Richard Norton Julian Lee worked as executive producer on "Iron Heart" with Imperial Entertainment, which later offered him the starring role in "My Samurai." |
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Fatal Revenge (1990)
starring Julian Lee with Sondra Greenberg, Gian-Carlo Scandiuzzi, and Michael Land. Tae Lee plays a Korean special agent killed by a crack czar. Julian plays his brother, Jung, who comes to the U.S. seeking revenge for his brother's death. trailer [Real-350K] [Quicktime-1.1M] |
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Sul Sa Do
Lee's first experience before the camera was the martial arts training video, "Sul Sa Do: Korean Ninja Legacy." The success of that video led to the production of "Tanto," and the ten-part "Sul Sa Transformer" video series. |
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