Gun fu
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Gun fu, a
The focus of gun fu is both artistic style and the usage of firearms in ways that they were not designed to be used. Shooting a gun from each hand (usually paired with jumping to the side at the same time),
Gun fu has become a staple of modern action films due to its visual spectacle, a result of often impressive choreography and stuntwork, regardless of its unrealistic elements when compared to real-life gun warfare.
Hong Kong origins
As the name suggests, gun fu has roots in
John Woo originated the style that would later be called gun fu in the 1986 Hong Kong action film A Better Tomorrow. The film launched the "heroic bloodshed" genre in Hong Kong, and gun fu action sequences became a regular feature in many of the subsequent heroic bloodshed films, which combined the elegance and precision of kung fu with the brutality and violence of gangster movies.[3] John Woo continued to make several classic heroic bloodshed films, all featuring gun fu, and all starring leading man Chow Yun-fat.
Anthony Leong wrote of the gunfights in A Better Tomorrow,
Stephen Hunter, writing in The Washington Post wrote,[5]
Woo saw gunfights in musical terms: His primary conceit was the shootout as dance number, with great attention paid to choreography, the movement of both actors within the frame. He loved to send his shooters flying through the air in surprising ways, far more poetically than in any real-life scenario. He frequently diverted to slow motion and he specialized in shooting not merely to kill, but to riddle—his shooters often blast their opponents five and six times.
Other Hong Kong directors also began using gun fu sequences in films that were not strictly heroic bloodshed films, such as Wong Jing's God of Gamblers (1989) and its sequel God of Gamblers Returns (1994). There were several heroic bloodshed films that did not feature gun fu, but opted for more realistic combat, such as Ringo Lam's City on Fire (1987).
Spread to the United States
The popularity of John Woo films, and the heroic bloodshed genre in general, in the U.S. helped give gun fu greater visibility. Some of the earliest Hollywood productions not directed by Woo that adopted the style were Desperado (1995) and The Replacement Killers (1998), the latter starring Chow Yun-fat.
The success of
In the 2010 film
A gun fu sequence involving Chris Redfield and Glenn Arias is showcased in the 2017 CGI film Resident Evil: Vendetta. Although produced in Japan, the Resident Evil franchise takes the majority of its inspiration from American horror and action cinema.
Other media
Video games
Video games, particularly in the shooter and shoot 'em up genres, have implemented gun fu-like gameplay. Below are some examples of video games and video game series which have been specifically compared to or described as gun fu:
- The "bullet time" gameplay of the Max Payne series has been described as gun fu.[6]
- The "CQC" fighting style in the Metal Gear video game series integrates the use of firearms into martial arts.
- The 2007 third-person shooter game Stranglehold, which serves as a sequel to John Woo's 1992 film Hard Boiled, features gun fu gameplay elements.[7]
- The 2008 fighting game series, BlazBlue, features a fighter who specializes in this fighting style in Noel Vermillion.
- The 2015 action role-playing game Fallout 4 features an ability, or perk, called "Gun Fu", which awards bonus points to the player for targeting multiple enemies while in the gameplay feature known as the Vault-Tec Assisted Targeting System (V.A.T.S.).[8]
- The 2019 shoot 'em up game My Friend Pedro features gameplay elements that have been referred to as gun fu.[9]
- The 2005 survival horror game Resident Evil 4 emphasises injuring enemies with gunshots and then performing martial arts on them while they're stunned.[10]
- The hack and slash game series Bayonetta has most of its combat revolve around using guns in her hands and on her heels to execute kung fu like combos while weaving in shooting.
- The 2019 virtual reality action-rhythm game Pistol Whipallows players to dual-wield pistols in an homage to gun kata. The game also features other elements from gun fu films like dodging bullets in slow motion and awarding extra points for shooting enemies in rhythm with the music track.
- The 2005 first-person shooter game F.E.A.R. also has firefight combat inspired by gun fu.
Comic books
Gun Fu is also the name of a series of
Pen-and-paper games
It is not certain where or when the actual term "gun fu" was invented. One of the earliest written records exists in the
Gun fu is a form of specialized martial arts usable in the game and is described as,
Conspiracy X, another tabletop RPG first published in 1996, also included the combat style as a usable skill. In this game, gun fu allowed players' characters to use firearms in close combat and skilled martial artists to string together combinations of moves.[13]
In the Buffyverse role-playing games, gun fu is the name for the firearms skill, but this is more likely meant to be humorous rather than to imply characters practice an actual firearm-based martial art.[14]
In the
In "Run and Gun", a expansion of the fifth-edition of the pen-and-paper role-playing game Shadowrun, gun fu is a combat style available.
The GURPS roleplaying system has a Gun-Fu supplement, written by S.A. Fisher, Sean Punch, and Hans-Christian Vortisch.
Television
In the Japanese series Tokusou Sentai Dekaranger, Banban "Ban" Akaza a.k.a. DekaRed is specifically mentioned as a master of gun fu technique, which in the series is called as "Juu Kun Do" (jū is the Japanese word for 'gun', and the name of the style is a play on Jeet Kune Do). As a result, the mecha for the series, Dekaranger Robo, is also sometimes shown using gun fu. The American adaptation of the series, Power Rangers S.P.D., also shows the Red Ranger Jack Landors and the Delta Squad Megazord using the same technique, though that was more because of the source material – Jack is not specifically mentioned as being a master of gun fu.
In the anime Mazinkaizer SKL, Ryou Magami (one of the two pilots of the titular Mazinkaiser) uses gun fu as his primary style of combat as he wields the Breast Triggers, a pair of handguns which store on Mazinkaiser's chest. Magami's fight scenes contain several visual homages to the film Equilibrium, including a scene in the first episode where Mazinkaiser performs the signature pose of the Grammaton Clerics.
See also
References
- ^ Sean Axmaker (December 6, 2002). "Just saying no to drugs in the fascist future". Seattle Post Intelligencer.
- ISBN 0-7864-0990-8.
- ^ a b c Lincoln, Kevin (12 October 2016). "From John Woo to John Wick, Here's Your Guide to Gun Fu". Vulture. Retrieved 16 May 2022.
- ^ Leong, Anthony (1998). "The Films of John Woo and the Art of Heroic Bloodshed". Archived from the original on November 30, 2007. Retrieved February 19, 2009.
- ^ Hunter, Stephen (April 20, 2007). "Cinematic Clues To Understand The Slaughter". The Washington Post. Retrieved February 19, 2009.
- ^ McNamara, Andy, ed. (May 2009). "'We took all the elements of the traditional Max and expanded it out so the game becomes gun ballet, or 'gun-fu', or whatever you want to call it'..." Game Informer. Sunrise Publications. p. 41. Retrieved 3 January 2020.
- ^ Cowan, Andy, ed. (2007). "Drifting out of the sports world, Stranglehold (Midway) is already out now for the PC and Xbox 360, and sees a whole heap of John Woo-styled action and gun-fu going down..." Hip Hop Connection. No. 216–218. Popular Publications. p. 337. Retrieved 3 January 2020.
- Escapist Magazine. Retrieved 3 January 2020.
- ^ Sykes, Tom (20 November 2016). "My Friend Pedro is a 2D Max Payne that looks bananas". PC Gamer. Retrieved 3 January 2020.
- ^ Resident Evil 4 Mercenaries - Melee Moves, retrieved 2023-01-20
- ^ Comic book series
- ^ "Martial Arts". cyberpunk.asia. Retrieved 2020-03-24.
- ^ "Review of Conspiracy X – RPGnet RPG Game Index". www.rpg.net.
- ^ "Review of Buffy the Vampire Slayer Roleplaying Game – RPGnet RPG Game Index". www.rpg.net.
- ^ Wujcik, Erick (1995). Mystic China (PDF). USA: Palladium Books. p. 44.