These are 3 rare documentaries on Bruce Lee.  The documentaries were assembled by a Los Angeles research company to be used by a production company.  I don't know what the project was intended to be.  Each disc comes in a plain jewel case with no inserts and no cover.  The quality of each DVD is perfect. 

See my other items for 2 more documentaries on martial arts: "Fight Girls" and "The Black Kung Fu Experience."  Buy 2 or items more and get free shipping (within the USA).

Disc #1 - The Life of Bruce Lee: Martial Arts Master.  Lionsgate, 1993, 1 hr. 8 min.

This documentary covers the short life (1940 to 1973) of martial arts actor Bruce Lee through interviews with his family and his fellow actors. It has been dedicated to his son, Brandon.  MARTIAL ARTS MASTER, THE LIFE OF BRUCE LEE is an absorbing documentary that traces Lee's life from his birth in 1940, through his meteoric rise to film stardom, and to his unexpected death in 1973. Interviews with Lee's cohorts and friends, Jackie Chan, Bolo Yeung, and James Coburn among them, round out this fascinating study of the kung fu superstar.

 Disc #2 - How Bruce Lee Changed The World.  History Channel, 2009,  ‎1 hr. 34 min.

The History Channel's How Bruce Lee Changed the World explores the amazing multitude of ways that Bruce Lee--the first international Asian superstar--has influenced pop culture. Calling Lee "the biggest movie star in history" is a bit of a stretch (though every shot of this hypnotically charismatic performer argues that he might have been, had he not died abruptly before the release of his fourth and most successful movie, Enter the Dragon). A wealth of interviewees, ranging from filmmakers like Jackie Chan (who was a stunt man on Lee's movies in his early career), John Woo, and Brett Ratner, comedians like Eddie Griffin and Margaret Cho, musicians like LL Cool J, RZA, and Damon Albarn, athletes like boxer Sugar Ray Leonard and bodybuilder Flex Wheeler, and more, testify to the enormous impression Lee had on them. The documentary overreaches at some points, but there's no denying that Lee brought martial arts movies to the West and redefined the image of Asian men in the public consciousness (before him, Asian men were fiends like Fu Manchu, servants, or buffoons). Lee's life history is efficiently told and some of the details are delightful--who would have guessed Lee was a champion cha-cha dancer in Hong Kong? His audition for The Green Hornet reveals a movie star just waiting to be discovered. The man himself--lithe and muscular, capable of astonishing speed and grace, radiating both intelligence and passion--makes all commentary unnecessary.

Disc #3 - Biography - Bruce Lee: The Immortal Dragon.  A&E, 2005, 50 min.

He fought his way from the mean streets of Hong Kong to international superstardom. With blazing fists and a burning passion, he became one of the most celebrated kung-fu masters of all time. In classic films like Fists of Fury and Enter the Dragon, he created the martial arts action genre that has become a favorite of moviegoers worldwide. But just as he reached the height of fame, he was struck down by a mysterious ailment or was it the curse that supposedly follows his family? This fascinating program examines the short, meteoric life of Bruce Lee. Exclusive interviews with friends and family including his late son Brandon and extensive footage from home movies, screen-tests and his legendary films help reveal the man behind the myth of the Immortal Dragon.