Wednesday, 15 August 2007



okee so along with martial arts, culture and religion comes in.
Some of the Chinese mythology in the film is based on actual history. Lo Pan is a famous legend in Chinese history according to Carpenter [Swires]. He was a “shadow emperor”[4] appointed by the first sovereign emperor Chan Che Wong. Lo Pan was put on the throne as an impersonator because Wong was afraid of being assassinated. However, Lo Pan tried to take over and was cursed by Wong to exist without flesh for 2,000 years until he could marry a girl with green eyes.[4]

Egg Shen divines "difficulty at the beginning" which is a hexagram from the Book of Changes or I Ching. Lo Pan is the name of the compass used for geomancy or feng shui. It literally means everything bowl - the device that reveals the secrets of the universe.

Monday, 13 August 2007

War! Huh! Yeah! What is it good for? Absolutely nothing,

The Rush Hour Trilogy
Rush Hour is a 1998 martial arts/buddy cop film starring Jackie Chan and Chris Tucker. The film was generally successful, becoming the 7th top grossing film of 1998, with a gross of over $140 million dollars at the box office.

soooo, with Jackie Chan, representing martial arts in Hollywood with a comical and action paced movie, its easy to see why modern audiences love watching him amongst the genre.Yet what has this got to do with my Hypothesis and what im researching. "MARTIAL ARTS".
Jackie Chan is an icon as a chinese actor as well as an american actor. His skills are shown in many Hollywood movies which are comical, yet it has been said that his work is not as impressive as it was in the orient. Well all that i can say is that Jackie amongst various legends has brought martial arts and that genre out of its shell,yet asian martial arts actors, producers,choreogrophers or stuntmen/women will always be in a movie that has to do with kung fu, martial arts.

Wednesday, 8 August 2007

Martial arts legends Quiz...

LINK ABOVE ^^^^^^^^^
do you know all about the legends of the big screen.
here is another quiz.
this should tell you how much you really now.and after you leave a comment i will know how much you guys now too.:D

Monday, 6 August 2007

A Lil Quiz for you...

click on the link above ^^
Tell me how you did!...

Kenjutsu is your Way. A central aspect of the Bushido, the code followed by the samurai, the Way of the Sword is a combination of practical sword training, combat Aikijutsu, as well as a tradition of honor and formality. Kenjutsu is the Way of true warriors.

Friday, 3 August 2007

Early History of Martial Arts



The teaching of martial arts in Asia has historically followed the cultural traditions of teacher-disciple apprenticeship. Students are trained in a strictly hierarchical system by a master instructor: Sifu (師傅) in Cantonese; Shih fu (師父) (Wade-Giles), Shī fù (Pinyin) (lit., master-father) in Mandarin;
In the warrior Kshatriya caste of South Asia, organised martial traditions were studied as a part of the Dharma (duty) of the caste. The senior teachers were called Gurus and taught martial arts at gurukuls to the shishyas (students).

Some method of certification can be involved, where one's skills would be tested for mastery before being allowed to study further; in some systems, there may not be any such certifications, only years of close personal practice and evaluation under a master, much like an apprenticeship, until the master deems one's skills satisfactory.[citation needed] This pedagogy, while still preserved and respected in many traditional styles, has weakened to varying degrees in others and is even actively rejected by some schools, especially in the West.

Many if not most Asian styles have had at least some influence from martial arts from China, India or both. It is often the case that both countries have left their mark especially in Southeast Asia and the Himalayan region. In Indonesia and Malaysia for example, a large number of arts under the umbrella term of Silat are practiced. It is difficult to pin down the origin of these arts, which have much in common with Yoga, Qigong, Yiquan and many forms of Chinese and Indian martial arts. Dharmic iconography figures prominently in contexts to these arts highlighting the influence of Dharmic religions. They have both internal and external qualities illustrating the influence of styles from other parts of Asia.

Throughout Asia martial arts were practiced as can be seen in the art, history and current traditions in Cambodia, Thailand, Myanmar (Burma), Vietnam and the Philippines. In many countries local arts like Te in Okinawa,[4] Kenjutsu and Ju-Jutsu in Japan,[5] and Taekyon and Soobak in Korea[6] - mixed with other martial arts and evolved to produce some of the more well known martial arts in the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries like Karate, Aikido, and Tae-kwon-do.

Wednesday, 1 August 2007

Women in Martial Arts.


with productions like "Memoirs of a Geisha"-2005 - Michelle Yeoh Crouching tiger hidden dragon - 2000- zhang ziyi and Kill Bill- 2003 - Uma thurman and "Charlies Angels - 2000 - Drew Barrymore, Lucy Lui & Cameron Diaz, it kinda makes you proud to live in the 21st century
It is also girls and women who aslo have the talent to have wht it takes to brak boards and fight the fight, Yet have the females actors been as successful as some of the legendary guys?... well Kill Bill was a major hit- spawned a sequal, Charlies Angels was a mega Hit, also spawning a sequal, however is the audience gettin what they want

A disgrace to the martial arts genre...


Kung Pow: Enter the Fist

is a movie within a movie, created to spoof the martial arts genre. Writer/director Steve Oedekerk uses contemporary characters and splices them into a 1970s kung-fu film, weaving the new and old together. As the main character, The Chosen One, Oedekerk sets off to avenge the deaths of his parents at the hands of kung-fu legend Master Pain. Along the way, he encounters some strange characters, one of which is a cow trained in the martial arts.

is this the sort of behaviour and attitude we have to movie genres. Spoofs may be funmy and hilarious, yet with such a powerful and dignifying background frrom where it comes from, screen icons that have mad eit possible, well these are affected and i for one would not see this movie.