


The “bonus features” included a one-paragraph biography of Bruce Lee that described him as a “king fu master.” The audio track alternated between inaudible and ear-shattering, and was punctuated by random bursts of static. The transfer was barely watchable, its washed-out graininess interrupted by occasional freezes. But the nostalgic impulse that had prompted the purchase quickly turned sour when I got the disc home. It’s possible I expected too much from a two-dollar drugstore DVD. The letters appeared to be made out of bamboo shoots. “Two Classics on One Disc!” the box exclaimed in a garish yellow font. A familiar cover caught my eye: Fists of Fury and The Chinese Connection. Years later, standing in line at the prescription counter of my pharmacy, I glanced over at the rack of budget DVDs next to the Metamucil. I still associate calzones and Rolling Rocks with kung-fu flicks. We mainlined the double feature that night, cracking up at the awkward English overdubs and marveling at Lee’s martial arts prowess. My film-major roommate, aghast at my ignorance, dragged me to the video store, where we found a combo pack of VHS tapes- Fists of Fury and The Chinese Connection-for five bucks. It took me until sophomore year of college to finally see a Bruce Lee movie.
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Reset is a series of second looks at influential, interesting, or forgotten games through a contemporary lens.
