Да, 35 лет назад мы тоже были фанатами, а потом все эти трюки делали сами, и доски били и кирпичи и прыгали высоко))) давно это было. Хорошо помню как смотрели эти фильмы затаив дыхание...
Северокорейская команда. В конце 80-х их тренеров привезли в Союз, помню нам этот фильм показывали. Сам тренировался у Син Ун Сама в Москве, на чемпионат СССР в Ленинграде не попал, был зрителем.
this is the real taekwondo, created by general Choi. very useful and powerful during life situations, while WT is almost useless due to the rules and the change of techniques. WT is not even a martial art anymore, it's a fighting sport.
ITF (international Taekwon-do federation) was made by the founder of Taekwon General Choi Hong Hi in 1966. We practice 24 patterns made by General Choi and when we spar we use are hands and feet equally. WTF (World Taekwon-Do federation) formed later, and is the federation associated with the Olympics, other federations cannot compete. They focus on sparring and use a lot more kicks (particularly turning kicks).
This is that tae kwon do that drew me to the art. Today is a lot less hardcore, and more like gymnastics. I can see how they used this art in time of war. Great Stuff! I still practice this way and love to see vids like this.
no, its not, the techniques are still the same. just the way of teaching is not practical, but thats down to each individual student, if you cant make tkd work for you, that says alot more about you than it does about tkd.
then you would be wrong, as tkd is not one style or one system of korean martial arts, it is a name that can be applied to any korean striking based system that has lineage in the 9 kwans, it's only a name. for every new practitioner of tkd there is a new way of tkd. dont be fooled into the cult mentality of some tkd federations, which many are guilty of.
@@michaelmckenna14 The other kwans practiced Karate. TaekwonDo is more than a name. It is an approach to self defence and martial arts that was completely new (a combination of Taekkyon and Shotokan Karate) in 1955.
@@leuchtrakete7093 Me too. When I practice ITF church start meeting next to Our jem. I get my 1 dan and leave to enter into ministry. It was 29 jears ago... :)
I studied TKD 15 years ago and it was nothing like this. Just a business to make money and it you could test for the nexf belt if you paid a fee, not earn the right to test. This is traditional martial arts at it's best.
Дружил и занимался с Ли Енг Сонгом,самый молодой 6 и 7 даны,потом 9 дан и разбился в автокатастрофе,брали его с собой на стрелки в середине 90 классный папень был,сначала генерал его поставил в Новосибирск,а потом в Москву,пооомиубрал в Китай за связь с братками...
que facil es faltar el respeto a los que practican un arte milenario.Solo aquellos que han pasado toda una vida de esfuerzo y sacrificio puden dar un autentica opinion ,los demas hablan solo porque tienen la oportunidad de mostrar su pequeña y debil alma.
TaeKwon. Respect from a former Scottish TaeKwon-Do student. If training was as good as this in the video (wither it was outside or not) maybe I would have continued TKD
It IS in North Korea. I recognize parts of this video. This is VERY good old school stuff. I got to meet Gen Choi in 1977 or '78 , I think it was in Flint, Michigan, when he headed a world tour of ITF with a team of 7th and 8th Dan black belts. I also got to meet Jhoon Rhee who was on the team and who really promoted ITF commercially in the USA. He was also in a cheesy movie called When TaeKwonDo Strikes....which can be found on VHS on nostalgia websites. I got a copy that way. All dubbed, etc., but still fun to watch at times. :) My instructor was a 4th Dan at the time and the highest ranking Dan in Michigan, and he was allowed to be part of the breaking demonstration. He did a double flying side kick breaking two targets of boards held vertically inline. I was a green belt at the time, and got to hold 6 1-inch boards above my head and they got shattered with a flying spin heel kick. These guys were nothing but amazing!!! :) One final comment about one of the team members. He was Korean and fought in the Korean War for the South, and lost his right hand and wrist to a grenade. He used his "stump" like a battering ram for breaking demos and did some great kicks. I'm not sure, but I think he was the head of kicking development for the ITF...I'm getting older and my memory is not so sharp, but I think he was! But, one thing I DO remember about him personally, was how powerful he was, but yet after the program I saw him tossing little children up and down in his lap and making so many people laugh. A great guy! I was trained old school style and reached the rank of 5th Dan. I am truly saddened by the political and commercial split-up of the ITF and lack of true TaeKwonDo teaching done so much around the USA, and the world for that matter. Seems like everything is driven now by money, money, and more money! To me, TaeKwonDo is the best base martial art ANYONE should learn. Then, it is good to train it some other styles to add to your own style...similar to Bruce Lee's Jeet Koon Do. Bruce studied EVERY form of combat and even wrestling to create his style...by cherry-picking the best of all of them and create HIS style. I was fortunate to meet him and Chuck Norris at a tournament before Bruce died. I actually got him to show me how to do his 1-inch punch! It fits right in with the power generation base from the hips that old school TaeKwonDo taught. In fact, he told me that he had a LOT of respect for TaeKwonDo. Ok, sorry for rambling on so much. I will ALWAYS be a fan of TaeKwonDo and carry wonderful memories of what it has done for me in my life!
ITF is far from traditional, I started training in it in the early 1970's when it was first popularized, it has changed dramatically since. What many people don't realize is that the most common usinfying factor for ITF was the Poomse, and grading structure. But since Choi Hong Hi had practiced Shotokan and had less martial arts training than most of his subordinates his main contribution was the organization itself and the unification of practitioners from a variety of Kwans. @@paulz4667