Postby Justin Blackford » Thu May 05, 2005 1:57 pm
Yeah, me and my training buddy are going to see the "Kingdom of Heaven" movie this weekend. I haven't seen too much from the trailers, but I would be blown away if they even somewhat represented Medieval fencing in a slightly accurate way, given that Ridley Scott's "Gladiator" was nothing but edge-on-edge bashing like all the other movies. But, who knows? Maybe they'll get it right this time.
I would love to see some real Western Martial Arts in a historically accurate movie. But, at the rate movies are going, I wouldn't be suprised if I saw a Teutonic Knight with a muzzle-loader musket in the middle of Australia fighting off a group of cybernetic ninjas.
My partner and I are actually planning on putting on a swordsmanship show in my hometown sometime in August or September. I did a sword show last year at the Bordentown Senior Center, and everybody was quite impressed. However, that particular show was just displaying my collection and explaining the histories of the weapons themselves. This time, I want to give a historically accurate series of fights with various weapons, including rapier, katana, longsword, spear, and sword and shield. My partner and I are in training for this right now, and man is it some hard work. We're wielding accurate replicas, sharps, and wasters, all of which are very lightweight(between 2 - 4 lbs.), but once you get swinging them around in test cuts and sparring for a couple of hours, they start to gain weight pretty freakin' fast!
But, since I am going to be displaying the longsword and the katana, maybe that'll give me a chance to clearly explain both the knight and the samurai in a clear and accurate manner. But for right now, it's training time, 3 hours every other day.
Concerning the "invincibility" of the katana, I have heard quite a bit. I took Aikido for nearly 6 1/2 years. My first instructor honestly believed that the katana had "up to 1 million folds" and "could cut paper on contact with the edge" and that "parrying is done edge-on-edge, because the katana is so advanced that it won't break". Then, I moved and temporarily saw another instructor before I read John Clements' book "Medieval Swordsmanship" and started studying WMA. My second Aikido instructor taught me the exact opposite of the first. He showed me how the katana was really used. You know why there was a difference? My first instructor was a Westerner and my second one was born, raised, and instructed in Japan. It seems to me that most of the hype on the katana has been invented by us here in the West. Gotta make you wonder.
Even the belt system is different in traditional Japanese schools. Over there, they just have white belt and black belt. I think the whole multiple colors of belts system must've been developed either by Eastern instructors as a scam, so they can charge you 100$ for every test, or invented by us in the West so we could mark our progress every step of the way. I'm really not sure how the whole belt system in the West got started. At least in WMA, we don't need orange belts and purple belts and God knows what else. I was a brown belt before I dropped out and began my studies on Talhoffer and Dei Liberi.
Maybe I will bring my copy of Hans Talhoffer's Fectbuch to the show. If I could find a way to blow up the templates and make the images larger so everybody could see them clearly. Do you think a photo shop could blow up pictures from a book?
Justin
A man believes what he wants to believe. - Cuchulainn