In 1967, Han emigrated to the United States of America, first staying with and teaching at his friend Seo-oh Choi's hapkido school in California. Han later opened his own school in Los Angeles in 1968. His early years were difficult and he worked in a factory during the day while he taught at a struggling hapkido school in the evening, located in an economically depressed area. Later, he relocated his school to the
Pacific Palisades area in an effort to be closer to Hollywood and the movie industry. On July 4, 1969, Han Bong-soo was giving a demonstration of hapkido at a park in Pacific Palisades, California. In the audience was
Tom Laughlin. After a spectacular demonstration, Laughlin approached Han about being involved in a movie project called
Billy Jack. Han gained critical acclaim for staging and performing some of the most realistic martial arts fight sequences in a film. Before
Billy Jack, movies contained at most brief references to martial arts, with fights portrayed by actors who had little training. With
Billy Jack, Han introduced authentic hapkido techniques to Western audiences. Han continued to choreograph fight sequences and bring martial arts to the big screen. In 1977, he played the evil Dr. Klahn in the spoof film,
The Kentucky Fried Movie; in 1980, he appeared as the Karate Master to a group of boys in the action-comedy film,
The Little Dragons, and he was the Reverend Rhee in the 1981 movie,
Force: Five. In a serious demonstration of pressure-point techniques, Han also arranged the fight scene in the 1988 movie
The Presidio, in which
Sean Connery uses one thumb to defeat a burly assailant. Han has been the subject of many magazine and newspaper articles, martial arts magazine cover stories, and was a member of the
Black Belt Magazine Hall of Fame in 1978 and the Martial Arts History Museum Hall of Fame in 1999. He was also featured in the
A&E documentary,
The Martial Arts and the
Wesley Snipes-produced
Master of the Martial Arts. In addition to being cited in dozens of martial arts books, he wrote many articles on the way of martial arts, and also authored the book
Hapkido, The Korean Art of Self-Defense, which was published by Ohara Publications in 1974 and is now in its 23rd printing. He completed a series of ten instructional Hapkido DVDs which are in worldwide distribution. In 1974, Han founded the
International Hapkido Federation (IHF). On July 6, 2006,
Black Belt Magazine presented the IHF with its 2006 Industry Award for Best Traditional School for its commitment to preserving the legacy of Hapkido. Han died at his home in Santa Monica, California, on January 8, 2007. He was buried in the
Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery. ==References==