Loup, eres una enciclopedia. No habría sabido yo entrar en tanto detalle. Efectivamente, esas pueden ser algunas de sus influencias. También tienes toda la razón en cuanto a la evolución en su forma de patear. Si tomamos por referencia sus libros, en Chinese Gung fu, sobre todo se ven patadas de wing chun (más las influencias que has citado), mientras que en sus libros posteriores se ven patadas más cercanas al tae kwon do (más el resto de influencias que también has citado.
También en sus películas se puede apreciar su evolución en las técnicas y en su capacidad de patear más alto. Se notó su trabajo sobre todo en el juego de la muerte.
elperrosuelto,
sobre Thomas Kurz puedes encontrar varias cosillas en internet:
http://www.stadion.com/column.html Aquí encontrarás artículos.
http://www.amazon.com/Stretching-Scient ... 0940149451Aquí podrás comprar el libro.
http://www.torrentreactor.net/torrents/ ... NG-DVD%20- Aquí igual encuentras algo.
http://www.free4vn.org/training-tutoria ... 37039.html
Siempre podrás encontrar algo en esos programas p2p.
Jaime G,
no había oído yo que el wing chun tuviese influencias/elementos de la esgrima occidental. Sería interesante estudiar ese punto.
Western Fencing- The main component that Bruce Lee based his Jeet Kune Do on. Interception of the Attack. He also utilized Footwork such as the Step and Slide for mobility, emphasis on timing, rhythm & cadence, and developed his 5 ways of attack which came directly from fencing such as Single Direct Attack - (Single Attack in fencing terminology) Attack by Combination - (Compound Attack in fencing terminology) Attack by Drawing - (Invitation / False Attack / Second Intention in fencing terminology) Progressive Indirect Attack - (Indirect Attack / Feint Indirect in fencing terminology) and Hand Immobilization Attack - (Attacks on the blade in fencing terminology)
INOSANTOThe intercepting part came from his brother, Peter who was a champion of Hong Kong in the epee. Bruce Lee relayed to me that as a teenager, he wanted somebody to practice with and he couldn’t find anyone to practice, so he asked his brother Peter if he would help him out. Peter told him that he didn’t do any martial arts but he would help him out if they played a game of slap. So they decided to put their left hand behind their back and their right hand was used to slap the person, after that, his brother just really truly got the best of him which infuriated Bruce Lee, so he ran and tackled him and they started punching and wrestling on the ground. But he said from that lesson he learned the value of disengaging, how to stop
hit and that came from his brother, Peter. So he started to study fencing from I guess, various different friends and he did a lot of researching, he then incorporated the stop hitting into the Jeet Kune Do. It’s like if he side kicks, you try to counter before he initiates the attack, if he left jabs or right crosses, you try to counter before. It takes a high degree of awareness obviously and you definitely have to practice it because you can’t always do it 100%. So sometimes you have to do what he referred to as “attack by drawing” rather than stop hitting. Although you could stop hit and attack by drawing at the same time but sometimes it’s not possible, so now, we have to go straight defence before you can go into an offensive mode.
No sé, pero incluso la posición de guardia del JKD es más parecida a la de la esgrima que la del Wing chun. ¿qué opinas tú?.
Desde luego, en wing chun soy sólo un principiante, y en esgrima occidental, aunque haya jugado con algún florete, no tengo ni idea.
Un saludo.