Opération Dragon (French Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Opération Dragon" in French language version.

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archive.org

  • Bruce Thomas, Bruce Lee, Fighting Spirit: A Biography, Berkeley, California, Frog Books, (ISBN 9781883319250, lire en ligne Inscription nécessaire), p. 247 :

    « A month after Bruce's death, Enter the Dragon was released. During its first seven weeks in the United States it grossed US$3 million. In London it monopolized three West End cinemas for five weeks before becoming a sellout throughout Britain and the rest of Europe. The film went on to gross over US$200 million, the ratio of cost to profit making it perhaps the most commercially successful film ever made. »

  • Wayne Wilson, Bruce Lee, Mitchell Lane Publishers, , 30–1 p. (ISBN 978-1-58415-066-4, lire en ligne) :

    « After its release, Enter the Dragon became Warner Brothers' highest grossing movie of 1973. It has earned well over $400 million »

books.google.com

  • Marc Eliot, Steve McQueen: A Biography, Aurum Press, , 237, 242 (ISBN 978-1-84513-744-1, lire en ligne [archive du ]) :

    « Papillon earned nearly $55 million in its initial domestic release, making it the third-highest-grossing film of the year. (...) Robert Clouse's Enter the Dragon, starring the late Bruce Lee, came in fourth, with $25 million. »

  • Matthew Polly, Bruce Lee: A Life, Simon and Schuster, (ISBN 978-1-5011-8763-6, lire en ligne [archive du ]), p. 479
  • John A. Lent, The Asian Film Industry, Helm, (ISBN 978-0-7470-2000-4, lire en ligne [archive du ]), p. 100 :

    « The Lee film, Enter the Dragon, was made with Warner; it grossed US $100 million in the United States alone (Sun 1982: 40). »

  • Barbara Mennel, Cities and Cinema, Routledge, (ISBN 978-1-134-21984-1, lire en ligne [archive du ]), p. 87 :

    « Golden Harvest took on Bruce Lee and began co-producing with Hollywood companies, leading to its kung-fu action films, including the Bruce Lee vehicle Enter the Dragon (dir. Robert Clouse, 1973), which “grossed US $100 million in the United States alone” (Lent 100; also Sun 1982:40). »

  • George Tan, « Behind The Scenes With Bruce Lee: An Inside Look at "The Dragon's" Films », Black Belt, Active Interest Media, vol. 28, no 11,‎ , p. 24–29 (29) (lire en ligne [archive du ], consulté le )
  • Edward Gross, Bruce Lee: Fists of Fury, Pioneer Books, (ISBN 9781556982330, lire en ligne [archive du ]), p. 137 :

    « In 1973, his third (sic) Enter the Dragon, grossed $100 million world-wide and firmly established young Lee as an international star whose films were almost guaranteed to be successful. »

  • « British Newspaper Clippings – Showtalk: The King Lives », Bruce Lee Eve: The Robert Blakeman Bruce Lee Memorabilia Collection Logbook, and Associates of Bruce Lee Eve Newsletters, Kiazen Publications,‎ (ISBN 978-1-4583-1893-0, lire en ligne [archive du ], consulté le ) :

    « Lee first found success in The Big Boss and followed that with Fist of Fury and Enter the Dragon which grossed an outstanding 100,000,000 dollars and firmly established itself as one of the world's all-time top films in commercial terms. Lee went on to top this with The Way of the Dragon and the cameras had barely stopped rolling when he began what was to be his final film Game of Death. (...) Now director Robert Clouse has completed Game of Death. »

  • Frank W. Hoffmann, William G. Bailey et Beulah B. Ramirez, Arts & Entertainment Fads, Psychology Press, (ISBN 978-0-86656-881-4, lire en ligne [archive du ]), p. 210 :

    « American moviemakers already knew the potential of the martial arts film; in 1973 “Enter the Dragon,” starring Bruce Lee, earned Fred Weintraub and Raymond Chow $100,000,000 worldwide. Of that amount $11,000,000 came from U.S. sales, indicating the market was really overseas. »

  • « The Turtles Take Hollywood », Asiaweek Limited, vol. 16,‎ (lire en ligne [archive du ], consulté le ) :

    « Lee's 1973 film Enter the Dragon is said to be one of the 50 top-grossing films of all time. »

  • « Immortal Kombat », Vibe Media Group, vol. 6, no 8,‎ , p. 90–94 (94) (ISSN 1070-4701, lire en ligne [archive du ], consulté le ) :

    « Bruce's own production company, Concord, was a full partner with Warner Bros, in his final, and greatest film, Enter the Dragon. Made for just $600,000, it has since grossed more than $300 million. »

  • James Bishop, Remembering Bruce: The Enduring Legend of the Martial Arts Superstar, Cyclone Books, (ISBN 978-1-890723-21-7, lire en ligne [archive du ]), p. 46 :

    « Three weeks after Bruce Lee died Enter the Dragon was released in the United States and became an instant hit. The movie, made for around $800,000, made US$3 million in its first seven weeks. Its success spread to Europe and then worldwide. It would eventually make over US$200 million, making it one of the most profitable movies of all time. »

boxofficestory.com

cinedweller.com

doi.org

dx.doi.org

eklablog.com

archives-box-office.eklablog.com

  • Fabrice Ferment, « BO France - 5 février 1974 », sur Les Archives du Box-office, (consulté le ).
  • Fabrice Ferment, « Calendrier BO Hebdos 1974 », sur Les Archives du Box-office, (consulté le ).
  • Fabrice Ferment, « BO France - 23 avril 1974 », sur Les Archives du Box-office, (consulté le ).

encyclocine.com

imdb.com

indiatoday.in

issn.org

portal.issn.org

  • Pierre-François Peirano, « The Multiple Facets of Enter the Dragon (Robert Clouse, 1973) », InMedia. The French Journal of Media and Media Representations in the English-Speaking World, no 3,‎ (ISSN 2259-4728, DOI 10.4000/inmedia.613 Accès libre, lire en ligne [archive du ], consulté le )
  • « Immortal Kombat », Vibe Media Group, vol. 6, no 8,‎ , p. 90–94 (94) (ISSN 1070-4701, lire en ligne [archive du ], consulté le ) :

    « Bruce's own production company, Concord, was a full partner with Warner Bros, in his final, and greatest film, Enter the Dragon. Made for just $600,000, it has since grossed more than $300 million. »

jpbox-office.com

jstor.org

  • (en) M. T. Kato, « Burning Asia: Bruce Lee's Kinetic Narrative of Decolonization », Modern Chinese Literature and Culture, vol. 17, no 1,‎ , p. 62–99 (JSTOR 41490933).

kobis.or.kr

loc.gov

looper.com

newspaperarchive.com

  • Dan Lewis, « Newest Movie Craze: Chinese Agents », Lima News,‎ , p. 30 (lire en ligne [archive du ] Accès payant, consulté le ) :

    « Warner Brothers has just released one called "The Five Fingers of Death" and, with Fred Weintraub as producer, is now involved in the first American-Chinese production of a martial-science picture, a film that stars Bruce (Kato) Lee (...) "Enter the Dragon," is budgeted at {US$1 million. The first two pictures grossed more than US$5 million in Southeast Asia alone, according to Weintraub. He also said American distributors are offering as much as $500,000 in advance for distribution rights. »

  • Lou Gaul, « Actor Bruce Lee's life celebrated in special video edition », Doylestown Intelligencer,‎ , p. 28 (lire en ligne [archive du ] Accès payant, consulté le ) :

    « The $550,000 picture – a modest budget even by 1973 standards – has grossed more than US$120 million during its initial run and re-release engagements in America and has never aired on network television. »

newspapers.com

  • Mitchell G. Hamberger, « Bruce Lee remembered », York Daily Record,‎ , p. 6 (lire en ligne [archive du ] Accès payant, consulté le ) :

    « His biggest and best film Enter the Dragon, grossed over Modèle:US$ internationally. That's more than any martial arts film has ever grossed. »

nytimes.com

revues.org

inmedia.revues.org

theguardian.com

top-france.fr

uillinois.edu

press.uillinois.edu

web.archive.org

  • Pierre-François Peirano, « The Multiple Facets of Enter the Dragon (Robert Clouse, 1973) », InMedia. The French Journal of Media and Media Representations in the English-Speaking World, no 3,‎ (ISSN 2259-4728, DOI 10.4000/inmedia.613 Accès libre, lire en ligne [archive du ], consulté le )
  • « Enter The Dragon (1973) » [archive du ], IMDb (consulté le )
  • Dan Lewis, « Newest Movie Craze: Chinese Agents », Lima News,‎ , p. 30 (lire en ligne [archive du ] Accès payant, consulté le ) :

    « Warner Brothers has just released one called "The Five Fingers of Death" and, with Fred Weintraub as producer, is now involved in the first American-Chinese production of a martial-science picture, a film that stars Bruce (Kato) Lee (...) "Enter the Dragon," is budgeted at {US$1 million. The first two pictures grossed more than US$5 million in Southeast Asia alone, according to Weintraub. He also said American distributors are offering as much as $500,000 in advance for distribution rights. »

  • Marc Eliot, Steve McQueen: A Biography, Aurum Press, , 237, 242 (ISBN 978-1-84513-744-1, lire en ligne [archive du ]) :

    « Papillon earned nearly $55 million in its initial domestic release, making it the third-highest-grossing film of the year. (...) Robert Clouse's Enter the Dragon, starring the late Bruce Lee, came in fourth, with $25 million. »

  • Matthew Polly, Bruce Lee: A Life, Simon and Schuster, (ISBN 978-1-5011-8763-6, lire en ligne [archive du ]), p. 479
  • John A. Lent, The Asian Film Industry, Helm, (ISBN 978-0-7470-2000-4, lire en ligne [archive du ]), p. 100 :

    « The Lee film, Enter the Dragon, was made with Warner; it grossed US $100 million in the United States alone (Sun 1982: 40). »

  • Barbara Mennel, Cities and Cinema, Routledge, (ISBN 978-1-134-21984-1, lire en ligne [archive du ]), p. 87 :

    « Golden Harvest took on Bruce Lee and began co-producing with Hollywood companies, leading to its kung-fu action films, including the Bruce Lee vehicle Enter the Dragon (dir. Robert Clouse, 1973), which “grossed US $100 million in the United States alone” (Lent 100; also Sun 1982:40). »

  • Lou Gaul, « Actor Bruce Lee's life celebrated in special video edition », Doylestown Intelligencer,‎ , p. 28 (lire en ligne [archive du ] Accès payant, consulté le ) :

    « The $550,000 picture – a modest budget even by 1973 standards – has grossed more than US$120 million during its initial run and re-release engagements in America and has never aired on network television. »

  • Renaud Soyer, « Box Office International 1973 » [archive du ], sur Box Office Story, (consulté le )
  • Renaud Soyer, « Bruce Lee Box Office » [archive du ], sur Box Office Story, (consulté le )
  • « Charts – LES ENTREES EN FRANCE » [archive du ], sur JP's Box-Office, (consulté le )
  • « Charts – LES ENTREES EN ALLEMAGNE » [archive du ], sur JP's Box-Office, (consulté le )
  • George Tan, « Behind The Scenes With Bruce Lee: An Inside Look at "The Dragon's" Films », Black Belt, Active Interest Media, vol. 28, no 11,‎ , p. 24–29 (29) (lire en ligne [archive du ], consulté le )
  • « 영화정보 » [archive du ], sur KOFIC, Korean Film Council (consulté le )
  • Khalid Mohamed, « Bruce Lee storms Bombay once again with Return of the Dragon », India Today,‎ (lire en ligne [archive du ], consulté le )
  • Edward Gross, Bruce Lee: Fists of Fury, Pioneer Books, (ISBN 9781556982330, lire en ligne [archive du ]), p. 137 :

    « In 1973, his third (sic) Enter the Dragon, grossed $100 million world-wide and firmly established young Lee as an international star whose films were almost guaranteed to be successful. »

  • « British Newspaper Clippings – Showtalk: The King Lives », Bruce Lee Eve: The Robert Blakeman Bruce Lee Memorabilia Collection Logbook, and Associates of Bruce Lee Eve Newsletters, Kiazen Publications,‎ (ISBN 978-1-4583-1893-0, lire en ligne [archive du ], consulté le ) :

    « Lee first found success in The Big Boss and followed that with Fist of Fury and Enter the Dragon which grossed an outstanding 100,000,000 dollars and firmly established itself as one of the world's all-time top films in commercial terms. Lee went on to top this with The Way of the Dragon and the cameras had barely stopped rolling when he began what was to be his final film Game of Death. (...) Now director Robert Clouse has completed Game of Death. »

  • Frank W. Hoffmann, William G. Bailey et Beulah B. Ramirez, Arts & Entertainment Fads, Psychology Press, (ISBN 978-0-86656-881-4, lire en ligne [archive du ]), p. 210 :

    « American moviemakers already knew the potential of the martial arts film; in 1973 “Enter the Dragon,” starring Bruce Lee, earned Fred Weintraub and Raymond Chow $100,000,000 worldwide. Of that amount $11,000,000 came from U.S. sales, indicating the market was really overseas. »

  • Mitchell G. Hamberger, « Bruce Lee remembered », York Daily Record,‎ , p. 6 (lire en ligne [archive du ] Accès payant, consulté le ) :

    « His biggest and best film Enter the Dragon, grossed over Modèle:US$ internationally. That's more than any martial arts film has ever grossed. »

  • « The Turtles Take Hollywood », Asiaweek Limited, vol. 16,‎ (lire en ligne [archive du ], consulté le ) :

    « Lee's 1973 film Enter the Dragon is said to be one of the 50 top-grossing films of all time. »

  • « Immortal Kombat », Vibe Media Group, vol. 6, no 8,‎ , p. 90–94 (94) (ISSN 1070-4701, lire en ligne [archive du ], consulté le ) :

    « Bruce's own production company, Concord, was a full partner with Warner Bros, in his final, and greatest film, Enter the Dragon. Made for just $600,000, it has since grossed more than $300 million. »

  • James Bishop, Remembering Bruce: The Enduring Legend of the Martial Arts Superstar, Cyclone Books, (ISBN 978-1-890723-21-7, lire en ligne [archive du ]), p. 46 :

    « Three weeks after Bruce Lee died Enter the Dragon was released in the United States and became an instant hit. The movie, made for around $800,000, made US$3 million in its first seven weeks. Its success spread to Europe and then worldwide. It would eventually make over US$200 million, making it one of the most profitable movies of all time. »

  • Clay Risen, « Bob Wall, Martial Arts Master Who Sparred With Bruce Lee, Dies at 82 », The New York Times,‎ (lire en ligne [archive du ] Accès payant, consulté le )
  • Richard Chachowski, « The Best Kung Fu Movies Of All Time Ranked », Looper.com, Static Media,‎ (lire en ligne [archive du ], consulté le )