Postby Justin Blackford » Sun May 15, 2005 3:48 pm
After having seen so many movies trying to display historical fencing(and doing it quite inaccurately,too), I believe that the primary issue with most movie theatre combat is the lack of "suprise".
What I mean by "suprise" is that in a real fight for survival, neither party is sure as to what the other party is going to do, so tactics in mid-fight will change to adapt to what their opponent's moves are. Obviously, this is no major discovery to anyone who has ever sparred with foam or rubber wasters going full speed and with intent. But, I do think that most of these fight co-ordinators need to work on making fight sequences that seem realistic in the sense that each party is constantly adapting to one another's tactics and not just following a simple, "1,2,3,4,5" style of regulated moves that are so worked into the actors' heads that in practically every movie they always look like they expected every move that was coming. That seems to be what takes away the "realistic" feeling in most movies and theatrical productions.
However, there are some which I think were very well done. John Waller's directing of the fight scene between the Black Knight and the Green Knight in "Monty Python and the Holy Grail" was probably the best and most realistic looking fight I have ever seen in a movie. I was suprised when I first saw it, because it was in MONTY PYTHON and the fight was hardly comical. In fact, it was quite easily the most brutal wake-up call to see how those kinds of fights really were.
I would also say that the duel between Hector and Achilles in "Troy" was decent. Though, there was some edge-on-edge occassionally and sometimes it would go back and forth from being "suprising" and then "predictable" between the fighters.
Mel Gibson's "Braveheart", although incredibly inaccurate about the life of William Wallace, showed some realistic sword moves, but unrealistic battle sequences. Nevertheless, Mel Gibson himself quoted the Scottish Wallace Clan re-enactors that trained him and the other actors as "real martial artists, who knew how to wield the claymores, axes, spears, and a whole bunch of other weapons effectively."
That's just my opinion on this stuff, but I would love to hear what anybody else thinks on the differences between theatrical combat and real combat.
Justin
A man believes what he wants to believe. - Cuchulainn