FrommerStop said:I have not seen it yet. Movies is movies and fighting is real.
I was taking break and so for a few minutes looked at the linked video, did not finish.Sure. I have to give Keanu credit though, he did train hard on the range for Wick 1 and 2, and he does quite well.
Im surprised he didn't correct Reeves for doing the turtle head tuck, where he tucks his head between raised shoulders, bad form for sure.
I recommend you not pay to much attention to gun gamers and the square range shooters. I do recommend that if you have a good back ground in the martial arts to incorporate this into the gun fighting training. If you do not already do it learn to shoot while moving and also learn force on force if you are not already doing so.17 years of fighting (two black belts). It doesn't seem to tense me too much but most likely because it is so natural. No worries at all, I shoot pretty well and appreciate your thoughts.
About 60 percent of officer-involved shootings occur during the hours of darkness. That's a high percentage, and it doesn't even include gun battles between law enforcement officers and suspects in darkened buildings during daylight hours. Overall, low-light incidents may account for as much as 85 percent of officer-involved shootings in large metropolitan areas.
But very few officers are receiving adequate low-light training. That's dangerous for the health of the officers, and it leaves the agencies they work for open to potentially devastating lawsuits if an officer should shoot an innocent bystander in a low-light incident. http://www.policemag.com/channel/weapons/articles/2009/06/shooting-straight-in-the-dark.aspx