Jackie Chan
Below is a complete filmography (list of movies he's appeared in) for Jackie Chan. If you have any corrections or additions, please email us at corrections@meninmovies.com. We'd also be interested in any trivia or other information you have.

Movie Credits
Kung Fu Panda (2008)
[ Dustin Hoffman ][ Jack Black ][ Ian McShane ]
Rush Hour 3 (2007)
[ Ian McKellen ][ Vinnie Jones ][ Roman Polanski ][ Chris Tucker ][ Michael Richards ]
Bo bui gai wak (2006)
San wa (2005)
San ging chaat goo si (2004)
Fa dou daai jin (2004)
[ Edison Chen ][ Donnie Yen ]
Around the World in 80 Days (2004)
[ Ewen Bremner ][ John Cleese ][ Arnold Schwarzenegger ][ Owen Wilson ][ Luke Wilson ]
Daai lo oi mei lai (2004)
The Medallion (2003)
[ Julian Sands ][ John Rhys-Davies ][ Avril Lavigne ][ Aaron Carter ][ Edison Chen ]
Chin gei bin (2003)
[ Edison Chen ]
Shanghai Knights (2003)
[ Owen Wilson ][ Aaron Johnson ][ Donnie Yen ][ Aidan Gillen ]
The Tuxedo (2002)
[ Jason Isaacs ][ Peter Stormare ][ Romany Malco ][ Bob Balaban ]
Rush Hour 2 (2001)
[ Jeremy Piven ][ Harris Yulin ][ Chris Tucker ][ Don Cheadle ][ Ernie Reyes Jr. ]
Dak miu mai shing (2001)
Shanghai Noon (2000)
[ Jason Connery ][ Owen Wilson ][ Xander Berkeley ][ Kid Rock ][ Curtis Armstrong ]
Dak ging san yan lui (1999)
Hei kek ji wong (1999)
[ Stephen Chow ]
Bor lei jun (1999)
[ Stephen Chow ][ Tony Leung Chiu Wai ]
Rush Hour (1998)
[ Chuck Berry ][ Michael Jackson ][ Chris Penn ][ Chris Tucker ][ Ken Leung ]
Wo shi shei (1998)
[ Kane Kosugi ]
An Alan Smithee Film: Burn Hollywood Burn (1997)
[ Eric Idle ][ Ryan O'Neal ][ Sylvester Stallone ][ Stephen Tobolowsky ]
Yatgo ho yan (1997)
[ Cameron Douglas ][ Sammo Hung Kam-Bo ]
Jing cha gu shi IV: Jian dan ren wu (1996)
[ Martin Jarvis ][ Nathan Jones ]
Hong faan kui (1995)
Piklik fo (1995)
Jui kuen II (1994)
[ Andy Lau ]
Chao ji ji hua (1993)
Sing si lip yan (1993)
[ Chingy ]
Zhong an zu (1993)
Shuang long hui (1992)
Jing cha gu shi III: Chao ji jing cha (1992)
Xi Zang xiao zi (1992)
Fei ying gai wak (1991)
Huo shao dao (1990)
[ Andy Lau ][ Sammo Hung Kam-Bo ]
Chu dao gui jing (1990)
Qiji (1989)
Ging chaat goo si juk jaap (1988)
Fei lung maang jeung (1988)
[ Sammo Hung Kam-Bo ]
'A' gai waak juk jaap (1987)
Long xiong hu di (1987)
Ninja the Protector (1986)
Nui ji za pai jun (1986)
Fuk sing go jiu (1985)
[ Andy Lau ][ Bolo Yeung ][ Sammo Hung Kam-Bo ]
Ging chaat goo si (1985)
Long de xin (1985)
[ Sammo Hung Kam-Bo ]
Xia ri fu xing (1985)
[ Andy Lau ][ Sammo Hung Kam-Bo ]
The Protector (1985)
[ Danny Aiello ][ John Spencer ][ Mike Starr ]
Ninja Thunderbolt (1985)
Cannonball Run II (1984)
[ Tony Danza ][ Fred Dryer ][ Doug McClure ][ Burt Reynolds ][ Frank Welker ]
Shen yong shuang xiang pao (1984)
[ Sammo Hung Kam-Bo ]
Two in a Black Belt (1984)
Kwai tsan tseh (1984)
[ Sammo Hung Kam-Bo ][ Herb Edelman ]
'A' gai waak (1983)
[ Danny Trejo ][ Sammo Hung Kam-Bo ]
Wu fu xing (1983)
[ Sammo Hung Kam-Bo ]
Long teng hu yue (1983)
Long xiao ye (1982)
Gong fen bing tuan (1982)
Mai nei dak gung dui (1982)
The Cannonball Run (1981)
[ Peter Fonda ][ Roger Moore ][ Burt Reynolds ][ Dean Martin ][ Dom DeLuise ]
The Big Brawl (1980)
[ Mako ]
Shi di chu ma (1980)
Dian zhi gong fu gan chian chan (1980)
Hsiao chuan yi chao (1979)
Long quan (1979)
Quan jing (1978)
Jui kuen (1978)
Se ying diu sau (1978)
Fei du juan yun shan (1978)
She hao ba bu (1978)
Jian hua yan yu jiang nan (1977)
San shi liu mi xing quan (1977)
Shao Lin mu ren xiang (1976)
Shao Lin men (1976)
[ John Woo ][ Sammo Hung Kam-Bo ]
Xin ching-wu men (1976)
Feng yu shuang liu xing (1976)
Hua fei man cheng chun (1975)
[ Sammo Hung Kam-Bo ]
Pai an jing ji (1975)
Mi zong sheng shou (1975)
[ Sammo Hung Kam-Bo ]
Police Woman (1974)
Jin ping shuang yan (1974)
Crash che botte! (1974)
Chu ba (1973)
[ John Woo ]
Enter the Dragon (1973)
[ John Saxon ][ Bruce Lee ][ Bolo Yeung ][ Sammo Hung Kam-Bo ]
Tie wa (1973)
Ding tian li di (1973)
Bei di yan zhi (1973)
Tang ran ke (1972)
Jing wu men (1972)
[ Bruce Lee ][ Steve Martin ]
Qi lin zhang (1972)
[ Bruce Lee ]
Hapkido (1972)
Guang dong xiao lao hu (1971)
Hsia nu (1969)
[ Sammo Hung Kam-Bo ]
Qin Xiang Lian (1964)
Big and Little Wong Tin Bar (1962)
[ Sammo Hung Kam-Bo ]

 

One of the most popular film personalities in the world, Jackie Chan came from a poverty-stricken Hong Kong family — so poor, claims Chan, that he was almost sold in infancy to a wealthy British couple. As it turned out, Chan became his family's sole support. Enrolled in the Chinese Opera Research Institute at the age of seven, he spent the next decade in rigorous training for a career with the Peking Opera, excelling in martial arts and acrobatics. Billed as Cheng Lung, Chan entered films in his mid-teens, appearing in 25 productions before his 20th birthday. Starting out as a stunt man, Chan was promoted to stardom as the potential successor to the late Bruce Lee. In his earliest starring films, he was cast as a stone-cold serious type, determined to avenge Lee's death. Only when he began playing for laughs did Chan truly attain full celebrity status. Frequently referred to as the Buster Keaton of kung-fu, Chan's outlook on life is a lot more optimistic than Keaton's, but in his tireless devotion to the most elaborate of sight gags and the most awe-inspiring of stunts (many of which have nearly cost him his life), Chan is Keaton incarnate. From 1978's The Young Master onward, Chan has usually been his own director and screenwriter. His best Hong Kong-produced films include the nonstop action-fests Project A (1983), Police Story (1985), Armour of God (1986), and the Golden Horse Award-winning Crime Story (1993) — not to mention the multiple sequels of each of the aforementioned titles. Despite his popularity in Europe and Asia, Chan was for many years unable to make a dent in the American market. He tried hard in such films as The Big Brawl (1980) and the first two Cannonball Run flicks, but American filmgoers just weren't buying.At long last, Chan mined U.S. box-office gold with 1996's Rumble in the Bronx, a film so exhilarating that audiences never noticed those distinctly Canadian mountain ranges looming behind the "Bronx" skyline. Chan remained the most popular Asian actor with the greatest potential to cross over into the profitable English-speaking markets, something he again demonstrated when he co-starred with Chris Tucker in the 1998 box-office hit Rush Hour. In 2000 Chan had another success on his hands with Shanghai Noon, a comedy Western in which he starred as an Imperial Guard dispatched to the American West to rescue the kidnapped daughter (Lucy Liu) of the Chinese Emporer.


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