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We live in a series of action and adventure in the background of Chinatown in San Francisco following the Civil War. It may be very difficult at that time through many of the conflicts and challenges facing the Chinese in that region. A short while later, a young man with a newly known martial art from China came to complete these fighting conflicts, finding himself stranded in the wars of Tung Chinatown, which changed the course of history.
..."The Itchy Onion," is powerful series premiere for Warrior. It is new lens and story in the world of the Old West. In one episode I am pulled into the world this series is going ...
It doesn't even remotely live up to [Lee's] legacy, too often coming off like a dirge when it needs to be as light on its feet as the man who once envisioned it.
The notion of whiteness as a provisional condition is rarely addressed on American TV, and it's fascinating to see it placed front and center on a show where characters kick each other through walls.
Warrior is a victory in nearly every sense of the word. Not only is it great TV, it also rights a wrong that has lingered over the legacy of cultural icon Bruce Lee for nearly half a century.
Warrior has its charms and much like a Chinese "Peaky Blinders" or "Gangs of New York," it's best when it leans into mankind's reaction to corruption and injustice.
There is much to savour in Warrior. The action is overly graphic at times, but the martial arts sequences are memorably scrappy and naturalistic - bones crunch and viscera squishes.