[if gte mso 9]>
<![endif]
Continued…
So first things first, I’ll address the inquiries of the last blog.
Joe Fiorello – William
Shatner Star Trek fight was a classic. Haha.
Flagday – Well like I said, I
cannot put a real martial artist on here and put him on blast. I don’t want to
make enemies… just yet. haha j/k. cuz to be honest, I can criticize even the best
of them just as an acting teacher can criticize an Oscar achieving performance
but wouldn’t that send out the wrong signals? I will steer away from negativity
because though some film-fighting is not good, I do still enjoy it.
MissScarlett – Good point.
It was a little bit insulting when we can clearly see that Collin Chou would
destroy Keanu in a heartbeat haha but I still enjoyed seeing Collin and Yuen Wu
Ping invade the western scene.
JRS - “Close-ups in film fighting
cover up a variety of flaws” That’s actually a great observation.
Not many
viewers know this. American action does this a lot, take for example Batman
Begins however in that particular example, it fits the style. I agree that
martial arts flips cannot compare to gymnastic flips.
“Teach us, baby!”
…and
show all my secrets?! Hahaha.
NO
WAY!
……………………………………………………………..
Okay so back to the component EXPRESSION.
EVEN REAL MARTIAL ARTISTS FAIL AT THIS STEP:
Real martial artist know how to throw a REAL punch, have good core strength and accuracy depending on their level. Someone like the MMA fighter Rampage Jackson might kill 3 stuntmen per day, destroy 2 expensive cameras, and break the DP’s nose in the process… and then still the footage is still unusable particularly because camera tension is very prevalent amongst non-experienced film-fighters.
Film-fighting
is TEAMWORK. Real fighting is not. In film-fighting, the stuntmen and the
“hero” must have trust, coordination, and chemistry; traits very similar to a BASKETBALL
team. (not talking about the old-school high shorts
)
A skilled fighter can throw a spin-kick very easily. But can he throw the same exact spin-kick 25 times at 3AM after 8 hours of shooting action with the same exact precision and intent and power and speed and emotion while knowing where the camera is so he can open up to it and sell the presence with focus eyes and perfect positioning according to the directors preference, (not to mention, stop on a DIME if stuntmen stumble too close)? ::catches air in a hurry::Most viewers are unaware that in film, there are many takes and film scenes can be brutal. More often than not, you must throw A COMBINATION of attacks, not just one and in between each attack you also must sell the “in-between” without looking like you are waiting (but that’s a different component).
Just
like in the court of law (ooh I made a connection), INTENT is a very important part of expression. When
you throw a film punch, you must sell the intent to hit him while maintaining
control.
This small detail entails
knowing what it is to want to beat a man’s face in. ... and so I'm not sexist, beat a woman's face in also.
Film
fighters must know what it is to be in a REAL FIGHT and the emotion that comes
along with it. Why? Because this IS THE EMOTION YOU MUST SELL. (Now when I say
fighting, I’m not talking about gloves and a ring. I’m talking about NO HOLDS
BARRED on the streets and the emotions that come with that.) For example, small
details like where your eyes are looking when you are film-fighting.
Inexperienced film-fighters focus their eyes on their opponent’s next attack before
the opponent even attacks. In doing so reveals the sequence of CHOREOGRAPHY. That
is bad because it takes away the element of fighting called UNPREDICABILITY or surprise element (separate component discussed later).
The eyes should look at the center of the person’s chest so that one can
use the peripheral vision to see attacks from all angles. Is this confusing?
haha
Aight
I didn’t know I was going to be circulating AnD. If I did, I would have put on
a shirt and combed my hair for this. … well actually, just the “combed my hair”
part.
At Flagday’s and JRS’ request./* Style Definitions */ p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal {mso-style-parent:""; margin:0in; margin-bottom:.0001pt; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:12.0pt; font-family:"Times New Roman"; mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman";} @page Section1 {size:8.5in 11.0in; margin:1.0in 1.25in 1.0in 1.25in; mso-header-margin:.5in; mso-footer-margin:.5in; mso-paper-source:0;} div.Section1 {page:Section1;}
Next
time I’ll go over "gags and stunts" which is essential for excitement. Maybe I’ll
show some clips from my film… hehehe lessee how high my ego is hoovering at
that time LOL.
"One day I will die SO today I will eat." –D.Y.