so would Marcel Marceau…
wat
dfgdfg
Bruddah, he’s doing the sword form…
but without a sword.
…very zen.
gohring makes thsi guy look like bruce lee
[QUOTE=David Jamieson;1105905]This appears to be the Lin Wan Kuen that is found in the book “Sil Lum Kung Fu” By Leo Fong.
Interesting.
lin wan is a coverall sort of name isn’t it? Similar to lien bo/lin bo? Continuous and returning.[/QUOTE]
This doesn’t look anything like the Lin Wan Kuen I learned. Mine was similar but different from the Sil Lum Leo Fong Book. At least if you put mine up against Leo’s you can tell they are pretty much the same form!
What kind of kung fu is this ?
[QUOTE=mig;1105862]Just wondering, if someone can see some kung fu in this or another local invention from videos or else.
http://www.youtube.com/user/Eliezer9272?blend=4&ob=5#p/u/2/gXcymvJdKXU[/QUOTE]
mig , I saw this video clip twice , too bad that this guy did ’ nt even put the lights on ,
anyway , the kung fu set that this guy was doing , the moves especially the opening part of the set came from hung gar , the hand techniques probably choy li fut especially when he was doing the moves fast and I could ’ nt see clearly too . the side horse stance could be choy li fut or hung gar , and the wide circular movements
could be choy li fut or whitecrane manchurian version .
Win ful jip fut.
not sure, it may be from Ark Wong’s system.
[QUOTE=lance;1106308]mig , I saw this video clip twice , too bad that this guy did ’ nt even put the lights on ,
anyway , the kung fu set that this guy was doing , the moves especially the opening part of the set came from hung gar , the hand techniques probably choy li fut especially when he was doing the moves fast and I could ’ nt see clearly too . the side horse stance could be choy li fut or hung gar , and the wide circular movements
could be choy li fut or whitecrane manchurian version .[/QUOTE]
Funny you made this remark. I imagine it comes from a hybrid style that a Chinese taught back in the 70’s but he never taught completely. Here is another version