Of course, if you start at the end, with the latest film in this collection—Sammo Hung’s My Lucky Stars, from 1985—Chan’s stateside success almost seems like a foregone conclusion. With Rush Hour still more than a decade away, he has already dialed in the persona that’ll make him a global icon. In My Lucky Stars, he plays Muscles, a Hong Kong police officer who has traveled to Tokyo with his partner, Ricky (Yuen Biao), to catch a corrupt ex-cop. Muscles is the kind of character Chan has played over and over—a human tornado in dad jeans and a cable-knit sweater, an absurdly brave everyman who’ll climb up and then down a working Ferris wheel during a foot chase, but can still get jump-scared by a spring-loaded dummy. But when the local yakuza boss kidnaps Ricky, Muscles goes into hiding and reaches out for help from the only people he believes he can trust—his old friend Kidstuff, played by Hung, and the other members of their childhood street gang, the Lucky Stars.
My Lucky Stars is really their movie; it’s an excuse to reunite the ensemble cast of Hung’s 1983 hit Winners & Sinners by having them play similar hoodlums with different nicknames. Whenever Chan shows up, he delivers what his audience had come to expect by the mideighties: comedy and casual death-defiance in precise proportion, as in the climactic sequence where Muscles fights his way through a haunted house full of fake skeletons and real ninjas while disguised as a bigheaded theme-park mascot, the girl-robot protagonist of the anime series Dr. Slump. Yet Jackie all but disappears from the story in the middle, to make room for the slapstick antics of the Lucky Stars themselves, who play hotel-room pranks on one another in matching pajamas, lust after their policewoman minder (Sibelle Hu), and occasionally break into five-part harmony. In one scene, they overcome the language barrier in a Japanese restaurant by pantomiming their dinner orders. One guy asks for sausage by unzipping his pants; the waiter brings him a mushroom.
Chan’s part feels like a deluxe cameo, inserted—as a favor to the studio, Golden Harvest, and to “big brother” Sammo Hung, who’d trained with Chan and Yuen at the infamously brutal China Drama Academy—to juice ticket sales. It worked; My Lucky Stars was the highest-grossing Hong Kong film of 1985, and the first film ever to make more than thirty million Hong Kong dollars. Even in a lowbrow comedy where his character isn’t the focus, Chan was a powerful box-office draw.
This was not always the case. In the early seventies, Chan was just another Chinese-opera-trained performer in an industry full of them—a stuntman, stunt coordinator, and occasional bit player known on Hong Kong film sets for his willingness to take hits and falls that other performers balked at. In 1975, he was in Korea, working for director Woo Yu-sen—later and better known as John Woo—as part of the stunt team on a joint Hong Kong/Korean production called Hand of Death. When one of the Korean actors turned out to be too old to perform in the movie’s many fight scenes, Woo slapped a wig on Chan and rewrote the part for him.
Chan continued to double for the movie’s lead; at one point, while performing a wire-fu stunt, he landed on his head, lost consciousness for twenty minutes, and awoke disoriented, unable to recall who he was. “I held him, and he cried as his memory slowly came back to him,” Woo told an interviewer years later, “and from that time on, we became close brothers. I made his character look better and decided upon a lot of good things for him.” When the movie wrapped, Woo urged Golden Harvest to sign Chan as an actor. This didn’t happen, and Hand of Death was not a success. But Chan’s work in the film did catch the eye of an independent producer and director named Lo Wei.
Originally from Shanghai, “Director Lo” had been a matinee-idol actor in the 1940s before launching a directing career in Hong Kong. By the time he entered Chan’s life, he was the Hong Kong version of a classic Hollywood archetype—the arrogant, cigar-chomping mogul who promises to make the no-name hero into a star. Lo could make that claim because, as he saw it, he’d done it before—in the early seventies, before leaving Golden Harvest to start his own company, he’d directed Bruce Lee’s first two major films, 1971’s The Big Boss and 1972’s Fist of Fury. Both movies were record-breaking hits, although it’s hard to say how much that really had to do with Lo Wei, whose nickname “Orson Welles” was a reference to his size, not his craftsmanship; by all accounts, he was a pretty checked-out auteur. “While actors were filming scenes, he often turned up his radio to listen to horse and dog races,” Matthew Polly wrote in his 2018 book Bruce Lee: A Life. “If someone disturbed him during a race or his horse lost, he would bellow in rage.” After meeting Lo, Bruce Lee described the director’s “almost unbearable air of superiority” in a letter to his wife, Linda, and once The Big Boss and Fist of Fury turned Lee into a star, Lo boasted in the press that he’d taught him everything, which infuriated Lee. They never worked together again, and while Lee went on to make more hits, Lo didn’t—which didn’t stop him from believing he could capture lightning once more by rehashing the Bruce Lee formula with a different actor.
To Lo, Jackie Chan looked like that actor. In 1976, on the strength of Hand of Death—and a nudge from Chan’s manager and eventual producing partner, Willie Chan—Lo signed Chan to an eight-year contract. Chan got the equivalent of four hundred dollars a month, plus a four-hundred-dollar bonus for every film he finished; for the term of the contract, Chan agreed to work exclusively in Lo’s films. Technically, this wasn’t the first time they had collaborated; as a stuntman on Lo’s Fist of Fury, Chan had doubled for the main villain, played by former Mainichi Orions outfielder turned actor Chikara “Riki” Hashimoto. When Lee finishes off Hashimoto’s character with a flying kick to the windpipe in the film’s final fight scene, it’s actually Jackie who goes through the wall and lands in the garden; at the time, it’s said, no Hong Kong stuntman had ever flown that far without a safety harness. Jackie went on to get killed by Lee again in Robert Clouse’s Enter the Dragon; he’s one of the bodyguards who tries to keep Bruce out of Mr. Han’s underground base, and gets an unceremonious off-camera neck-snap for his trouble.
By the time Chan signed on with Lo, Lee had been dead for three years. It was the heyday of the martial-arts subgenre known as Bruceploitation, when any actor who had the right look—and was willing to adopt an opportunistic stage name like Bruce Li or Bruce Lai or Bruce Leung—could find work as a substitute Bruce in films that traded shamelessly on the real Lee’s absence, complete with sucker-bait titles like Re-enter the Dragon; Exit the Dragon, Enter the Tiger; and Enter Another Dragon. The trailer for Lo’s first film with Chan, New Fist of Fury (1976), featured flashes of Lee’s image, and attempted to sell Chan as Lee’s true, anointed successor by hyping the involvement of the director who “brought you Bruce Lee.” But the film still flopped. It was the first of many Chan/Lo collaborations that went nowhere. Lo might have had an eye for talent, but in films like 1977’s To Kill with Intrigue, he kept on casting Chan as a grim and indomitable avenger in the Bruce Lee mold without much creative or financial success. Whenever Chan attempted to inject this material with humor, Lo reportedly rejected his ideas. “I was never going to be Bruce,” Chan wrote of this period in his 1998 autobiography, “and everyone seemed to know it but Lo.”