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  1. This series aired from 1972 to 1975 on ABC. When it premiered, it was a unique Western series with a half-Asian lead character (albeit played by an actor with no Asian ancestry) who refused to use a gun and looked out for the innocent, especially the minority groups that the genre typically ignored.

    • Pilot
    • Season 1
    • Season 2
    • Season 3
    • Films

    The Way of the Tiger, The Sign of the Dragon: In the 1800's, the orphaned half-white, half-Chinese Kwai Chang Caine is raised in the Shaolin Temple. One day, the Emperor's nephew murders his belove...

    King of the Mountain: Caine works as a ranch hand for a widowed woman and starts to fall in love with her, but a bounty hunter finds him.
    Dark Angel: Caine helps the blinded preacher, Serenity Johnson, learn to function without sight. Serenity returns the favor by helping Caine reconcile with his estranged grandfather. Caine learns h...
    Blood Brother: Caine learns a friend of his from the Shaolin Temple is also in America. He travels to his town, but finds him missing and the townsfolk attempt to stop his investigation.
    An Eye for an Eye: A family wants revenge on the solider who raped and impregnated their daughter, while Caine desperately tries to stop the cycle of violence.
    The Well: During a drought, Caine drinks bad water and recovers in the home of the Brown family. The family has a working well, but the father, Caleb, is bitter over being a former slave and refuse...
    The Assassin: Caine stumbles upon Feuding Families with a pair of Star-Crossed Loversbetween them. One of the families hires a ninja and Caine must stop him, despite being mistaken for the ninja's...
    The Chalice: Caine promises to recover a chalice stolen from a murdered priest.
    The Brujo: Caine attempts to liberate a Mexican village that lives in fear of a warlock's curses.
    Cry of the Night Beast: Caine protects a buffalo calf who has been separated from its mother from a hunter.
    My Brother, My Executioner: Caine thinks he has found his brother, but he is really an imposter who is being pursued by a young gunfighter.
    This Valley of Terror: Caine meets a woman who has escaped from an asylum and claims to see visions of the future. He recognizes her affliction as true visions and accompanies her on a quest to dis...
    A Small Beheading: A sea captain delivers a message to Caine from the Emperor. His death sentence will be lifted and he can return to China... if he agrees to lose a finger.
    Kung Fu: The Movie: The father of the Emperor's nephew destroys the Shaolin order and then attempts to use Caine's illegitimate son that he didn't know he had as an instrument of his vengeance.
    Kung Fu: The Next Generation: Set in the modern day, Caine's grandson, also called Kwai Chang Caine, tries to guide his son Johnny away from a life of crime and deal with a drug ring.
  2. The Brothers Caine: Directed by Harry Harris. With David Carradine, Leslie Nielsen, Joanna Moore, Tim McIntire. Kwai Chang Caine's long search for Danny Caine comes to an end in a deserted mine where his brother is waiting to kill him.

    • (113)
    • Adventure, Drama, Western
    • Harry Harris
    • 1975-03-01
  3. Kung Fu Panda 4 is the 47th film produced by DreamWorks Animation and the fourth theatrical installment in the Kung Fu Panda franchise. It once again stars Jack Black as Po alongside franchise veterans Dustin Hoffman, Bryan Cranston, Ian McShane, and James Hong, as well as newcomers Awkwafina, Ke Huy Quan, Lori Tan Chinn, Ronny Chieng and Viola ...

  4. During four episodes of the third and final season ("Barbary House", "Flight to Orion", "The Brothers Caine", and "Full Circle"), Caine finds his brother Danny (Tim McIntire) and his nephew Zeke (John Blyth Barrymore).

    • Action / Adventure Western Drama
  5. Kung Fu was a 1970s TV series which presented the adventures of Kwai Chang Caine, a half-white/half-Chinese Shaolin monk wandering throughout the Wild West, helping people along the way with sage wisdom for the good people and devastating expertise in martial arts for the bad ones.

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  7. Kung Fu was always hit and miss. But giving its audience their final payoff was a dreadful ordeal. From Kwai Chang forgetting his purpose of finding his brother to the train wreck of Barbara Hershey.

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