Postby Dylan Asbury » Tue Apr 21, 2009 9:14 am
I realize that as this show goes on, this thread will live on with our griping and complaining. It's great. Really, I live in a world where I'm the only one who knows jack about WMA and it's kind of cool to hear the same complaints I made coming from other people's hands.
just WAIT till they get to the episode about Knight V whoever. This place will come ALIVE with angry posts. and when whatever rapier-wielding soldier they choose rolls around, you'll hear me griping too.
As far as my actual thoughts on the matter go, They take data from weapons V gel. They don't account for variables like movement, give armor only a cursory testing and make no account whatsoever of technique.
I just laugh at the badly acted "dramatization" at the end. The last one, where the samurai did this wierd little jump dodge thing and they slowed the camera down, I laughed hysterically because earlier that day, my friend and I had been sparring and I'd voided or dodged about 80% of his blows (even though he was wielding the "finest weapon ever produced by man" according to one of the shows "experts")
It's a show made for the public and the public doesn't care about realism in martial arts. I'm the guy at my school that people ask about anything having to do with the martial arts or the history thereof. These are some of the questions i get:
"Dylan, can a sword really cut all the way through someone's leg?"
" Dylan, what was the point of being a knight?"
"Dylan, did ninjas ever exist?"
"What did ninjas do?"
When i responded to what did ninjas do with
"They killed, stole, and spied for money"
the gentleman actually responded with
"Oh, i thought they just got together in little ninja clubs and karate kicked around"
I SWEAR on my heart that he said this in full, true earnest. So, the show was made for people like the above. I said all that to say this. (and to vent a little.) They have no concept of swordsmanship and if the show did, no one would watch it because it would be incomprehensible to them.
"It means so much more than just sticking them with the pointy end"