Celebrim
Legend
The first thing to note is that combat Tumbling is going to come up very rarely in duels of any sort. You might see it used as part of the bonus that makes you harder to hit, or you might see it used as part of what amounts to a Feat where you've been trained to use acrobatics to disguise the direction and timing of your attacks. But the sort of tumbling we are talking about here to avoid attacks of opportunity doesn't come up very often in a fight between two unarmed fighters. The threat of drawing attacks of oppurtunity, and the consequent need to tumble to evade an attack just won't be there.
The sort of fight scenes we should be looking for are:
a) One parties intent is to disengage from the fight.
b) One party is armed with reach weapon, and the other must close inside there reach in order to attack.
c) One party is surrounded by multiple attackers and needs to move out of the ring of threats.
In those cases I'd expect to see 'realistic' uses of combat tumbling. I'm going to have to think about this a while, because I don't watch a lot of movies much less a lot of action movies where these scenes would occur, and I think bad examples are going to just harden your position rather than helping it. I mean, I can think of a good cartoon fight, but I doubt you'll accept a cartoon as evidence of realism.
If it is, and I don't agree that it is, but if it is, then its not an example of using tumble to negate attacks of opportunity. What it is in my opinion is combination of Dodge and Improved Feint. Notice also that Mobility will in a fight visually emulate the effects of having Tumble, but I presume with a more upright approach to doing so. If we have any boxing fans, then I'd be interested in thread where we match fighters to the feats that they have.
That word; I don't think it means what you think it means. Choreographed or not, obviously the videos are evidence of the possibility of using those techniques. I think the word you are looking for is 'impractical'. Wuxia - and much of Chinese martial arts to say nothing of Chinese stage martial arts - is highly impractical in a real fight, but it is not impossible for the obvious reason that Jackie Chan does all of his own stunts.
The sort of fight scenes we should be looking for are:
a) One parties intent is to disengage from the fight.
b) One party is armed with reach weapon, and the other must close inside there reach in order to attack.
c) One party is surrounded by multiple attackers and needs to move out of the ring of threats.
In those cases I'd expect to see 'realistic' uses of combat tumbling. I'm going to have to think about this a while, because I don't watch a lot of movies much less a lot of action movies where these scenes would occur, and I think bad examples are going to just harden your position rather than helping it. I mean, I can think of a good cartoon fight, but I doubt you'll accept a cartoon as evidence of realism.
Now, this is very, very interesting. So your point, Jonesy, is that Ali's footwork is...tumbling?
If it is, and I don't agree that it is, but if it is, then its not an example of using tumble to negate attacks of opportunity. What it is in my opinion is combination of Dodge and Improved Feint. Notice also that Mobility will in a fight visually emulate the effects of having Tumble, but I presume with a more upright approach to doing so. If we have any boxing fans, then I'd be interested in thread where we match fighters to the feats that they have.
Those are choreographed fights, impossible in real life.
That word; I don't think it means what you think it means. Choreographed or not, obviously the videos are evidence of the possibility of using those techniques. I think the word you are looking for is 'impractical'. Wuxia - and much of Chinese martial arts to say nothing of Chinese stage martial arts - is highly impractical in a real fight, but it is not impossible for the obvious reason that Jackie Chan does all of his own stunts.