Ninjutsu is really very beautiful, full of enigmas in its movements. They observe minute details, which in most other arts end up going unnoticed, without a doubt it is the most complete style.
This video is wonderful. Reminds me of some similar techniques I train in Korean Kwon Bup. I really like how respectful you are towards your training partner. Great work!
If you consider the fact that those techniques are meant to be applied with fully equipped samurai armour, most of the movements would make sense e.g. hitting the neck with the blade of the hand. If your opponent is wearing such type of armour, you would not punch his face, as the head is armoured, the neck area remains open and those gauntlets have typically reinforced edges, so that is what people back then would use to attack. It is all context dependant. What initially seems like shitty judo throws might actually be effective if there is armour involved. As preserving the art has higher priority than adjusting the techniques to make them effective for modern circumstances or combat sports, it makes sense that no one consider this to work in "real fights".
Still beautiful to watch. It's important to know it's a lot kata, slow demonstration and a lot "let go" instead of hurting. Do not judge if you have no clue.
I trained for four years so I have a clue. It's an aesthetically looking style with a lot to ponder, sure. But the way it's practiced is absolutely unrealistic for real use. I've seen senseis that have dominated the mat in their own school but still got their asses kicked by taekwondo greenbelts. Is that really what is supposed to be about?
@@Moodo76That's hilarious. 😂 A Bujinkan-blackbelt would break a Taekwondo-guy's feet and then the show is over. Especially a green-belt. That's totally nonsense and that never happened anywhere. 😂 Be happy, a Bujinkan-guy hold back if nothing happened. 😂 Trust me, it would end very quick with broken bones.
Oh wow there is option double hoppken face thumb to the eyes you can put to the bone under the eyes or check like pressorpoint the move is flowing... thumb up
Tired of reading comments about "it's no use in real fighting." Many of us train a tradition to keep the heart and mind in place (control emotions). This type of comment shows that it is from people who: either only got into a fight in a bar, or in sports situations. The real or street situation is a minimum of 3 people armed with firearms. I train to have better control in stressful situations and work on pressure and scenarios and situations and doing some randori. And yes, including firearms and knives. But a martial art is for life, and you are not going to fight in the same way at 20, as at 30 or 50 years of age. "Real" ninjutsu to defend yourself is using weapons. even the way to use hidden or concealed weapons. Put aside the stupidity of believing that sports wrestling is the real thing...because it is very easy to break, even with something as simple as a screwdriver stuck in your gut. People who kill on the street do not train SMA or UFC. They know how to kill quickly and effectively. And to defend yourself from that you must train according to that possibility, unless you live in a country and society different from mine, calmly inside a tupperware.
This is true, and also... All the techniques in this video require the uke to stand there for 30 seconds with their arm stretched out while the Tori beats them up and tosses them around! I would much rather see techniques that don't rely on the punch hanging out there in the air during the whole technique. I know it's training, I know, but the actual moves require a static punch. At least the way they are practiced here. And I say this as someone who has been studying Bujinkan since 1988.
@@meaningfulideasI’ve trained movements very similar. They absolutely do not require a static opponent. If you know it is for simple demonstration, instead if criticizing the movement or the way it is delivered, you should be praising the clarity of the footage.
@@Kamawan0 Naw man. There is simply no way to do these techniques without a static opponent. You would have to change the whole thing. And this person should change the whole thing! Even if you're doing something for a demonstration, it should still be a demonstration of something that's accurate and effective. Like I said, I've been studying and teaching the buj since 1988! This is not coming from someone standing on the sidelines.
Mi chiedo se contro un muay thai siano efficaci queste tecniche, ho esperienza nelle arti marziali e credo che molte di esse non siano applicabili in un vero scontro, si sono belle da vedere ma...c'è sempre un ma!!!
Most of this would not work in a real fight. But there were some really good ones in there too. I know this hurts some people's feelings, but if you do not pressure test your techniques, you will not know. And, no, MMA is not the end all, be all either.
@@budo_w estão quase parecendo aquelas demonstrações de aikido, onde o atacante nem encosta no adversário. A maioria das técnicas só servem para demonstração. Alguns praticantes acreditam que tudo pode funcionar. O cinema é o único culpado disso.
@@cassiolinzzambaldi7247 No se debe confundir la práctica técnica de Kata con la práctica de Randori. Ambas son cosas diferentes y tienen distintos objetivos. Este video muestra práctica de Kata cuyo objetivo es aprender una forma particular de realizar un movimiento acorde a las enseñanzas de nuestra escuela. En ningún lado se está tratando de convencer a las personas de que esto está pensado para ser utilizado en un combate real.
@@cassiolinzzambaldi7247 Yo tampoco, por eso entreno esto. El problema es que por falta de conocimiento no estás siendo capaz de diferenciar la práctica técnica (kata) del combate práctico (sparring / randori). Yo practico ambas, pero en este caso particular no se está mostrando sparring. Creo que no es tan difícil de entender.
When i was a teenager i would have loved this shit,but from what i see,none of it,or very little of it would work in a real fight because it's never pressure tested in full contact sparring.
I have no idea what FMA is, but this is not a video about what works and what does not work in a realistic situation. Please don't analyze it from a "practical application" perspective because it is not what is happening here, neither we are saying it is.
@hanadojo FMA= Filipino Martial Arts. What's being shown is typical "standing shiatsu." No aliveness what so ever. Just lunge punches and impractical movements. For a system that's supposedly has been around for "900" years you would think it's practioners would evolve and stop moving like it's 900 years ago...🤦🏼
@@Haas1973 Typical western mentality análisis from an uneducated person in japanese martial arts. There are multiple forms of training when you are learning a Japanese tradition. Sometimes you train hard, sometimes soft, sometimes fast, sometimes slow. Sometimes movements are shown to explain a different thing that has nothing to do with an actual confrontation. That's the problem with your comment, you have no idea what the teacher is showing here, or why is he doing it this way, and you assume that he is teaching a real fighting situation. You are wrong, read my previous message where I already explained that this is NOT trying to be a realistic situation, but you keep insisting on the same. I trained many times for real knife fighting and I'm perfectly aware of the difference between both practices. I'm not interested in comparing arts to see which one is best, but most of the things I saw of Kali Filipino are really bad.
@hanadojo Actually I have experience in Japanese martial arts. I woke up and realized alot of them are Bullshido. You keep hemming and hawwing about how this isn't real combat training it's just "Kata" work. Like I said all standing shiatsu. No pressure testing, no aliveness all from an art that claims to be a proven means of self-defense and combat. Just stick to your shuriken and smoke bombs...🤣🤣🤣
@@Haas1973 Do you know how to read? Are you a teenager trolling on the internet? I practice kata and shiai, I do both. This is a video about kata and different aspects of the art that I will not explain here, if you are interested come to a class. You clearly have no idea on Japanese martial arts or you were badly taught. Your words are a vivid example of your lack of knowledge. If you have received a proper instruction, you would understand what is happening in the video and would not be doing this childish comments. I'm so sorry your previous teacher scammed you and taught you bullshido, but not all Japanese martial arts, and of course not all teachers are the same. I will tell you this one more time, let's see if you can increase your reading attention "THIS IS NOT A VIDEO ABOUT PRESSURE TESTING", that does not ment that we don't do pressure testing, we are just not doing it on this video. Go keep playing with your sticks, they are very useful for drum playing.
@@budo_w no, not total but special comment. Non of this techniues works in real fight or even sparring. The man who does that techniues to work need a sparring partner who freez or making no resistance and even easly fall down under the light pressure while he does a lot of moves. Especially everyone attack him in the first intention deeply engaging whole body with moving full step forward which is super dangerous because this left your body fully open when your attack miss or be blocked. Nobody attacks like that except the drunk and stupid people.
@@Porzuc_Ateizm And who said that this video was about sparring?. The man that you are talking about is a highly qualified instructor of the art with many years of practice. He is not teaching sparring, or attempting to say that what he is showing should be done this way in sparring or in a real fight. This is a free Tai jutsu practice and Kata geiko. Both practices can not be used to spar but at the same time will improve your sparring abilities. The problem is that you "think" you are seeing something that is not what you think, and since you have a big lack of knowledge, you are just trying to look smart making a comment that it's actually dumb.
Do you mean modern day taijutsu? This bullshido fantasy is actually really difficult to master, you need a lot of commitment and dedication. Now if you are thinking that what you see in the video is real fighting you are misunderstanding the video. Thanks for watching!
@@budo_w Won't debate on ninjutsu as this is main and highest skill of its actual practitioners: won't be battling on your field. Practiced Bujinkan budo tai jutsu with Japanese ranking for years btw, so this is not basic bashing. Could write more about but i think ths would feed the phantasy monsters. However, i still appreciate to watch time to time some footage about these weird old ryu(s) so thank you for posting.
This is garbage, train jiujitsu; the shinobi certainly did. Also, the only "martial art" associated with the shinobi is fuudo ryu & it's not really a martial art; more like outdoor survival/evasion/concealment.
Thanks for your comment, but you can not expect someone to take you seriously after calling them garbage. I think garbage is your attitude and the fact that people like you with very little knowledge feel entitled to make a comment like this. Also is not Jiu jitsu what ancient warriors used to practice, you are so lame trying to correct people not even knowing what you are talking about. What you mean Is Ju jutsu, Taijutsu or Yawara. Educate yourself first then comment.
@@budo_w this is trash, and you're a charlatan playing make-believe with other people's money [EDIT] "Taijutsu" is a farcical invention that does not exist outside the minds of the gullible.
@@budo_wYou could have made this whole comment without using the word lame. Using the word lame is the same as the other guy using the word garbage. Let's use our ideas shall we?
@@thearashisenpai I spent years practicing these “fundamentals”. I wasn’t competent until I started training actual combat arts. But keep doing kihon if that makes you happy.
Very nice! Koto-ryu Okuden & more, thank you so much!
Ninjutsu is really very beautiful, full of enigmas in its movements. They observe minute details, which in most other arts end up going unnoticed, without a doubt it is the most complete style.
Thank you. I hope to get back to Japan and train with you guys. He is excellent. Strong and smooth.
Muchas gracias Mauro y Tezuka por este hermoso registro!!
Super smooth ❤
Excellent demonstration 👏 congratulations for everyone
Wow awesome moves
This video is wonderful. Reminds me of some similar techniques I train in Korean Kwon Bup. I really like how respectful you are towards your training partner. Great work!
If you consider the fact that those techniques are meant to be applied with fully equipped samurai armour, most of the movements would make sense e.g. hitting the neck with the blade of the hand. If your opponent is wearing such type of armour, you would not punch his face, as the head is armoured, the neck area remains open and those gauntlets have typically reinforced edges, so that is what people back then would use to attack. It is all context dependant. What initially seems like shitty judo throws might actually be effective if there is armour involved. As preserving the art has higher priority than adjusting the techniques to make them effective for modern circumstances or combat sports, it makes sense that no one consider this to work in "real fights".
カッコ良かったです
Still beautiful to watch. It's important to know it's a lot kata, slow demonstration and a lot "let go" instead of hurting. Do not judge if you have no clue.
I trained for four years so I have a clue. It's an aesthetically looking style with a lot to ponder, sure. But the way it's practiced is absolutely unrealistic for real use. I've seen senseis that have dominated the mat in their own school but still got their asses kicked by taekwondo greenbelts. Is that really what is supposed to be about?
@@Moodo76That's hilarious. 😂 A Bujinkan-blackbelt would break a Taekwondo-guy's feet and then the show is over. Especially a green-belt. That's totally nonsense and that never happened anywhere. 😂 Be happy, a Bujinkan-guy hold back if nothing happened. 😂 Trust me, it would end very quick with broken bones.
Oh wow there is option double hoppken face thumb to the eyes you can put to the bone under the eyes or check like pressorpoint the move is flowing... thumb up
Ah... Not a shurikenjutsu day. I guess we can't have everything. 👍👍
Shurikenjutsu videos in the near future, stay tuned!
@@budo_w That is wonderful news, indeed! Thank you very much! 🙏
Tired of reading comments about "it's no use in real fighting." Many of us train a tradition to keep the heart and mind in place (control emotions). This type of comment shows that it is from people who: either only got into a fight in a bar, or in sports situations. The real or street situation is a minimum of 3 people armed with firearms. I train to have better control in stressful situations and work on pressure and scenarios and situations and doing some randori. And yes, including firearms and knives. But a martial art is for life, and you are not going to fight in the same way at 20, as at 30 or 50 years of age. "Real" ninjutsu to defend yourself is using weapons. even the way to use hidden or concealed weapons. Put aside the stupidity of believing that sports wrestling is the real thing...because it is very easy to break, even with something as simple as a screwdriver stuck in your gut. People who kill on the street do not train SMA or UFC. They know how to kill quickly and effectively. And to defend yourself from that you must train according to that possibility, unless you live in a country and society different from mine, calmly inside a tupperware.
This is just fucking LARPING. Budo Taijutsu will get you killed in a real fight.
This is true, and also... All the techniques in this video require the uke to stand there for 30 seconds with their arm stretched out while the Tori beats them up and tosses them around!
I would much rather see techniques that don't rely on the punch hanging out there in the air during the whole technique.
I know it's training, I know, but the actual moves require a static punch. At least the way they are practiced here.
And I say this as someone who has been studying Bujinkan since 1988.
@@brunod1az 🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@meaningfulideasI’ve trained movements very similar. They absolutely do not require a static opponent. If you know it is for simple demonstration, instead if criticizing the movement or the way it is delivered, you should be praising the clarity of the footage.
@@Kamawan0 Naw man. There is simply no way to do these techniques without a static opponent. You would have to change the whole thing.
And this person should change the whole thing! Even if you're doing something for a demonstration, it should still be a demonstration of something that's accurate and effective.
Like I said, I've been studying and teaching the buj since 1988! This is not coming from someone standing on the sidelines.
Tezuka Sensei looks like the Japanese Elon Musk 😁
מי המדריך?
פשוט זרימה מעולה . בחיי הלואי עלי.
Hi! His name is Tezuka Wataru Sensei.
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
😮❤
Mi chiedo se contro un muay thai siano efficaci queste tecniche, ho esperienza nelle arti marziali e credo che molte di esse non siano applicabili in un vero scontro, si sono belle da vedere ma...c'è sempre un ma!!!
Most of this would not work in a real fight. But there were some really good ones in there too. I know this hurts some people's feelings, but if you do not pressure test your techniques, you will not know. And, no, MMA is not the end all, be all either.
Thanks for your comment and watching the video!
Who told you that we don't do pressure tests?
Why do people watch a 2 minute video and think the practitioner doesn’t pressure test??
quem ataca e para pra ficar esperando um contra-ataque?
Una persona que está ayudando al instructor de la clase a mostrar una técnica para que el resto de los practicantes puedan aprender.
@@budo_w estão quase parecendo aquelas demonstrações de aikido, onde o atacante nem encosta no adversário. A maioria das técnicas só servem para demonstração. Alguns praticantes acreditam que tudo pode funcionar. O cinema é o único culpado disso.
@@cassiolinzzambaldi7247 No se debe confundir la práctica técnica de Kata con la práctica de Randori. Ambas son cosas diferentes y tienen distintos objetivos.
Este video muestra práctica de Kata cuyo objetivo es aprender una forma particular de realizar un movimiento acorde a las enseñanzas de nuestra escuela.
En ningún lado se está tratando de convencer a las personas de que esto está pensado para ser utilizado en un combate real.
@@budo_w ok. treina quem quer. Eu não treinaria algo que serve só para exibição, e que em combate real seria "cosas diferentes".
@@cassiolinzzambaldi7247 Yo tampoco, por eso entreno esto.
El problema es que por falta de conocimiento no estás siendo capaz de diferenciar la práctica técnica (kata) del combate práctico (sparring / randori).
Yo practico ambas, pero en este caso particular no se está mostrando sparring. Creo que no es tan difícil de entender.
KAI
When i was a teenager i would have loved this shit,but from what i see,none of it,or very little of it would work in a real fight because it's never pressure tested in full contact sparring.
Wrong.
How is it possible for you to know what we do privately?
This guy wud school Anthony Cummins
Anthony who?
That knife stuff won't work against FMA.
I have no idea what FMA is, but this is not a video about what works and what does not work in a realistic situation.
Please don't analyze it from a "practical application" perspective because it is not what is happening here, neither we are saying it is.
@hanadojo FMA= Filipino Martial Arts. What's being shown is typical "standing shiatsu." No aliveness what so ever. Just lunge punches and impractical movements. For a system that's supposedly has been around for "900" years you would think it's practioners would evolve and stop moving like it's 900 years ago...🤦🏼
@@Haas1973 Typical western mentality análisis from an uneducated person in japanese martial arts.
There are multiple forms of training when you are learning a Japanese tradition. Sometimes you train hard, sometimes soft, sometimes fast, sometimes slow.
Sometimes movements are shown to explain a different thing that has nothing to do with an actual confrontation. That's the problem with your comment, you have no idea what the teacher is showing here, or why is he doing it this way, and you assume that he is teaching a real fighting situation. You are wrong, read my previous message where I already explained that this is NOT trying to be a realistic situation, but you keep insisting on the same.
I trained many times for real knife fighting and I'm perfectly aware of the difference between both practices.
I'm not interested in comparing arts to see which one is best, but most of the things I saw of Kali Filipino are really bad.
@hanadojo Actually I have experience in Japanese martial arts. I woke up and realized alot of them are Bullshido. You keep hemming and hawwing about how this isn't real combat training it's just "Kata" work. Like I said all standing shiatsu. No pressure testing, no aliveness all from an art that claims to be a proven means of self-defense and combat. Just stick to your shuriken and smoke bombs...🤣🤣🤣
@@Haas1973 Do you know how to read? Are you a teenager trolling on the internet?
I practice kata and shiai, I do both.
This is a video about kata and different aspects of the art that I will not explain here, if you are interested come to a class.
You clearly have no idea on Japanese martial arts or you were badly taught. Your words are a vivid example of your lack of knowledge. If you have received a proper instruction, you would understand what is happening in the video and would not be doing this childish comments.
I'm so sorry your previous teacher scammed you and taught you bullshido, but not all Japanese martial arts, and of course not all teachers are the same.
I will tell you this one more time, let's see if you can increase your reading attention "THIS IS NOT A VIDEO ABOUT PRESSURE TESTING", that does not ment that we don't do pressure testing, we are just not doing it on this video.
Go keep playing with your sticks, they are very useful for drum playing.
bullshito
Amazing random comment, thanks!
@@budo_w no, this is the truth about everything in this video because non of this techniues works
@@Porzuc_Ateizm Another total random comment.
What are you referring to? Don´t work against what? What do you think you are seeing in the video?
@@budo_w no, not total but special comment.
Non of this techniues works in real fight or even sparring. The man who does that techniues to work need a sparring partner who freez or making no resistance and even easly fall down under the light pressure while he does a lot of moves.
Especially everyone attack him in the first intention deeply engaging whole body with moving full step forward which is super dangerous because this left your body fully open when your attack miss or be blocked. Nobody attacks like that except the drunk and stupid people.
@@Porzuc_Ateizm And who said that this video was about sparring?.
The man that you are talking about is a highly qualified instructor of the art with many years of practice.
He is not teaching sparring, or attempting to say that what he is showing should be done this way in sparring or in a real fight.
This is a free Tai jutsu practice and Kata geiko. Both practices can not be used to spar but at the same time will improve your sparring abilities.
The problem is that you "think" you are seeing something that is not what you think, and since you have a big lack of knowledge, you are just trying to look smart making a comment that it's actually dumb.
Modern days ninjutsu could have been such a killer instead of this bullshido phantasy.
Do you mean modern day taijutsu?
This bullshido fantasy is actually really difficult to master, you need a lot of commitment and dedication.
Now if you are thinking that what you see in the video is real fighting you are misunderstanding the video.
Thanks for watching!
@@budo_w Won't debate on ninjutsu as this is main and highest skill of its actual practitioners: won't be battling on your field.
Practiced Bujinkan budo tai jutsu with Japanese ranking for years btw, so this is not basic bashing. Could write more about but i think ths would feed the phantasy monsters.
However, i still appreciate to watch time to time some footage about these weird old ryu(s) so thank you for posting.
@@amorfati9519 Thanks for your comment, so sorry you had such a bad experience.
Never seen any fight that involve this moves ,so you spend many years to something that you can t never use in real fight@@budo_w
well it is more Bujutsu becouse you can see them but a Ninja you dont see
This is garbage, train jiujitsu; the shinobi certainly did. Also, the only "martial art" associated with the shinobi is fuudo ryu & it's not really a martial art; more like outdoor survival/evasion/concealment.
Thanks for your comment, but you can not expect someone to take you seriously after calling them garbage.
I think garbage is your attitude and the fact that people like you with very little knowledge feel entitled to make a comment like this.
Also is not Jiu jitsu what ancient warriors used to practice, you are so lame trying to correct people not even knowing what you are talking about.
What you mean Is Ju jutsu, Taijutsu or Yawara. Educate yourself first then comment.
@@budo_w this is trash, and you're a charlatan playing make-believe with other people's money [EDIT] "Taijutsu" is a farcical invention that does not exist outside the minds of the gullible.
@@budo_wYou could have made this whole comment without using the word lame. Using the word lame is the same as the other guy using the word garbage. Let's use our ideas shall we?
It’s like tai chi, essentially worthless for combat, but at least they are getting exercise.
That's Kihon, something about the fundamentals.
@@thearashisenpai I spent years practicing these “fundamentals”. I wasn’t competent until I started training actual combat arts. But keep doing kihon if that makes you happy.
@@DROCK0810 that's absolutely right, you must practice everything!
Years? how many?
In the combat arts you don't practice kihon also?
Maybe you just don't have the skill needed for traditional martial arts.
Sounds like you haven’t seen much but it’s never too late to educate yourself.