Added: 1 year ago
From: warfox777
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  • 可能一堆人不懂意思,所以訂正一下,我是想說比起中國人,老外學­習中國文化及功夫可能會更有潛力。

  • Not bad. Cuts well. (from a guy who studies martial arts and cinema)

  • 八你老母,步法呢?哩D咩掌啊?回身掌?轉身拳?老八掌入面有邊­掌係度啊?

  • cool

  • *Resumes shirtless midnight stroll*

  • @GiftedFiasco lol...

  • Martial arts editing should be mostly wide shots to capture the entire bodily movements, with just sparse close ups to spice up some parts. Otherwise, the edits become distracting and the movements are lost in the edits and too many close ups. You may know the movements but the viewer who isn't a martial artist doesn't so you need to show them the whole body. Examine the chinese movies and see how they do it. Fist of Legend etc... it goes downhill when a U.S. co. edits the scenes.

  • 很像少林室出來的銅人

  • I am impressed your Bagua is flowing just like your rhymes. your Rap is the best I've heard since the Wutang clan and Jeru da Damaja. Osu my friend ^^

  • the last second of that video say all the truth, sadly

  • Didn't know Dave Chappelle knew kung fu.

  • 西方人要是會中國武術的話,可能會比東方人更有慧根。

  • @a9012456789 不是這樣。功夫只是時間而已。我練了很28年。但是謝謝你的支持­。我自己覺得我剛開始。

  • @a9012456789 西方人太泛泛了吧。黑人白人都是西方人?

  • @a9012456789 黑人是非洲人。。。

  • 越打越厲害了~!好厲害的美國人~!

  • where can i find this song?!

  • Good work!

    When is your song gonna be out?

  • I liked that!

    

  • Very good demonstration. I hoped there were more videos like this showing martial arts applications.

  • Comment removed

  • Dunno what the politically correct term is for black people these days, but no offence meant: black people always look 100 times more natural at martial arts than white people. I think white people have been brought up too conservative, and take gungfu too literally. Asians and Africans look natural because I think they see the deeper intent behind the arts. Michael J White looks so fluid compared to Jason Statham (but Jase is still pretty damn cool) :)

  • 少林十八銅人是吧!?

  • ...好弱的對手,明顯套招的

  • Yay choreography!

  • why is the brother walking in the park half naked anyway?

  • First video i saw of real bagua fightign techniques being used in a fight. GJ man, and where can i get this song?

  • Wow man, as a tai chi guy myself this is so cool to see, truly admire this video and the guys skill, shows with correct practice and intent TCMA can be used in fight with out the mystical rubish that people falsey ascribe to it, cool vid man!

  • @uncleedoo

    This isn't Tai Chi. Its Bagua Zhang

  • I know it is not tai chi I was stating "as a tai chi man myself" that I admired how soft style can be used to fighting, maybe I should of corrected the way I said it.

    But thanks anyway

  • See, the FIRST priority of ANY martial art is the prolonging of healthy life. What good is it if you win 100 fights, but your training wears you out so you die at 52 of an aneurism? Second, BaGua makes you move, act and think FLEXIBLE. It makes you move fast, and accurate, and speed and accuracy under stress is number one in any fight. It doesn't matter how big and bad a dude is, if you strike quick, hard and fast, you knock him out. Just ask Anderson Silva.

  • is this a real song or what cause its good some one tell me the name of this song

  • @ivan12373 Yes it's a real song but it isn't out yet. Sorry I moved out of Taiwan before it's production. You can get my song "My life is a fight scene" On itunes. But you have to look for it on the side, there such engine sucks.

  • @ivan12373 hey one question, have i met you? in taiwan were u in the martial art exhebition in Tainan? :if u remember a taiwanese that was from peru and speaks fluent english its me > i got the video of ur exhebition!

  • The new face of Bagua!

  • ok where do we get it for download. Time and Effort, thats great.

  • is it in Miami?

  • haha just randomly has his shirt off

  • what movie is this

  • "Now thats Bagua" .. WHERE? LOL

  • I like how theres no grappling, cause as soon as grappling is involved all the Bagua goes out the window.

  • @123UncleRuckus Yeah, go try and grapple a dude while there are three other attackers. Logical right? This isn't UFC, this is reality.

  • @papertiger7 Obviously you arent going to take him to the ground when 3 other guys are involved but you could perform a throw. Also, I know Bagua likes to turn their back a lot, that would be horrible vs. 3 other people get ready to be struck from behind.

  • @papertiger7 Grappling is not the be all end all. I once asked this of a Filipino Kali master, We had a grappler try to take him down and he was always nullifeid. And most times the filipino had moved the blade on him in many spots.

  • @beunbad Grappling is fundamentally flawed for a street application. You never want to go down on the ground for real. What if the bad guy isn't alone? It also assumes sporting rules are going to be followed. BJJ might be good for subduing a drunk or putting the smack-down on someone, but it's got no place on the street.

  • @technonaut31337 I agree with you on the ground application of grappling on the Street. I was in Hapkido 20 years and have done Muay Thai and Pekitit-tirsia. I have wanted tot rain in CMA for years and have an invite from Kulo Style Wing Chun teacher. I have found an associate of Dr Painter near me. Not sure if I can snyc my schedule to allow me to train with him. What Military were you in? have 13 years broken time in myself.

  • @technonaut31337 like grapplers don't know how to throw at all? If you are unarmed and a group of dudes really want to beat your ass, you will get beaten up. That's just the nature of fighting. Numbers win fights.

  • @nomamao but being a fast runner can save your life ;)

  • @mowgdog very true. lol. 

  • @technonaut31337 this is probably the most ignorant comment on this page.Bjj has No place in a street fight WTF? People like to fantasize about kung fu and taekwondo however the truth still stands 95% of fights end up in a scuffle THERE ARE NO RULES in street fighting ever. eye goudging,head butts, biting pulling hair and kicks to the nuts are a must and so is finishing your opponent off fast whatever it takes.

  • @jermo777 No offense but it seems to me your the ignorant one, What you are looking at (reffers to video) is a product of 5,000 yrs of refinement through warfare when it was fought upclose and very personal. Agreed there are no rules in street fighting, but these arts utilized in the battlefield (were its kill or be killed) and considering that they have survived today means they work. Martialarts in general is all about technique against brute force and uncivilised fighting...

  • @AntonioGuamil What makes you think that Bagua was used for actual warfare? I believe the only true chinese battlefield boxing was Hsing-I. Most of the rest were "village kung fu" used by civilian brawlers and gangsters or rebels.

  • @varanid9 Sorry to jump in this, but I know for a fact Northern Shaolin was made up of 5 military styles brought to the Shaolin Temple and then condensed to their core principles. Bagua did indeed see use, especially in warfare concerning swords. Miao Dao forms were created to fight the Japanese pirates in the 1600s. Some texts say Mantis is over 2000 years old, from the battlefield concepts at the time. There are a lot of styles whose bare techniques were brought to/from battlefields

  • @Matacuz Um, the "5 Elders of Shaolin" may be more than a myth, but probably not much more. Mantis is widely attributed to Wong Long, who lived only 2 centuries ago. Though I'm sure many styles were used in the Boxer Rebellion and, as you point out, for specialty use through the ages, I meant, in the reference to Hsing-Yi and Jujitsu, as being officially adopted by large contingents of conventional military.

  • @varanid9 Indeed, Fairbairn did attribute his knowledge to Chinese boxing and Japanese Jiu-Jitsu. Mind you, Jiu-Jitsu wasn't simply grappling at the time and Chinese boxing could have been all sorts of things. Other Militarys have indeed stayed primarily with these styles, but I think that has more to do with simplicity. Mind you, the amount of time spent on training with firearms is more important, and they don't do that enough as it is.

  • @Matacuz Exactly, and the same could be said of military organizations in feudal Japan and China. It is said that the Samurai trained with his sword first, last and always. Aikijitsu uses these sword principles as its foundation because those are what the swordsman is adept at, not because they are the most efficient empty-hand methods. Ancient Greek pankration similiarly took advantage of Hoplite spear training fundamentals. Anyone serious about War trains with weapons.

  • @jermo777 I agree with you Jermo777, however Technonaut has his point as well. You will be at a disadvantage if you get caught on the ground with more than one opponent. Might I remind everyone however that BJJ is not all ground fighting. In the UFC (where BJJ is quite popular) there is only 1 opponent and it proves effective. However BJJ and any JJ style has throws that don't put both fighters on the ground. People underestimate the impact of the ground. The JJ fighter can stay on his/her feet.

  • @Unlucky13Lucky

    I agree with you, in UFC, the floor is not nearly as hard as in the street. That renders throws ineffective

  • It's cool, but with the music, I can't help but to loled really hard xD

  • cool stuff man, much respect. even though i don't know much of bagua (just that it has lots of circular movements), it seems quite practical to me. more of these vids would be great, keep it going!

  • There is Taiwan!

    

  • Those dudes were crazy. I'm black and I wouldn't take on some random black dude standing around with his shirt off.

  • epic stuff man ^^ 

  • good applications of Bagua, I would like to see a wider camera angle and therefore more whole body movement and muddy walking style footwork, then people would see that the back turning is too fluid and grounded for an opponent to take advantage. You have good skills I would like to see your feet...the root of your power!

  • see but what they all jumped at you at once like in a real situation.

  • @revelation1234 Actually in real life it's even easier. People don't practice organized group fighting and don't know when to attack. When you use foot spacing and timing you confuse them while attack the others. Unless your attacking a special tactics team which would require a different strategy all together.

  • @warfox777 It's true, it's not that easy for multiple opponents to attack you all at once, they would just be getting in each other's way and hit each other; especially if you keep them flanked. Btw, cool video and very cool song too.

  • @warfox777 What style of Bagua is this? Is it generally taught combatively? Or is it like Tai Chi where it is hard to find the combative and health beneifts both strongly emphasised?

  • @beunbad Dr. Painter's school is along the lines of what you're looking for. I've been in seminar with him. I'm ex-military and studied a few arts; unfortunately had to use them for real. What he teaches is the kind of real martial arts most people wish they could study. He's on youtube as TheGompa.

  • @beunbad Bagua was originally for military, assassins and body guards. So it is all very combat related. Health benefits are a a great benefit just as in Taichi. But it is lethal.

  • @warfox777 well in actuality they would't stand a chance against ma gun rotated to the side like a real gangstaa

  • @warfox777 nice come back :)

  • ok it was cool bad cam angels you can see the miss hit action but yet you can do better

    me and you wingchung vs Bagua what do you say it would be great

  • great

  • What happened to the defender's shirt? Everybody else is wearing a shirt. Maybe that's why they started to fight? They were offended by the vanity of the defender's shirtlessness? LOL!

  • I would love an mp3 of that song man, I really dig it. I wish you well on your path of refinement.

    

  • Comment removed

  • turning your back to your opponent? don't try that in the real world

  • @bagchun been in plenty of scraps and its worked fine for me. Just takes a lot of practice. But for a wing chun guy it wouldn't make much sense. Different strokes for different folks.

  • @warfox777 How come it doesn't make sense for a Wing Chun Guy? Im considering taking it ,been in another style 19 years but always wanted to train in Kung Fu. Im in Boston so there is slim pickins..

  • @bagchun in bagua yes any other no for the most part in bagua you need a fast spin

  • @vishesfishes cool, I can dig it, just fyi i also practice bagua, yin fu style from the Liu Yun Ciao lineage and i still wouldn't turn my back to my opponent, but that's just me, I reserve that tactic for some form of escape from, or entanglement of, my opponent. I'm not judging any of you, I respect other perspectives very much. because I know that when the sh!* hits the fan we do all kinds of crazy stuff then afterwords go, "how did I do that?" or "what the hell just happened". peace.

  • @bagchun yea same here i will say never try to do that but in your bagua training do train for a opponent any were around you behind you yes :)

    i study the oldest basics of baguazang tai chituan & xing yi with the most effective animals snake & crane along with iron fist/body & for my form i use the 12 movements (or the 5 movements of all marshal arts-from the original masters) that are the basis of all marshal arts i study the beginning of it is what am looking at to under stand them all :)

  • @bagchun i did wc for over a decade and thought you shouldnt trun back either, then i studied bagua for many yrs, turning back is fine when staying close, and with bagua, the back is a punch also, so dont matter, whole body is a punch, learn to hit with everything then it makes sense. Probalem is finding great teachers of these rare arts, but they are out their. Wc is awesome also but theirs alot more quality available to get the info. Bagua, and xingyi are rare but very good arts. Cheers

  • I only trade blows with fos when I have ta

  • 什么掌法?

  • I can't see the technique, the camera movement makes me dizzy :(

  • Way to show how its really done ^_^

  • That was great! Fox please please please release some tunes with these kind of lyrics to give the youngsters a different perspective of how to be strong. 10 out of 10 my brother!

  • wow....hen hao ba gua zhang. you are the standard for internal styles. i love all your video's. please, PLEASE!! keep up the good work! tsai jian!

  • jong shi fu fu wang bi kao qian chi hai cong fu tou seng li zuo bao li wu hua li fu tai zen tao te qing tien hui chi hai qing dao yeh chin pi guan wei dan he chi hai tong fu kong fu rong yong yeh dan dien tien chi hai zhi

  • niiiiice. niiiice song aaswell >=] awesome hahhaa whats the track called

  • @Belphybear thanks, it's called time and effort

  • Fox should do a movie.

  • Wow!!!!!!! SIIIIICCCKKKK!!!!! An easy like. The 3 people that disliked were the 3 that got their asses handed to them in the video. GREAT JOB. I practice Bagua too...not Gao but Yin Style. Very effective martial art. Very INTERNAL.

  • Man is there a way to get that song, it makes me smile every time I hear it.

  • Awesome keep making these please! Wider camera angles so we can really see the movements though.

  • dude song was FUCKING SICK IT SO WENT WITH THE HOLE THING and pretty cool dig it camera could of been better doe but very nice thumps UP! and could you tell me the name of the song plz

  • the song's TIGHT AS HELL , I THOUGHT TWAS WU TANG LOL BETTER THAN WU TANG AND THAT'S YOU ? LOL

  • the song fits great ahah

  • oh no, I'm from Boston, maybe we all can work with Jackie Chan someday!

  • hh, can i play with you guys!

  • @ Capoeirababe Of course you can, you in Taiwan?

  • I like your video, it's got good quality production and editing. I think there's a problem with the camera work, though: the angle is consistently shot from below which makes it difficult to actually see the action, and the frame is very small which also cuts out a lot of the action.

  • @otfresh This video director was shooting for a music video not related to martial arts. So I guess they were trying to grab a different kind of intensity. I also would like to use different angles to show the full technique. It kind of feels like the fight scene in Enter the Dragon where you can see Bruce Lee clearly but not what he is doing. Thanks for the comment, I will keep improving.

  • Good Job Master Fox!!! An idea for your next video...why not highlight baguas beautiful footwork by having a few of the guys attack at the same time and manuever around them? Just a thought! Peace.

  • @theblackpirate112 yes that is coming soon. Thanks for the tip

  • Wow, was just rewatching this for the third time and realized that the martial artist is also the singer of the song? Shit man, if I had half your talent I'd be making millions on youtube instead of just spare change.

  • very dope...not feeling the beat but the rhymes are amazing

  • what form of Baquazhang is that? Very nice scene! *bows*

  • @Bastion83 Gao Bagua

  • Cool!

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