I just found out about this fascinating thing called parkour.
Parkour is the art of quickly and efficiently getting from one place to another (also used in a chase, to escape pursuit). Basically, you train your body to peak physical condition, and utilize any objects in your surroundings to make for a speedy trip. This includes running along walls, jumping over cars, leaping from rooftop to rooftop (very dangerous, and only reccomended for professionals).
Now, I know what you are thinking… “What?!?”
So I present to you two things that will give you a good picture of what the heck parkour is.
The first is from the movie District B13 (thank you, O!), and stars David Belle, founder of parkour (he’s the running dude). As it is a movie, it’s overly dramatized, as parkour does not usually involve so many leaps from rooftop to rooftop, but it does indeed contain many real things from parkour, such as climbing up poles, pushing off of things, wall runs, precision jumps, rolling when you hit the ground to avoid impact damage or loss of momentum, and much more And it’s totally badass, too.
Without further ado, I present to you (since a picture’s worth a thousand words, and a video’s worth a thousand pictures)…
And a great Wikipedia article that explains the whole thing well….
Note that you may come across the term freerunning. This is not parkour. It is a similar, related art, but is not parkour. The two are most decidedly different. In the words of an article I found on the topic…
So you want to get started in Parkour or Free running. The videos are out there... people doing insane jumps between buildings, over railings and through cities. These trained experts are probably practicing either parkour or free running. Parkour is a form of movement that stresses efficiency and speed. The point is to get from spot A to spot B as quickly and efficiently as possible. Free Running is similar but it also involves aesthetic movements such as flips, spins, and many other forms of 'flair' (traceurs, practitioners of parkour, usually frown upon movement "wasted" on aesthetics). Also, Free Runners usually don't have a set path.
Parkour is all about efficiency and speed, whereas freerunning is like parkour that has mutated into an art form. Parkour ensures that no energy is wasted or misdirected, whereas freerunning is more like an exhibition.
Parkour is much more practical.
I plan to get involved in it. My being in cross-country/track ensures that I already am in good shape, have good stamina, and am good on my feet (as well as already having developed leg muscles).
Time to see what it’s like.
Last edited by WakataDreamer; 05-29-2009 at 05:21 AM.
its cool shit, though its hard as hell dude. I've take your working on your roll?
Starting from the ground up. Working on the basics now, like spatial awareness while moving fast (traceurs have a much sharper spatial awareness than ordinary people, if they didn't they would bump into things, misjudge jumps, etc. because they have to think very quickly.).
Oh, and grasshoppa: I gotta good pair of shoes.
Last edited by WakataDreamer; 05-30-2009 at 05:33 AM.
Cool, I'll have to look this up further. I've found I need some sort of physical discipline in my life, and this seems much better than the half-assed mashup of shit I have going on right now. I'd love to hone a good impact roll as well.
What's the workout regimen like to get your body into said peak physical condition? Any good links you found?
I just found out about this fascinating thing called parkour.
Parkour is the art of quickly and efficiently getting from one place to another (also used in a chase, to escape pursuit). Basically, you train your body to peak physical condition, and utilize any objects in your surroundings to make for a speedy trip. This includes running along walls, jumping over cars, leaping from rooftop to rooftop (very dangerous, and only reccomended for professionals).
Now, I know what you are thinking… “What?!?”
So I present to you two things that will give you a good picture of what the heck parkour is.
The first is from the movie District B13 (thank you, O!), and stars David Belle, founder of parkour (he’s the running dude). As it is a movie, it’s overly dramatized, as parkour does not usually involve so many leaps from rooftop to rooftop, but it does indeed contain many real things from parkour, such as climbing up poles, pushing off of things, wall runs, precision jumps, rolling when you hit the ground to avoid impact damage or loss of momentum, and much more And it’s totally badass, too.
Without further ado, I present to you (since a picture’s worth a thousand words, and a video’s worth a thousand pictures)…
And a great Wikipedia article that explains the whole thing well….
Note that you may come across the term freerunning. This is not parkour. It is a similar, related art, but is not parkour. The two are most decidedly different. In the words of an article I found on the topic…
Parkour is all about efficiency and speed, whereas freerunning is like parkour that has mutated into an art form. Parkour ensures that no energy is wasted or misdirected, whereas freerunning is more like an exhibition.
Parkour is much more practical.
I plan to get involved in it. My being in cross-country/track ensures that I already am in good shape, have good stamina, and am good on my feet (as well as already having developed leg muscles).
Time to see what it’s like.
I guess you watched the special features on Paul Blart Mall Cop too? :p
I've known about it for a while, it's cool. Just look up "free running" on youtube, there's tons of videos.
I've worked on my roll a bit, damn this stuff doesn't come naturally at all to me. I'll need to work hard if I want to get any good at a single move. For now I'm mainly just running and lifting to get more in shape.
Oh and spockman, is that a frame from Paprika in your sig? If not, what is it?
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