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No it doesn't work like that. This was a one sided demo.I mean does it work like this in real life?
being good and being able to "pull this stuff off" are kind of two different things. He may be a great martial artist, but fights just don't really happen like that. Being able to kick and punch as shown in the clip is not the most important aspect of self defense.Does this mean that this guy isn't really that good and that in a real fight he couldn't pull off all this stuff?
- I'm seeing a lot of excess movement in these demos. I don't like the way his arms flail around to no purpose when he's kicking. I also don't think all the sequences are well constructed in terms of which technique would efficiently flow from the previous one.
No it doesn't work like that. This was a one sided demo.
On the contrary, that is exactly how self defence should work. Once you area at the point where you feel the only way out is a physical response, then the last thing you want is the back and forth/"he gets a go I get a go" of a "fight". Exactly what you are looking for is a one sided continuous stream of violence until the threat is naturalised, allowing you to escape.
My biggest problem with the video however is that (in the UK at least) I think he would find it very hard to claim his actions as "reasonable force". The last sequence is a perfect example, guy at a bar turns to face him, he then kicks him five times (twice in the head, and one of those while the guy is on the ground). Stomping on someone's head when they are on the ground and no longer a threat is not self discern, that's more like attempted murder.
This clip remind me in the movie that when someone