Street Fighter: Legend of Chun-Li


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I want to see those panties....hell I wanna see the stuff under it too. :devil:

DO NOT WANT

the only good live action chun-li is Jackie Chan

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What movie is that from? or where I can I see it?

I want to see those panties....hell I wanna see the stuff under it too. :devil:

What movie is that from? or where I can I see it?

City Hunter (film)

I hope you know that it's Jackie Chan here... Not an actual girl... (I have nothing versus Gays, btw)

The film is most notable of the crossdressing done by Chan as the Street Fighter II character Chun-Li in one scene.
Damn, cant they get a REAL asian girl to play the part? And no thanks to kelly hu. Notice how they cant get a real asian women but women with asian in them but are bi racial. Im not racist but this move seems like a complete asiaphile . Being an asian guy, i can picture 500+ white guys going to see this move and getting off...

No, not racist at all. Oh and definitely not stereotyping either. :rolleyes:

LatinoReview got their paws on an early version of the script. Here are some spoiler-rific bits:

? The new flick centers on one character: Chun-Li. That?s it. No Ryu, no Ken, no Guile, no eight million characters.

? Chun-Li?s mother dies and now she has no one. She searches out a man called Gen and it is he who tells her that her father is actually still alive in the hands of Bison. Chun-Li then trains with Gen. She becomes faster! Stronger! She is?THE STREET FIGHTER!

? The movie is a revenge flick plain and simple. There?s some awesome kung-fu action in the script but there?s no fireballs. No sonic booms. No flash kicks. Pure and simple Chun-Li is on a mission to find her father and take down Bison.[/quot:ermm:/>

:ermm: Sounds worse then the other movie!

As a asian male and a active asian american activist against anti asian hate crimes , I can response easy to your post.

I know this isn't the right place for this but.....

So you are against asian hate crimes and yet you are attacking asains because they are not "real" asians? Just because a person is not from 2 asian parents doesn't mean they are any less asian. In fact, Kelly(not a "real" asian by your standards) is probably more active in the asian-american community than most of the "real" asians. I would think you are in the group that called Ming-Na a sell out because she married a white guy and they applauded when she divorced him and then married a chinese guy. [/rant]

BTW, i've seen that pic of Kelly several times before but never noticed that it is a nip slip until now.

I know this isn't the right place for this but.....

So you are against asian hate crimes and yet you are attacking asains because they are not "real" asians? Just because a person is not from 2 asian parents doesn't mean they are any less asian. In fact, Kelly(not a "real" asian by your standards) is probably more active in the asian-american community than most of the "real" asians. I would think you are in the group that called Ming-Na a sell out because she married a white guy and they applauded when she divorced him and then married a chinese guy. [/rant]

BTW, i've seen that pic of Kelly several times before but never noticed that it is a nip slip until now.

Someone has been zooming :shifty:

  • 1 month later...

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Kristin Kreuk, no stranger to franchise reinvention from her time on "Smallville," will play Chun-Li in the latest big screen incarnation of "Street Fighter."

Also set for the "Street Fighter" cast are Chris Klein as Nash, Oscar nominee Michael Clarke Duncan as Balrog and Rick Yune as Gen.

According to Variety, the cast of the Andrzej Bartkowiak-directed feature will also include Moon Bloodgood, Taboo, Edmund Chen and Cheng Pei Pei. The key role of the villainous Bison has yet to be cast.

Dion Lam will choreograph the action sequences on "Street Fighter," which is set up through Hyde Park Entertainment and Capcom, with 20th Century Fox set to distribute.

Justin Marks adapted what will be the second attempt to turn the popular video game franchise into a big screen success. A 1994 dud starred Jean-Claude Van Damme, Raul Julia and Ming-Na as Chun-Li.

Since it premiered in 1987, "Street Fighter" has become one of the most successful video game franchises of all-time, moving 25 million units and generating more than $1 billion in revenue.

In addition to her long run as Lana Lang on The WB and CW's "Smallville," Kreuk has been seen in the telefilm "Eathsea" and in the feature "EuroTrip."

"American Pie" and "Election" star Klein is currently co-starring on CBS' "The Captain," while Duncan's recent credits include "The Last Mimzy" and "Welcome Home, Roscoe Jenkins

  • 1 month later...

2 New Cast Announced!

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• M. Bison: Neal McDonough. The Hitcher (2007), Flags of Our Fathers (2006), Band of Brothers (2001)

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• Vega: Taboo. Member of popular R&B music group Black Eyed Peas and recipient of three Grammy Awards.

(Source)

  • 4 weeks later...
n addition to listing the already announced Kristin Kreuk (Chun-Li), Neil McDonough (M. Bison), Chris Klein (Nash), Michael Clarke Dunacn (Balrog), Black Eyed Peas member Taboo (Vega), and Josie Ho (Cantana), the site confirms that Moon Bloodgood will be playing Maya and actress Pei Pei Cheng (Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon) will play Zhilan. The post also introduces Edmund Chen (The Eye) as Huang.

After listing many key crew members, including director Andrzej Bartkowiak (Romeo Must Die), fight choreographer Dion Lam (The Matrix), director of photography Geoff Boyle (The Mutant Chronicles) and editor Derek Brechin (The Bourne Ultimatum), it describes the first week of shooting, indicating that Duncan is performing his own stunts and Kreuk and Ho appear together in a provocative scene. Finally, the post hints at a major casting announcement for the character Gen, saying "it's not who you think." Rick Yune was rumored to be playing this key role, but it remains to be seen whether our sources were correct.

  • 2 weeks later...
Hey folks, Aaron here, back again and reporting for duty. We?re just about halfway through shooting, and things have been going swimmingly. Unfortunately, I mean that literally. We?re up to our eyeballs in water these days. See, the arrival of May brings the rainy season upon us in Bangkok, and when it rains out here?it friggin? pours. If its not a mid-afternoon shower to temporarily halt filming, it?s the roaring thunder off in the distance muckin? up our sound. Of course, that could just be the booming voice of Michael Clarke Duncan?

But, hey, like former Air Force Lt. Charlie Nash? we soldier on. We?re still shooting like crazy. This past week saw Chun Li and Vega goin? toe to toe. They brought the claws out for this melee (one of them literally). And this very morning, Neal Mcdonough?s Bison unleashed a BRUTAL beat-down that was a little more one-sided. Ohhh yes my friends, there will be blood.

For this week?s exclusive first-look, feast your eyes on the beautiful Moon Bloodgood as Det. Maya Sunee. The character probably won?t sound familiar to you die-hard SF fans out there. And it shouldn?t. Maya?s new to the Street Fighter universe. She?s Bangkok Gangland Homicide. A no-nonsense, fast-talking, half-Thai cop who rocks a Ducati and a set of gold cuffs. Check her out below, hangin? with her boys.

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Let’s explore this question together. Even threats to impose tariffs won’t work After Trump entered the White House as the 47th President of the United States, his administration adopted strict tariff policies. One of these policies was the imposition of a 25% tariff on smartphones manufactured outside the United States. Trump said he “had a little problem” with Apple CEO Tim Cook over producing smartphones outside the U.S. So he thought that threatening a 25% tax on imported phones might force Apple to bring manufacturing back to the United States. “I have long ago informed Tim Cook of Apple that I expect their iPhones that will be sold in the United States of America will be manufactured and built in the United States, not India, or anyplace else,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. Image via The White House Although Apple currently manufactures some of the iPhone’s chips in the United States with TSMC's help, it still shows no willingness to shift full iPhone production to the country. 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