Ip Man 3


02:00 am - 04:00 am, Sunday, November 16 on WFUT HDTV UniMás 68 (68.1)

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About this Broadcast
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Todo acerca del funcionamiento del cerebro, las últimas investigaciones y adelantos científicos acerca de este órgano.

2015 Spanish, Castilian Stereo
Acción/aventura Drama Artes Marciales Historia Continuación

Cast & Crew
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Donnie Yen (Actor) .. IP Man
Chen Chao (Actor) .. Master Chan
Lynn Hung (Actor) .. Cheung Wing-Sing
Jin Zhang (Actor) .. Sum Nung
Karena Ng (Actor) .. Miss Wong
Kent Cheng (Actor) .. Fatso
Kwok-Kwan Chan (Actor) .. Bruce Lee
Louis Cheung (Actor) .. Chui Lek
Lo Meng (Actor) .. Master Law
Patrick Tam (Actor) .. Ma King-sang
Erik Thirsk (Actor) .. Cheung Wing-sing
Leung Ka Yan (Actor) .. Mater
Babyjohn Choi (Actor) .. Newspaper reporter
Sung Man Ban (Actor) .. David
Li Xiao Long (Actor) .. Ah Ching
Ling Yi Lei (Actor) .. Ip Man's Student
Tats Lau (Actor) .. Principal
Kang Yu (Actor) .. Master Tam
Mang Lo (Actor) .. Master Law
Leung Siu-Hung (Actor) .. Master Lee
Mike Tyson (Actor) .. Frank
Wang Shi (Actor) .. Ip Ching
Cui Can (Actor) .. Cheung Fong
Sarut Khanwilai (Actor) .. Thai Boxer
Lynn Xiong (Actor)

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Donnie Yen (Actor) .. IP Man
Born: July 27, 1963
Birthplace: Guangzhou, China
Trivia: A sharp-skilled martial artist who has gone on to a successful career as a director and choreographer, Donnie Yen has found success in both his homeland China and in the hustle and bustle of Tinsletown. Working on projects ranging from the traditional Chinese martial-arts period piece Once Upon a Time in China II (1992) to the bone-crunching science fiction-vampire opus Blade II, Yen has distinguished himself as a formidable figure in the ranks of action cinema. Born in Canton, China, in July 1963, Yen's family moved to Hong Kong when Yen was two, again relocating to Boston, MA, when he was 11. It was in Boston that his mother, Bow Sim-Mark, a famous Wushu and Tai Chi master, ran the internationally famous Chinese Wushu Research Institute. A musically inclined youngster who excelled at the piano, Yen was educated by his mother in the martial arts from the moment he took his first steps. An addiction to Hong Kong cinema only fueled the energetic teenager's love for martial arts, and Yen would frequently find himself emulating the awe-inspiring moves of such film legends as Bruce Lee and Jackie Chan. Worried that Yen spent a little too much of his time in Boston's notorious Combat Zone, his concerned parents sent him to Beijing on a two-year training program with the Beijing Wushu Team. Studying alongside such future stars as Jet Li, Yen began to build the confidence and self-discipline to become a Wushu master; he also made history as the first non-PRC Chinese to be accepted to the school. Fate intervened at a pit stop in Hong Kong en route back to his home in Boston, and Yen's chance meeting with legendary filmmaker/choreographer/action director Yuen Woo-Ping served as the inspiration Yen was seeking to break into the film industry. After appearing in minor roles in such 1980s Woo-Ping films as Tai Chi Master (1984) and Tiger Cage (1988), Yen received his breakout role in director Tsui Hark's massively popular Once Upon a Time in China II (1992). Cast opposite peer Jet Li, the duo engaged in a pair of fight scenes that would rank among the most inventive and exhilarating in martial arts film history. Even opposite such formidable talent as Li, Yen's creative fighting skills were so effective that he was nominated for Best Supporting Actor at the 1992 Hong Kong Film Awards. Later turning to the small screen to perfect his cinematic fighting skills and sharpen his abilities as a director, Yen began to earn a reputation as a director of unparalleled focus who was always able to deliver in even the most discouraging film shoots. Aiming to create films that would not only thrill, but stir the emotions deep within an audience, Yen made his feature directorial debut with 1997's Legend of the Wolf. Drawing from his choreography experiences on such films as Iron Monkey (1993) and Wing Chun (1994) and combining them with his experience as a filmmaker, Yen made little impact at the Hong Kong box office with Legend of the Wolf, though the upbeat filmmaker would continue to refine his skills both at home and abroad. Subsequent efforts such as Ballistic Kiss (1998) and City of Darkness (1999) found Yen entering John Woo territory in terms of cinematic style, and prominent appearances in such popular American films as Highlander: Endgame (2000) and Blade II (2002) (both of which found Yen serving double-duty as fight choreographer in addition to acting) found his audience expanding and his skills as a choreographer in increasing demand.
Chen Chao (Actor) .. Master Chan
Lynn Hung (Actor) .. Cheung Wing-Sing
Jin Zhang (Actor) .. Sum Nung
Karena Ng (Actor) .. Miss Wong
Kent Cheng (Actor) .. Fatso
Kwok-Kwan Chan (Actor) .. Bruce Lee
Louis Cheung (Actor) .. Chui Lek
Lo Meng (Actor) .. Master Law
Patrick Tam (Actor) .. Ma King-sang
Erik Thirsk (Actor) .. Cheung Wing-sing
Leung Ka Yan (Actor) .. Mater
Babyjohn Choi (Actor) .. Newspaper reporter
Sung Man Ban (Actor) .. David
Li Xiao Long (Actor) .. Ah Ching
Ling Yi Lei (Actor) .. Ip Man's Student
Tats Lau (Actor) .. Principal
Kang Yu (Actor) .. Master Tam
Mang Lo (Actor) .. Master Law
Leung Siu-Hung (Actor) .. Master Lee
Mike Tyson (Actor) .. Frank
Born: June 30, 1966
Birthplace: Brooklyn, New York, United States
Trivia: A heavyweight champion of the world for three and a half years (November 1986-February 1990), boxer Mike Tyson also earned a historical footnote as the youngest individual ever to win, and lose, the said title in his chosen sport. Both during and after his heavyweight tenure in the ring, Tyson also courted an overwhelming amount of controversy for his reported anti-social behavior, which included raping a beauty pageant contestant in an Indianapolis hotel room (an act for which he received six years in prison, later commuted to three) and biting off a piece of fighter Evander Holyfield's ear, mid-fight (an act that DQ'd him from that particular match and sent the media into a tailspin). For the most part, Tyson spent his early years on-camera in projects exclusively related to boxing, but following his release from prison, he became acquainted with director James Toback (Fingers), and that marked the beginning of a long friendship that witnessed the men frequently working together. Their collaborations commenced with the improvisational, racially themed 1998 drama Black on White (in which Tyson makes an extended cameo and receives a very blatant pass from a gay character played by Robert Downey, Jr.), the erotic drama When Will I Be Loved? (2004), and, ultimately, the documentary portrait Tyson (2008), which Toback put together from over 30 hours of interviews with the then-retired boxer. Aside from the Toback projects, Tyson's résumé also includes small roles in the 2000 boxing comedy Play It to the Bone and the 2006 boxing drama Rocky Balboa.
Wang Shi (Actor) .. Ip Ching
Cui Can (Actor) .. Cheung Fong
Sarut Khanwilai (Actor) .. Thai Boxer
Jingchu Zhang (Actor)
Lynn Xiong (Actor)

Before / After
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