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Jonathan_Kaplan wrote:Well, I think the idea would be to make it "more feasible/sound", not necessarily COMPLETELY correct. Just better. And the idea is to show "you can use better moves that still move plot, and can do it better than the traditional way." ... Which has to be possible, right? Otherwise everyone's complaints about movie fights wouldn't hold water, right? The basic idea is to deconstruct what the director 'wanted' based on the emotions shown, camera angles, sound, etc., and then accomplish that using more feasible moves...
Gene Tausk wrote:I think you are confusing apples and oranges. Fight choreographers have a job to do and their interests, not to mention the interests of the director, producer, numerous unit directors, etc., may not be to present a historically accurate fight on screen, but one that is exciting to the non-historical fencers in the crowd (who, lets face it, are the vast majority of ticket buyers). They have their goals, just as we have ours.
Gene Tausk wrote:I think you are confusing apples and oranges. Fight choreographers have a job to do and their interests, not to mention the interests of the director, producer, numerous unit directors, etc., may not be to present a historically accurate fight on screen, but one that is exciting to the non-historical fencers in the crowd (who, lets face it, are the vast majority of ticket buyers). They have their goals, just as we have ours.
Michael Navas wrote:I seem to recall from somewhere that the medieval styles had an attack for every defence, and a defence for every attack, which if correct should make it possible to create a really exotic and drawn-out fight using only real techniques, yet with the characters on-screen being so inhumanly skilled as to always be able to counter each other (realistically) where even the best real fighter couldn't.
If there truly is a way to deal with anything, then it should be possible to make a movie fight where the only unrealistic or unauthentic component is the fencers' ability to always get it right, no matter how long the fight lasts and under what circumstances it takes place.
Carey Vaughn wrote:*snip*Take the Pirates of the Caribbean movies. I know they're Disney movies and as such have to consider their audience, but still. Those guys just clang away at each other for hours at a time, with no consequences, carrying on arguments in the process.
*snip*
...We're supposing here that the combatants are so experienced and skilled that it's viable for them to actually carry on a five minute fight, and instead of using flashy Hollywood tricks we actually apply WMA techniques. Very cool idea.
David E K Frischkorn III wrote:I have redone a martial arts movie
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