fighters market

Archive for December, 2008

smallseikodokanOn Jan 31 2009, The Vancouver Seikidokan Judo Club and the Capilano Seikidokan Judo Club invites Judoka to participate in the 2nd Annual Vancouver International Open Judo Tournament for Junior Boys and Girls, Juvenile Boys and Girls, Cadet Men and Women, Junior Men and Women, Senior Men and Women. See the registration info at http://www.seikidokan.com/ .

When: The action begins at 9:30 A.M., Saturday, January 31, 2009

Entry fee for spectators is $4.00

Location: Capilano College SPORTSPLEX
2055 Purcell Way
North Vancouver, BC, Canada

Share on Facebook
Monday, December 29th, 2008 at 20:57 | Comments Off

Here is a great interview with Bruce Lee by Pierre Burton in three parts. Its clear that Bruce Lee was really ahead of his time in his philosophy on life and the way martial arts has influenced his life. He talks about his acting, his time training famous actors like James Garner, Steve McQueen, and Roman Polanski. He talks also about the evolution of martial arts beyond style, ideas that MMA fans understand well today.

Part 1:

YouTube Preview Image

Part 2:

YouTube Preview Image

Part 3:

YouTube Preview Image Share on Facebook
Monday, December 29th, 2008 at 20:47 | Comments Off
YouTube Preview Image

Why oh why….? Here we have a black belt breaking stuff demo…. and he chooses to break coconuts. Coconuts would be hard to break being round, because they would have a tendency to veer laterally when some kind of force is applied, especially, as in the demo, when they are placed loosely on a steel beam. Um, now I don’t know as much about martial arts as this 5th level black belt guy (notice the number of gold bands on his black belt towards the end of the clip), but you might want to practice your thing breaking performance in private before you demonstrate it to a television crew so it goes off without a hitch and you look really cool. But what do I know. He could probably kick my ass.

Also referred to on the intertuubz as UBER FAIL!!!!!!

Share on Facebook
Wednesday, December 17th, 2008 at 17:20 | Comments Off

muay thai chaya

muay thai chaya

Muay Thai Chaiya is a Thai martial arts movie set in the lives of 3 brothers, Pow, Piek, and Samaw, as they move from their home in a boxing camp in a small village to the big city. We see them grow up and experience life together, move from village to the big city, where they vow to stick together but are pulled apart by the forces of their lives. This is a great fighting movie upon the large scale backdrop of the three brothers’ lives. There is blood, Muay Thai, fighting, living, drama, illegal fights, corruption of the big city, love, betrayal, murder, ugliness, sacrifice, loss, action, tradition and for each of them the pain and challenges they must overcome. In the end, its the fighting spirit of Muay Thai Chaiya that brings them through.

I found other reviews of this film elsewhere, on movieexclusive.com and twitchfilm.net but I dont think the reviewers really understood the film. Stefan Shih of movieexclusive.com called Muay Thai Chaya ‘…a mixed bag approach that couldnt decide what it wants to be…’ and said further, ‘The storyline too is pretty weak…”. Mack at twitchfilm.net said that the movie was “…ripped right out of pages of a Hong Kong filmmaking handbook”. I might not have seen the movie if I had to rely on those reviews. But I am glad I did see it. Sure to some degree these movies are going to be gone over with the same broad brush as an asian martial arts movie, for sure. But I am surprised that neither of those authors picked up on the deeper dramatic backdrop in the story. The story this movie leans upon is that great russian epic, Dostoevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov. In that work, there are brothers with different temperments who traverse lifes experience by different paths, and have everything tested along the way. Maybe to some its a stretch but I can see the connection. And the backdrop for this action movie rests on that premise. If other critics didnt like the balance struck in the movie between fighting and drama, perhaps they didnt consider that this is a Thai movie made for a Thai audience, and that balance of sentimentality works for that kind of audience. Ong Bak and The Protector also have their moments of pure sentimentality. Such moments are usually set ups for action, where we become sympathetic with the main character, and then we are committed to them through their combat. Muay Thai Chaya reaches deeper into the lives of three brothers to show the heart of the Thai fighting spirit.

YouTube Preview Image

Muay Thai Chaya (2007),  Cathay-Keris Films,  Starring: Kongkait Komesiri, Akara Amarttayakul, Sonthaya Chitmanee, Don Ferguson, Saengthong Gate-Uthong, Prawit Kittichantheera, (the lovely) Phreeta Kongpetch, Samart Payakarun, and Thawatchai Phanpakdee.

Share on Facebook

Tuesday, December 16th, 2008 at 12:58 | Comments Off
TOP