Jun Chong (born 1944) is a South Korean-born martial artist, filmmaker and actor.
Chong is also the founder of the World United Martial Arts Organization (WUMAO), connecting schools from all over the world to support the advancement and growth of martial arts.
In 1985, Chong founded Action Brothers Productions. His first film as a producer and star was L.A. Street Fighters, also known as Ninja Turf. The film included students in the cast members like Bill Wallace and a pre-fame Thomas F. Wilson of the Back to the Future trilogy. His second film, Silent Assassins, had Chong team up with real-life student Sam J. Jones and Linda Blair. The film also had a brief fight scene between real-life brothers Phillip and Simon Rhee, who play a good guy and an assassin, respectively. In 1990, Chong starred, produced and choreographed the fight scenes for Street Soldiers, in which he plays the martial arts teacher of a high school gang who want to take back the streets from a rival and more ruthless gang. The film was the lone Hollywood film with master kicker Hwang Jang-Lee, who fought Chong in the film. Afterward, Chong took a 15-year hiatus from movies to focus on teaching.
Chong returned in 2006 in the role of Master Chong in the mixed martial arts film Maximum Cage Fighting, which was also produced by Action Brothers. In 2015, he made a cameo as himself in the comeback film for Phillip Rhee, Underdog Kids as a judge alongside fellow martial arts greats Richard Norton, Don Wilson, Benny Urquidez and Dan Inosanto.
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