the camerawork on this makes little things like separating the fighters, switching stances or taking off the (I don't know what is called) sword tips look so epic
I assume the short-haired guy is Laertes, who sought vengeance against Hamlet for (unintentionally) killing his father Polonius. Before officially arranging this match, he mentioned buying something poisonous in which to dip his blade, ensuring that even _one_ skin-piercing strike would eventually kill Hamlet. While there's no poison in this reenactment... doesn't that seem like the kind of person who'd remove their rubber tip first?
Great fight choreography & camera work. My only note is lose the generic "epic" music that's done to death in projects of this genre. It's annoying and adds nothing to the scene. If there is to be background music, I suggest reaching out to an ancient music ensemble in your country--I just found one with a search: Elthin. I've now got a vid of theirs playing and would love to see a collaboration between your group and theirs with them providing the background scores for your period projects.
Theatrical without looking stupid. Need more fights like these in movies
Foxeazy TV we are trying 🤪 in some shows
Now that was great. Great swordmanship.
David Reedy 🙏
the camerawork on this makes little things like separating the fighters, switching stances or taking off the (I don't know what is called) sword tips look so epic
Oh god lord, that was GOOD.
This is amazing!!!!!!! I wish I could see more content like this around
Just
Awesome
This was phenomenal.
Blonde guy was part of the swordplay coordinators in BBC Musketeers
Keiichiro Murata 😂😂😂 right
each of their videos, just amazing choreography
The fencers are from Adorea, if I'm right.
I'm quite sure they have the same video uploaded on their channel so I guess it must be so
wooooow amazing work guys. I can totally see this in the play too
Outstanding!
Amazing work!!!!
you guys are amazing
Top notch
¡Bravo!
you should be famous
Großartig !!! Note 1 plus
Великолепно!
2:15 Any movie that displays a less painful outcome is lying to you.
I'm not familiar with Hamlet (I'm assuming that's what this is, given the comments). Why did the short-haired guy take the rubber tip off his rapier?
I assume the short-haired guy is Laertes, who sought vengeance against Hamlet for (unintentionally) killing his father Polonius. Before officially arranging this match, he mentioned buying something poisonous in which to dip his blade, ensuring that even _one_ skin-piercing strike would eventually kill Hamlet.
While there's no poison in this reenactment... doesn't that seem like the kind of person who'd remove their rubber tip first?
Who's hamlet in this film?
The guy who won 2 matchs before they tried to kill each other
@@vaninhhuu3215 Long blond hair or short black hair?
@@kylestubbs8867 long blone hair.
Looks wonderful, but doesn't really reflect the authentic nature of rapier and dagger duels, not hating just stating.
Is there a video that does that? (I've been trying to find one.)
😍
This is kinda close...
ua-cam.com/video/BwCDXCjdBpo/v-deo.html
wow
👍🏽👍🏽👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼🤩
So... which one of them are supposed to be Hamlet?
I presume the one with long, blond hair. His opponent Laertes seems more the type to remove that rubber tip from his blade.
Great fight choreography & camera work. My only note is lose the generic "epic" music that's done to death in projects of this genre. It's annoying and adds nothing to the scene. If there is to be background music, I suggest reaching out to an ancient music ensemble in your country--I just found one with a search: Elthin. I've now got a vid of theirs playing and would love to see a collaboration between your group and theirs with them providing the background scores for your period projects.
Норм.