Why are movie swords always wrong? (An armourers thoughts)

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  • čas přidán 30. 07. 2019
  • Why are historical film props so often 'not quite right'?
    This film explains why weapons props are so often not quite historically correct however much we all wish for it....
    Real life working on films gets in the way of being totally historically accurate; after all none of us are making a documentary.
    If you would like to support my work on this channel you can always buy my fantastic reproduction medieval weaponry available here todcutler.com
    If you are interested in custom historical replicas look at www.todsworkshop.com

Komentáře • 5K

  • @user-xq5og9lt8p
    @user-xq5og9lt8p Před 4 lety +2419

    -Oi, Pierre, have you seen our arrows lately?
    -No, what about them?
    -They got black fletching on them... Pierre, are we the baddies?

    • @Ch0pj0b
      @Ch0pj0b Před 4 lety +82

      Webb and Mitchell.

    • @MikaelKKarlsson
      @MikaelKKarlsson Před 4 lety +37

      Something 9 of 10 movie goers wont notice anyway.

    • @Sk0lzky
      @Sk0lzky Před 4 lety +48

      We need this in some movie

    • @kevinsullivan3448
      @kevinsullivan3448 Před 4 lety +63

      @@Sk0lzky It should have been in Robin Hood: Men it Tights.

    • @JMcMillen
      @JMcMillen Před 4 lety +51

      @@kevinsullivan3448 or Monty Python and the Holy Grail.

  • @tuomopoika
    @tuomopoika Před 4 lety +5869

    Probably the most annoying thing in movies is that armour often doesn't do anything. People just slash through mail and sometimes even plate.

    • @shanemccarthy265
      @shanemccarthy265 Před 4 lety +822

      GoT has a guy stabbing through plate, mail, and gambeson all the way through the torso. So two layers of plate, two layers of mail, and two layers of gambeson, plus the torso itself. These shows need to have a historian, and for the choreography there needs to be a HEMA instructor.

    • @Tyrhor
      @Tyrhor Před 4 lety +1233

      As a former weapon specialized stuntman, I would like to say there are a few reasons this commonly happens
      1) Safety: You want the actor to perform the stunts, but he/she is not skilled enough. Hitting the armor is safe and there will be only a few people complaining, so why not.
      2) Speed: The action has to be fast, but not really violent. I can write a choreography of one hero cutting through a dozen armored opponents, but it will be really bloody and I would need a lot of time to train the actor to actually do it. Cutting the chest or belly is the fastest and least bloody way of doing such a scene
      3) Money: Most commonly, the budget cuts didn't allow more complex choreography to be in the scene. We were a rather cheap crew to film with, yet as far as I know, it can cost about 50 000 USD per day of training. With the payment like that for every day of choreography preparation, you don't wanna have too complex scenes.
      (PS: Feel free to ask me anything about stunts)

    • @MrMaxBoivin
      @MrMaxBoivin Před 4 lety +1045

      The worst part of historical movies is the forced diversity.

    • @ToteDichter1984
      @ToteDichter1984 Před 4 lety +50

      @@Tyrhor How were stunts filmed? Are they seperated from the normal movie stuff, like on special days, or do they directly follow the scene before, to avoid continuety mistakes? I want to become a director, and learn much stuff. Not that easy without the right connections, so I ask anyone everything, I could need to know, to form a project and coordinate a team.

    • @jchrystsheigh
      @jchrystsheigh Před 4 lety +39

      @@robertslobson Oy he was born an Aussie

  • @captainnwalps6689
    @captainnwalps6689 Před 3 lety +1375

    “They will wear open-faced bascinet” mighty bold of you to assume the actors will wear helmets at all

    • @fakshen1973
      @fakshen1973 Před 3 lety +77

      They might... but then there's always some excuse as to why the helmet is either taken off, falls off, or ends up missing.

    • @Tiberiotertio
      @Tiberiotertio Před 3 lety +25

      Yeah Henry V with Kenneth Branagh no helmet at all, as a royal noggin needs no protection.........too much BS I don´t watch reguardless of the explainations. Best example "The Last Kingdom" books great entertainment, the film puke! Lindey Beige took that series nicely apart. Not financing filmmakers rubbish.

    • @8015908
      @8015908 Před 3 lety +10

      Helmet off then I turn off movie.

    • @rdt1104
      @rdt1104 Před 3 lety +63

      They should ALL wear helmets all of the time, and keep their visors up with one hand.
      - Monty Python

    • @kimosabe6692
      @kimosabe6692 Před 3 lety +4

      @@Tiberiotertio Especially after he got shot with an arrow at 16 years of age.

  • @arttukorppivuori8038
    @arttukorppivuori8038 Před 2 lety +61

    One further reason for the industry love for the back scabbards is - I'd imagine - that it allows you to show the weapon right alongside that expensive face. You get the actor AND the character specific hilt design neatly right there in a close-up.

  • @moatddtutorials
    @moatddtutorials Před 4 lety +2243

    everyone knows that a trotting horse's hooves sound like coconuts

    • @Bear-cm1vl
      @Bear-cm1vl Před 4 lety +25

      I wonder why that might be... 😃

    • @szethtoxicco1710
      @szethtoxicco1710 Před 4 lety +8

      @Kent Goertzen
      What the hell are you even trying to infer?

    • @lordwasabi6330
      @lordwasabi6330 Před 4 lety +120

      Swallows are known for carrying migrating coconuts.

    • @speleokeir
      @speleokeir Před 4 lety +88

      @@lordwasabi6330 African or European swallows?
      czcams.com/video/liIlW-ovx0Y/video.html

    • @Zonnymaka
      @Zonnymaka Před 4 lety +38

      Sometime knights don't even need an horse...but a pair of coconuts :)

  • @jasonq7504
    @jasonq7504 Před 4 lety +778

    I can tell you what kind of sword I use to hunt Orcs. I’m more reluctant to admit that I haven’t found an Orc.

    • @jamiemccormick8259
      @jamiemccormick8259 Před 4 lety +23

      You have to coat the blade with the blood of a maiden, that attracts the orcs.

    • @leonaldobrum
      @leonaldobrum Před 4 lety +18

      To properly hunt Orcs, you need a machine gun. The reason is that they are too fast, too strong, so you need a high rate of fire - definitely no hunting rifles.
      OR you need even more phantasy - then you use a sword bigger than a human.
      I consulted with Professor Orc and he told me that their worst fear is to be rendered immobile by laughter, they really cannot control their views of the ridicule. And ridicule is abounding in all "medieval" enactments in movies and comics. Look at what happened to the Dragon when he looked at puny George 😉

    • @12jswilson
      @12jswilson Před 4 lety +28

      King Elessar promised to get rid of the Orcs. Promises made, promises kept. You're welcome. Vote #Elessar2020

    • @luna_moon6662
      @luna_moon6662 Před 4 lety

      Wut weapon dammit???!!!

    • @dominic6634
      @dominic6634 Před 4 lety +1

      I have the same problem

  • @willdbeast1523
    @willdbeast1523 Před 3 lety +463

    My view is that I can deal with it being historically inaccurate but not historically implausible. They can have armour that's a couple of centuries out of date and the wrong colours but it should behave like armour and be functional in the setting.

    • @dhorn4005
      @dhorn4005 Před 3 lety +44

      The thing that bothers me most in when they get things wrong by overcomplicating things. In Vikings, for instance, saxon or frank soldiers are given some ridiculous armour that never existed in orther to make them look more uniformed than the vikings... Yeah, I undertans, making lots of long chainmail gambesons (the most acuratte type of armour for carolingian era soldiers) would be pretty expensive... BUT gambesons made of cloth would be much cheaper and historically accurate!
      Most foot soldiers who could not afford mail (or whoose lieges could not afford to equip them anyway) still would wear cloth gambesons. With cloth gambesons, helmets and shields you can equip a large group of soldiers and make them look a real medieval army. Add some officers or knigths with full mail armour, some mail coifs (you can buy them already made ones for just 40€ so you dont have your costume department saturated making mail) and you will get an uniformed regular army in no time... Also, when you need your soldiers to be gutted by vikings; it's much more realistic if they die easilly wearing ligth armour than if they are killed wearing full mail...or worse, full plate
      But no. They prefer to made up wacky armours that did not exist nor even look to work propperlly (I'm thinking thoose englishmen in Braveheart; with random pieces of square metal bits just stiched into their sleeves and trousers)

    • @purpledave3271
      @purpledave3271 Před 3 lety +10

      So...no First Knight? I'm not the sort to actually ruin my filmgoing by trying to find all the historical inaccuracies, but I _hated_ the stylized armor in that flick. It looked like they were wearing the medieval equivalent of bowling shirts.

    • @willdbeast1523
      @willdbeast1523 Před 3 lety +5

      ​@@purpledave3271 yeah it's a shame cos it's an extremely good film in other ways. At least in that one the armour actually does something some of the time... doesn't just get chopped through like paper.

    • @EricRoberts2112
      @EricRoberts2112 Před 3 lety +1

      YES!

    • @snowburn14yt
      @snowburn14yt Před 3 lety +8

      "With respect to the requirements of art, a probable impossibility is to be preferred to a thing improbable and yet possible."
      -Aristotle, Poetics
      Impossible: a 12th century soldier wearing armor that wasn't seen before the 14th century
      Improbable: a soldier weighing himself down with hundreds of pounds of plate mail that somehow still gets torn to shreds like it's tissue paper - they'd *probably* just go for maneuverability with the type of cloth gambesons Dhorn mentions, if their opponents' swords were so sharp (/magic)

  • @woopimagpie
    @woopimagpie Před 3 lety +220

    I loved how Peter Jackson got around the wonderful LOTR artwork copyrights of Alan Lee and John Howe by employing them as art directors on the films. Very clever. We've all marveled at the beautiful pictures in many editions of the books over the years done by those two men, how fantastic that the films were able to recreate so many of those iconic scenes. With the added bonus of him being able to ask them "can you draw suck and such?", and then taking that drawing to the set department and saying "can you make it look like this?" Luckily both Alan and John were thrilled to be involved. That's how it should always be done, but sadly the opportunity to do so arises very rarely. Of course LOTR is a fictional work, not an actual historical recreation, but I'm sure you understand my meaning.
    Great video Tod. I could listen to you all day.

    • @Phenix19
      @Phenix19 Před 2 lety +9

      Suck and such

    • @dylanduke9963
      @dylanduke9963 Před 2 lety +5

      Technically, you could hire the artist who owned the copyright to the descriptions and they would not have to provide you with the copyright they hold... itd need to be specified that they would use the copyright you want... so in effect, you're still buying the copyright..

    • @vostokcosomonaut5205
      @vostokcosomonaut5205 Před rokem +1

      @@Phenix19 An interesting proposition from Peter there ;)

  • @RobKinneySouthpaw
    @RobKinneySouthpaw Před 4 lety +1197

    The last time I went hunting Orcs, pretty sure we were armed with just some No2. HB pencils and some funny dice.

    • @zapfanzapfan
      @zapfanzapfan Před 4 lety +11

      Ah, nostalgia :-)

    • @johnladuke6475
      @johnladuke6475 Před 4 lety +88

      There is NOTHING funny about a D4 when you step on it. Nerd caltrops.

    • @Keifefromtwitchtv
      @Keifefromtwitchtv Před 4 lety

      Funny or Fuzzy dice?

    • @SumNutOnU2b
      @SumNutOnU2b Před 4 lety +48

      Heh ... I saw "armed with just some NO2." and my first thought was "what does nitrous oxide do for you against orcs?"

    • @abigailslade3824
      @abigailslade3824 Před 4 lety +2

      And a can do attitude

  • @MrVeps1
    @MrVeps1 Před 4 lety +1223

    It's sort of sad that we've basically imagined a history without colour, so that every medieval peasant has to wear dirty beige, every castle has to be gray, togas are white and so on.

    • @datalt7873
      @datalt7873 Před 4 lety +97

      Leather biker gear

    • @alextusv
      @alextusv Před 4 lety +54

      Throughout history colours were expensive

    • @MrVeps1
      @MrVeps1 Před 4 lety +303

      @@alextusv That very much depends on the colour. Red wasn't terribly expensive, nor was yellow. You might spot the difference between a cheap red and an expensive one, but "colour" by itself wasn't expensive, only the ones that were difficult to make dyes and paints of. That's why purple was such a big deal. It's not like nature itself defaults to dirty beige, and whitewash for the houses was dirt cheap.

    • @wilhelmu
      @wilhelmu Před 4 lety +28

      my local castle is red cause its made out of brick

    • @alextusv
      @alextusv Před 4 lety +5

      @@yalewaller5721 which was cheap?

  • @jessechisholm4842
    @jessechisholm4842 Před 4 lety +85

    re: "What sword to take Orc Hunting?" The sword you already own, and already know how to use. That is the PERFECT sword to hunt orc's with.

    • @logosimian
      @logosimian Před 3 lety +3

      This.
      If I went Orc hunting I would take a jingeom.
      Not because it's especially good for orcs. Because it's the only sword I have some skill with.

    • @purpledave3271
      @purpledave3271 Před 3 lety +5

      So, a lightsaber?

    • @jessechisholm4842
      @jessechisholm4842 Před 3 lety +4

      @@purpledave3271 I you have one, then yes please, go Orc hunting. Just a suggestion, though, not Orcs with their own light-sabers. Be smart about this.

    • @nicholasnicosia2325
      @nicholasnicosia2325 Před 3 lety +1

      Coincidentally this is the same advice for people looking for the best gun for home defense

    • @Avenus112
      @Avenus112 Před 2 lety

      Still rather have a projectile or a reach weapon. Keep those things away from me.

  • @gabrielpottebaum5249
    @gabrielpottebaum5249 Před 4 lety +54

    "When the last time you went hunting orcs, what was the sword you used?"
    LARPers: "Well since you asked...."

    • @tyree9055
      @tyree9055 Před 3 lety +4

      - Realistically, a 7.62mm machine gun w/ 1200 rounds of NATO ball ammo! 😄
      - Imaginarily, full gothic plate armor w/ sword and shield and I still got beaten by them even though they wore leather jerkins because all I could do is roll 1's!
      🤦

    • @thomasfplm
      @thomasfplm Před 2 lety

      Actually, I was the ork.
      And I was using a double sword and chain mail.

  • @akhasshativeritsol1950
    @akhasshativeritsol1950 Před 4 lety +860

    I love it when a movie has the balls to put their expensive actors behind helmets/masks the whole time. Props to Dredd and V for Vendetta

    • @rnichol22
      @rnichol22 Před 4 lety +25

      Gladiator

    • @teeawa9412
      @teeawa9412 Před 4 lety +71

      Season 1 GoT shows armor is actually useful then by the end they make it paper armor.

    • @Adierit
      @Adierit Před 4 lety +85

      To be fair, it's not really "balls" in those films, the entire identity of those characters *is* the costume.

    • @3nertia
      @3nertia Před 4 lety +17

      I'd just like to point out that in Dredd, his mouth is visible which can still convey quite a bit of emotion

    • @Ruhrpottpatriot
      @Ruhrpottpatriot Před 4 lety +102

      The produces in Dredd wanted some scenes where Dredd takes off his helmet, but because Karl Urban is a massive Dredd fanboy he refused.

  • @SidneyBeers
    @SidneyBeers Před 4 lety +718

    Personally i would think seeing a battle from the perspective of a knight in full plate trough a visor could make a good claustrophobic scene.

    • @osmacar5331
      @osmacar5331 Před 4 lety +101

      Add heavy breathing and strikes too, just to add tension to it, hell, i know a good story for it too, give a bit more time, a script

    • @SidneyBeers
      @SidneyBeers Před 4 lety +42

      @@osmacar5331 budget wise a short would be extremely doable and youtuable

    • @dennispetrov9628
      @dennispetrov9628 Před 4 lety +16

      Actually I remember seeing something like that in my early schoolyears: czcams.com/video/I0wPpCXG7b4/video.html
      Not much, but close to the point )

    • @zerozeroone4424
      @zerozeroone4424 Před 4 lety +20

      @@dennispetrov9628 that was great. If someone were to take that idea with a higher budget and better choreography, it would be amazing. Like something out of the videogame, 'Kingdom Come: Deliverance'

    • @dennispetrov9628
      @dennispetrov9628 Před 4 lety +1

      @@zerozeroone4424 yeah, and it would be even more amazing to watch in a VR-headset

  • @budvizergaming2554
    @budvizergaming2554 Před 3 lety +345

    Still no excuse for the Nilfgardian armor that Netflix made.

    • @AMetroid
      @AMetroid Před 3 lety +81

      That decision was made by the feminist writers (who did their damnedist to fk the story over with their agenda)

    • @TF_Tony
      @TF_Tony Před 3 lety +120

      @@AMetroid uwotm8? xD Have a cup of tea, calm down, regain sanity.

    • @allanredhill8682
      @allanredhill8682 Před 3 lety +56

      @@TF_Tony its true tho. It was something along the lines of scrotum armor to show their toxic masculinity or some shit. Fact is the armor looks retardet but the show itself was pretty cheesy and b movie like anyway....

    • @TF_Tony
      @TF_Tony Před 3 lety +71

      @@allanredhill8682 Citation needed. Although that concept is pretty hilarious and completely justified, if true, unfortunately, I couldn't find any sources to back up that claim other than people spreading the rumor without any original sources.

    • @davidbodor1762
      @davidbodor1762 Před 3 lety +17

      @@allanredhill8682 Doubt. I don't think it was meant to actually resemble a scrotum btw, it's probably incidental that people took it that way. My first thought was that it was a cost saving measure for background characters, but that didn't turn out to be the case. Either way they'll probably use different armor for season 2. Don't read into it too much mate.

  • @Windhawk
    @Windhawk Před 3 lety +133

    "Peasants are always dull. They're not bright."
    Wait a minute ... oh, he's talking about the color scheme! Isn't he?

    • @assumjongkey1383
      @assumjongkey1383 Před 3 lety +1

      No it an't

    • @TurinTuramber
      @TurinTuramber Před 3 lety +9

      I got more annoyed when poor down trotten peasants toiling in the mud are all immaculately clean.

    • @assumjongkey1383
      @assumjongkey1383 Před 3 lety +5

      @@TurinTuramber u got mud on ur face!!!!!u big disgrace!!

    • @olsim1730
      @olsim1730 Před 3 lety

      @@TurinTuramber Exactly! Especially when(in Britain at least) peasant folk had only two baths in their lives..one at birth and one at death...

    • @ninjacell2999
      @ninjacell2999 Před 3 lety +4

      @@olsim1730 this isn't true lol

  • @thecaveofthedead
    @thecaveofthedead Před 4 lety +866

    Just to say as a person very familiar with the commercial industry, there's something Tod can't mention: it's not unusual to have complete idiots in decision-making capacities. Most of them are called 'producers.' They will sometimes demand absurd things in the Dunning-Kruger belief that they know better what punters will think or like. So yes, he's totally correct and illuminating about the many practical factors. But they're not always grown-ups.
    And on the note about not being documentaries. Very true. But that can also be a cop-out when you realise that the masses Tod speaks about often derive their knowledge of history from these films and not from any other sources. Filmmakers have more responsibility than they like to tell themselves. And it's frequently only the opinion of the directors and producers that the masses will need these changes in order to enjoy the film as entertainment - and these heavily altered films sometimes bombing, and very accurate ones sometimes raking in millions will never convince them otherwise. They're not as rational as they pretend to be.

    • @99IronDuke
      @99IronDuke Před 4 lety +21

      And that, I bet, is a major reason for silly and stupid errors, like giving all the British cavalry red trousers (rather than only the 11th Hussars) in the film Charge of The Light Brigade.

    • @hunterfindon1018
      @hunterfindon1018 Před 4 lety +64

      I have to disagree with your second point that films have a responsibility for the mass's knowledge of medieval history. You are absolutely right many people develop their pool of "knowledge" from said films, but that is their fault. Unless the movie claims to be educational, they bare no responsibility for the stupid decision of a person to take what they see as immediate truth.

    • @carbon1255
      @carbon1255 Před 4 lety +37

      Look at Kathleen Kennedy, she was kept as a producer because she made nice coffee. Moment she was in charge you could see ALL her terrible decisions.

    • @adamtennant4936
      @adamtennant4936 Před 4 lety +38

      I've worked on some horrific productions where you got (too many) producers putting their oar in purely for the sake of being seen to be "contributing".

    • @Mikey__R
      @Mikey__R Před 4 lety +30

      People are stupid. A person /can/ be smart, insightful and curious about truth, but people, en masse, are tribal, entrenched in their own ignorance, and stupid.

  • @bunk1860
    @bunk1860 Před 4 lety +78

    You pointed out a lot of valid reasons why movies props often can't be historically accurate, most of the reasons would have never occurred to me. Thanks for making me a tad bit smarter.

  • @Valandar2
    @Valandar2 Před 3 lety +10

    My personal opinion... Anduril, Glamdring, and Aragorn's "Ranger Sword" from Peter Jackson's LOTR were three of the most perfect, beautiful, realistic, and ideal movie swords ever made.

  • @stanbartsch1984
    @stanbartsch1984 Před 3 lety +57

    "Camera Tests" are pretty much the FINAL arbiter of whether a thing can be used. A weapon, armor, or set piece that causes camera issues [i.e. a tight weave pattern on a gambeson that causes Moiré patterns to appear on the final product] is right out, regardless of how "authentic" the weave was for the character who is supposed to wear it!

    • @dumpygoodness4086
      @dumpygoodness4086 Před 2 lety +7

      I LOSE MY MIND every time I see them do the "NIGHTTIME" scenes in films, but it's clearly daytime but they use a BLUE FILTER on the camera to make it appear it's moonlight.
      OOOOF!

    • @originalprecursor
      @originalprecursor Před rokem +2

      Serious problems with this as a 3D designer. I would guess that such a thing comes down to budget.

    • @HawkJedilord
      @HawkJedilord Před rokem +2

      Is there no way at all to adjust camera settings, use a different lens etc? Or is that a budget question rather then the equipment does not exist question? How the heck does documentaries get away with it when they do it accurately then?

    • @thebaumfaeller1477
      @thebaumfaeller1477 Před rokem +1

      @@HawkJedilord I think the primary problem is cost and often safety. If you want to film in the dark you have a limited time to film, you may have to pay people more, you will still need light but that is more difficult to get right and it might be dangerous for action scenes if the people performing can't see as well.
      also dark environments may just not give you a good picture in the end so you end up having it not be true night so the audience can see what is going on better.

    • @HawkJedilord
      @HawkJedilord Před rokem

      @@thebaumfaeller1477 I see. Unfortunate and interesting at the same time. Safety first is a good thing though.

  • @briangindling1266
    @briangindling1266 Před 4 lety +258

    still waiting for that Corinthian Column blockbuster! Steve Buscemi as the master stonemason and Kate McKinnon as his muse, and the Rock as the columns of course. Cinema Gold!

    • @kirillbessonov876
      @kirillbessonov876 Před 4 lety

      гыыыы

    • @hansvonmannschaft9062
      @hansvonmannschaft9062 Před 4 lety +4

      You sir made me laugh hard. Thank you very much. May you have a great day!

    • @ottodeluxe
      @ottodeluxe Před 4 lety +8

      You have no idea how many people would watch that movie just for The Rock. And probably not even be disappointed.

    • @poiuyt975
      @poiuyt975 Před 4 lety +11

      @Colin Cleveland Corinthian Column: The Second Row ;)

    • @ian1352
      @ian1352 Před 4 lety +4

      I'm not sure The Rock has the acting chops to convincingly play a column.

  • @derekbroestler7687
    @derekbroestler7687 Před 4 lety +80

    I feel your pain Sir!!! I'm a locksmith who occasionally gets work making or modifying prop locks and other lock related devices for movies and TV shows filmed locally...
    My first one went like this...
    Them... "OK, so it's a 17th century pirate ship and we need you to make this key (purchased in bulk from some home decor store) work this thingie"..... "
    Me "OK, well that's not period accurate, see ships back then would have had toggles or slide bolts, and usually not locks as locks were both expensive and prone to rust back then... ALSO even if it IS a lock... this key is wrong.... it's not even really a key, it's way too big.... see it should be a...."
    "We're making a kids movie... Not a documentary... We just need it to look good and pop on screen, can you do it or not?"...
    Me "YES SIR!!!! I can make that work!!!"
    Then they tell you last minute that they need 6 more IDENTICAL copies within 24 hours... (now I plan for this, but back then it was a shock)

    • @THEPELADOMASTER
      @THEPELADOMASTER Před 4 lety +9

      Honestly the response you got is exactly what I think when someone starts nitpicking those things.
      Did the movie say it was historycally correct in every little aspect? No? Well then shup up and watch the movie.

    • @derekbroestler7687
      @derekbroestler7687 Před 4 lety +17

      @@THEPELADOMASTER Oh I totally get it NOW... But for someone who also repairs and restores ACTUAL antique locks, as well as just being a locksmith, as we tend to be compulsively detail orientated (watching a scene in a movie involving lock picking, with a locksmith, is like watching a horror film with a trauma medic, something glaringly wrong just takes us completely out of the scene...)... It was a totally different mindset then what I was used to.

    • @CrownRock1
      @CrownRock1 Před 3 lety +6

      @@derekbroestler7687 Don't you just stick a nail or a paper clip in the keyhole and jiggle? I'm pretty sure that technique beats every lock.

    • @logicplague2077
      @logicplague2077 Před 3 lety

      @@CrownRock1 you can actually jiggle a paperclip, but only if it's shaped right(like an actual picking rake), and even then not every lock can be raked open.
      edit: and you still need to tension the lock somehow

    • @CrownRock1
      @CrownRock1 Před 3 lety +2

      @@logicplague2077 well, I was just poking fun at movie style lock picking, but thanks I guess.

  • @mikehenthorn1778
    @mikehenthorn1778 Před 3 lety +16

    Great video sir. As a photographer who shot a lot of Cosplay and reenactors a varies timeframes I can certainly say that I've had to instruct people to pull things or turn ways that are completely wrong but look right from the camera side. In the end it's all about telling the story

  • @Zappygunshot
    @Zappygunshot Před 4 lety +189

    I wish we lived in a world where you could go to the movies with your mates and watch 1.5 hours of Corinthian pillars in Ancient Greece.
    Actually, I just wish we lived in a world where you could go to the movies with your mates at all :(

    • @shacuras8201
      @shacuras8201 Před 4 lety +4

      Big oof

    • @seanc9520
      @seanc9520 Před 4 lety +1

      At least you ppl still have drive-ins. My country has zero such cinemas. So chances of going to a new movie would be like earliest next year. Might as well gather at the home of the guy with the best sound systems and biggest screen.

    • @damagingthebrand7387
      @damagingthebrand7387 Před 3 lety

      That would just be Ionic...

    • @greggeshelman
      @greggeshelman Před 3 lety

      That would be a blockbuster hit film in the universe of "The Invention of Lying".

  • @SaintCronch
    @SaintCronch Před 4 lety +320

    Lord of the rings managed nice swords and hanging swords by the side! Kinda fun to think a fantasy film is more historical that actual historical films

    • @mikereger1186
      @mikereger1186 Před 3 lety +19

      Christoffer Bergström - I suspect that if riding you probably would hang the longsword somewhere on the horse’s harness anyway... trying to draw it from your side on horseback, you’d probably end up chopping the poor nag’s ears off.

    • @Pro_Butcher_Amateur_Human
      @Pro_Butcher_Amateur_Human Před 3 lety +47

      In many ways, yes. However they suffer from the common mistake of armour being useless. I'm glad the main heroes only wore leather jerkins, because all the Gondorians who wore full plate still got killed effortlessly by crude arrows and slashing weapons.

    • @Jhakaro
      @Jhakaro Před 3 lety +25

      @@Pro_Butcher_Amateur_Human this actually isn't that true. A lot of the time the orcs bash them over the heads and they fall down and arrows generally go through areas that are uncovered. Not always of course but there are many cases where this is true

    • @Pro_Butcher_Amateur_Human
      @Pro_Butcher_Amateur_Human Před 3 lety +26

      @@Jhakaro I'm talking about the movies. In the books the Gondorian heavy infantry was very good, but in the films their armour was made of tissue paper. One (in the siege tower scene) gets killed by a slash across the chest that in real life would have just left a scratch on his chestplate.

    • @maxwaggoner823
      @maxwaggoner823 Před 3 lety +9

      Meanwhile, the director was rewriting Tolkien in his own image.

  • @torbjornkallstrom2316
    @torbjornkallstrom2316 Před 4 lety +524

    People talk about inaccurate historical fight scenes in movies, as if modern gun fights in movies are any more realistic :P

    • @lexex2550
      @lexex2550 Před 4 lety +7

      Hong Kong style gunfight

    • @brianspenst1374
      @brianspenst1374 Před 4 lety +86

      Ahhh the 15 shot six shooter.

    • @njalsand133
      @njalsand133 Před 4 lety +47

      What do you mean? Surely running into the face of John Wick so he can close range shoot you is a legit strategy

    • @danielaramburo7648
      @danielaramburo7648 Před 4 lety +32

      I understand that movies are flexible on what weapons are used, but when they show Japanese soldiers in ww1 with Soviet Ppsh43 from ww2 1943.... that upsets me. When I see a 1400s European knight with a katana.... that upsets me.

    • @point-five-oh6249
      @point-five-oh6249 Před 4 lety +13

      @@brianspenst1374 You think that's bad? What about Arnold Schwarzenegger wielding a $@!#'ing minigun off of a mount? Now I know the man is stronger than some oxen, but an 85-86 pound minigun with about 60lbs of ammunition, this isn't even including a power source because miniguns are electrically powered? First of all, it doesn't matter how strong you are, miniguns' weight distribution is ridiculously barrel heavy to compensate recoil, because otherwise firing it for just a moment would send it flying off the mount. Second, you cannot be stronger than the explosions of 2,000-6,000 7.62NATO per minute. Arnie would have lost an arm after the gun launched itself out of his hands. Lastly, How TF was he so accurate? The dude was sniping people with a heavy machine gun meant for covering fire and forcing enemies to retreat, hide, or get turned into swiss cheese. It wasn't meant to be a weapon to hit someone over the horizon with.
      I will take a 15 shot revolver over a dude wielding a minigun on foot ANY DAY. At least in film, you could say he reloaded the revolver when the camera was focused on other entities. I mean speed loaders were a thing back then.

  • @billybudd45
    @billybudd45 Před 3 lety +3

    I worked in the film industry here in the USA , and the main decision motivation is budget. The movies are getting better with historical accuracy. I love your work and products you sell. Peace William Sterling

  • @user-od3iy2qz9d
    @user-od3iy2qz9d Před 4 lety

    Amazing video. Really informative, and with some very interesting points. I'm really glad someone took the time to do this. Thanks Tod, hats off to you, mate!

  • @carltomacruz9138
    @carltomacruz9138 Před 4 lety +325

    My beef is that in most swordfights, a kick is more likely to connect than the actual sword strike.

    • @alkohnest
      @alkohnest Před 4 lety +83

      Also, in the less realism oriented sword fights when the combatants are both really skilled and one loses his weapon he just beats the crap out of the other guy until he gets his weapon back. Why even have a weapon if you are apparently capable of killing an armed opponent with your fists better than with a sword.

    • @justinthompson6364
      @justinthompson6364 Před 4 lety +11

      Well, that's because if somebody gets hit with a sword they're killed instantly, right? They can't end the fights that quickly! :P

    • @ToeCutter454
      @ToeCutter454 Před 4 lety +17

      @@alkohnest because when you have empty hands you are better able to grapple/wrestle/maneuver by closing the distance if the enemy hasn't already foolishly gotten too close by being over confident. a weapon merely holds an opponent at distance. at some point if an enemy closes the distance beyond what your weapon is capable of functioning at then YOU are at a disadvantage unless you drop your weapon to free up that extra hand... OR pull out a hidden dagger/knife which is able to function in a far smaller space. CQB comes down to who has the better skill/will to want to live but hollywood always wants the hero to prevail so it's a false sense of reality in truth.

    • @ThePalatineHill
      @ThePalatineHill Před 4 lety +11

      if they had those pointed boots it would make a load more sense tho

    • @Academicidiot
      @Academicidiot Před 4 lety +2

      Dam, if only I brought a dagger too.

  • @zapfanzapfan
    @zapfanzapfan Před 4 lety +264

    What really annoys me is when the chain mail is a sweater with silver paint.

    • @mfactor88
      @mfactor88 Před 4 lety +16

      the worst ever, for me was that shithouse movie First Knight. they had stupid blue skivvies with little square plates stuck on them :D

    • @zapfanzapfan
      @zapfanzapfan Před 4 lety +8

      First Knight was such crap on other levels that I don't even remember the armor :-) It's amazing how bad a movie can be despite a whole host of awesome actors.

    • @fredygump5578
      @fredygump5578 Před 4 lety +18

      Heard of "steel wool"? I don't see the problem... :)

    • @armorfrogentertainment
      @armorfrogentertainment Před 4 lety +16

      That's a bad habit film picked up from theatre. Theatre costumes need to look good and convincing from 20 or 30 feet away. From that distance, painted string does look like mail.

    • @zeppohoj3188
      @zeppohoj3188 Před 4 lety +10

      And what annoys me is when people allways say chain mail.. Its called mail. Not chain mail.

  • @gregkokegei2531
    @gregkokegei2531 Před 4 lety +4

    I absolutely love this video. Bar none, the most informative video I have seen on this topic. Thank you for explaining it in such a simple manner. Keep up the good work :)

  • @Choklar_
    @Choklar_ Před 4 lety +22

    13th Warrior was one of my favorite films when it first came out. "This sword is too heavy!" "Then grow stronger!" This is the first time I saw one of your videos. This just popped up in my feed. You have a lot of good insight and meantioned a lot of things I never even considered. Anyway great video, very interesting! Liked and subbed!

    • @ReffaDay
      @ReffaDay Před 2 lety

      Can my daughter have that when you die?

  • @etelmo
    @etelmo Před 4 lety +351

    Counterpoint to full face helmets: A Knight's Tale.
    The actors wear armor obscuring their face during the majority of fights, I suspect it primarily worked because the plot revolves around tournament fights of short duration with plenty of opportunity to show faces during interludes, and doing so let stunt doubles more easily take over the roles of an actors.
    It's a fantastic comedy, completely historically inaccurate and all the better for it.

    • @willis32
      @willis32 Před 4 lety +46

      That and the fact that they used stuntmen whenever the face shield was down thus saving them money

    • @etelmo
      @etelmo Před 4 lety +35

      @@willis32 Yes, that's the "and doing so let stunt doubles more easily take over the roles of an actors." part =)
      It never felt jarring though, it was very well done.

    • @willis32
      @willis32 Před 4 lety +14

      @@etelmo honestly most of the time it doesn't bother me. Unless you've got a bloke with a longsword charging a phalanx I can suspend my disbelief

    • @tommeakin1732
      @tommeakin1732 Před 4 lety +33

      Completely agree. Some of the best films have portions where they have the balls to have noone even talk for five or ten minutes, and a combat scene where you're locked into the combat with the main character could be fantastically done. No disrespect to Tod, but I felt like most of his points were like this. I don't want more conservative, mostly mediocre films (imo); I want something that really tries to do it perfectly. Like nail the narrative structure of it, alongside making it gritty, realistic and historically accurate. I've no doubt people can do that if they're just willing to bother and invest in the idea

    • @gpgpgpgp1000
      @gpgpgpgp1000 Před 4 lety +63

      "We will, we will ROCK YOU! We will, we will ROCK YOU!"
      What do you mean that wasn't the common peasant's cheer??

  • @MayaWu44
    @MayaWu44 Před 4 lety +377

    I hunt the Orks with bolter loaded with Righteous Fury! Anyway, excelent stuff you are saying mister.

    • @CommanderSharpEye
      @CommanderSharpEye Před 4 lety +17

      Deploy the space Marines!

    • @Dennis-vh8tz
      @Dennis-vh8tz Před 4 lety +14

      I prefer an Assault Cannon with Hellfire rounds.

    • @TheLoxxxton
      @TheLoxxxton Před 4 lety +12

      For emperors sake! Just send in a squad of terminators with a librarian in charge. Job done.

    • @RevRaptor898
      @RevRaptor898 Před 4 lety +14

      Purge with holy fire Brother.

    • @MayaWu44
      @MayaWu44 Před 4 lety +6

      @@RevRaptor898 May Emperor always shines at your dice Brother.

  • @BytebroUK
    @BytebroUK Před 3 lety

    I love it when you go off on one of your rants! Most enjoyable, and surprisingly informative :)

  • @ItAintHalfHotMum
    @ItAintHalfHotMum Před 3 lety

    Very interesting. Thanks for spending the time to make the video.

  • @Jangocat
    @Jangocat Před 4 lety +187

    The copyright aspect is interesting, I never thought about that. That sheds light on why some movie, TV, books, comics and games of the same initial story aren't exactly the same.

    • @PongoXBongo
      @PongoXBongo Před 4 lety +15

      Kind of puts Disney's iron grip into perspective. They can make the same Mickey Mouse in whatever medium they want.

    • @jmitterii2
      @jmitterii2 Před 4 lety +24

      Copyright is such crap. Artificial monopoly. Anti-competitive garbage. Might as well throw for profit motive out the window... hence why there's only a handful of major media and publishers per each nation. They end up monopolizing content.

    • @harrymills2770
      @harrymills2770 Před 4 lety +4

      @@jmitterii2 : I think (don't know) that he's probably over-playing the degree to which copyright influences weapons choices made my movie makers. The idea of intellectual property is one of the few things that actually puts money in a creative person's pocket. I'd say we need MORE stringent copyright law. What we HAVE is a system where if you're big enough and have enough lawyers, nothing is sacred, and anything you almost had a thought about is YOURS. But if you're some low-budget creative type, they'll steal your stuff and sue YOU!

    • @sirrathersplendid4825
      @sirrathersplendid4825 Před 4 lety +4

      Copyright was one of the key reasons the Klingons look so different in STD.

    • @cerebraldreams4738
      @cerebraldreams4738 Před 4 lety +4

      @@harrymills2770 - I think we can reduce copyright length to 45 years after initial publication, while providing more stringent protection until the copyright lapses. Especially for the smaller scale producers, who might not have a legal team ready to go at a moment's notice.

  • @mrspidey80
    @mrspidey80 Před 4 lety +448

    "This is a scabbard that i made. Dated early to mid 14th century."
    I did not know you are that old. Impressive.

    • @sexydoritosnachos6943
      @sexydoritosnachos6943 Před 4 lety +108

      @Thomas King A genuinely stupid comment. Why did you bother?

    • @jguenther3049
      @jguenther3049 Před 4 lety +8

      You know what he meant.

    • @chrisbaker2903
      @chrisbaker2903 Před 4 lety +43

      @Thomas King Sometimes it's just to get people with a stick up their ass to respond just as you did.

    • @l.jboylan6704
      @l.jboylan6704 Před 4 lety +14

      @@jguenther3049 IT WAS A JOKE WHOOSH

    • @Cryogenius333
      @Cryogenius333 Před 4 lety +8

      @Thomas King r/ woosh

  • @WilleyGHD3
    @WilleyGHD3 Před 4 lety

    I'm subscribing because I appreciate who you are, your Integrity, Honest and your ability to convey information with clarity that piques my interest to see more of what you do. Thank you!

  • @Nozael92
    @Nozael92 Před 4 lety +13

    Love this video, it leave me with a lot to re-consider.
    I can read english pretty well but understand spoken english is very difficult for me. Your way of speaking is so "sharp" and accurate that your words are really easy to understand, thank you for that.

    • @shakti666
      @shakti666 Před 2 lety +1

      I too recognized that element in his vernacular though english is my native language

  • @Texas240
    @Texas240 Před 4 lety +553

    Speaking of what the audience wants,
    We want...a shrubbery! (and, a period correct one, at that)

  • @zeppelinled3967
    @zeppelinled3967 Před 4 lety +200

    "This is the scabbard I have made, Dated early to mid 14th century" Tod are you immortal? time traveler perhaps?

  • @bradarmstrong3952
    @bradarmstrong3952 Před 2 lety

    Interesting monologue, Tod -- thanks for taking us behind the scenes!

  • @philbrown8181
    @philbrown8181 Před 2 lety

    A very interesting and informative talk - thanks for making and sharing.

  • @wagonburnt
    @wagonburnt Před 4 lety +77

    I love that this very knowledgeable man, who actually makes accurate reproductions.. somewhat involved in the movie making process...just told off every pedantic, know it all, in a language they'll all understand.

    • @Snagabott
      @Snagabott Před 4 lety +5

      I watched it all, and I still feel pretty pedantic. I buy the part about points on swords. But the rest of it...
      To me, it's all about the "feel" that the movie is going for. If it's a "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" style flick, then by all means let the swords "schwiiiinnngg" and have armor be worthless and let people somersault and dance around with their backs to the enemy and observe all the other tropes established for that genre. But if the movie tries tell me with a straight face that it represents a period, then I expect to be taken into that world. Surprise me. Wow me. Don't be afraid to educate me. Maybe I will even see something I haven't seen before.
      If some things don't look "cool" to modern sensibilities, but are clearly treated as such in 'verse, wouldn't that just be a way to further tell us that we're not in Kansas anymore?
      Cinematographers suddenly don't wanna take any excuse to play around with colors on film now? How did that happen?
      Surely the problem of differentiating the two sides was the same for the actual fighters back in the day (and a damn site more important)? What solutions did _they_ have to that problem? And what do I need to care if actors are expensive? Bits of ornaments and heraldry on people's gear wasn't uncommon at all, so why would a proper helmet automatically mean we can't tell A from B? How much of this move is going to be spent on the actual cavalry charge anyway? Aren't limits supposed to be overcome in interesting ways, not just ignored? (and does it make me a bad person if I didn't even notice that the color difference on fletching was supposed to be something systematic?)
      Why do the heroes need "swords with built in extra oomph" if they wouldn't have had that for the fighting style their gear is otherwise supposed to portray? Aren't limits supposed to be overcome in interesting ways, not just ignored?
      If scabbards created so many problems when running around, how was that dealt with by the actual people carrying them? If equipment is found to be so impractical to walk around in as to be hazardous, how was that dealt with by the people using that? Aren't limits supposed to be overcome in interesting ways, not just ignored?
      I guess what I'm saying is this: The "rule of cool" only works when "cool" isn't just "stupid".
      (Oh and btw... I think village blacksmiths would make wargear when the occasion called for it, at least if the mass grave on Gotland is to be believed)

  • @danthefrst
    @danthefrst Před 4 lety +16

    Just have to say that i'm just as equally awestruck every time i see that 1 sec intro of yours. There are just so many things condensed down to the essentials. Shape, colour, speed, work, tools, makeing and all focused down and superimposed on your 4 quarters logotype. Its like a koan in video form. Just great work.
    Whoever did it... its genius.

  • @Killobot42
    @Killobot42 Před 2 lety +4

    This has been enlightening. Thank you for giving us some of your insight into this, it actually helps me be able to ignore these issues cause I can just lay blame at them being practical instead of ignorant.

  • @Kokorisu
    @Kokorisu Před 3 lety +1

    I love your attitude and your stance on this whole issue. Pragmatic, realistic and very well-versed. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.

  • @jester_1973
    @jester_1973 Před 4 lety +30

    I remember myself and the other fight guy being asked to use epees for fighting a British Civil War sequence. We refused because it was for a Son e Lumiere, which is played out mostly in the dark. You couldn’t see where the tips of the swords were. It would only have taken one of us to be slightly out of step for the scene to get very real, very quickly. In the end we used very plain, and blunt, swords which sounded great when bashed together, could be easily filed back to take the burrs out and wouldn’t have costed much to replace if they became unusable. Would the other swords have looked more authentic? Perhaps. But our choice was safety over appearance and nobody in the audiences even noticed.

  • @zeronzemesh7718
    @zeronzemesh7718 Před 4 lety +1153

    I hunt Orc's with a shotgun. It's not historically accurate, but I'm Amurican

    • @kristinfrostlazerbeams
      @kristinfrostlazerbeams Před 4 lety +7

      🤣

    • @chrisbaker2903
      @chrisbaker2903 Před 4 lety +9

      Do you use buckshot or slugs?

    • @albertjackson8700
      @albertjackson8700 Před 4 lety +64

      Obviously a European Troll, real Americans hunt Orc’s with those murder machines, those AR-15’s (that stands for Assault Rifle Weapon and 15 bullets a second that the hi capacity clip can spit out from the drum, BTW). 😈

    • @chrisbaker2903
      @chrisbaker2903 Před 4 lety +6

      @@kristinfrostlazerbeams light sabers.

    • @TK-2510
      @TK-2510 Před 4 lety +10

      Or you hunt everything with a sawed off shotgun, Doomguy approved.

  • @msmorrissey
    @msmorrissey Před 6 měsíci +1

    Thank you. You answered more questions than were posed in your wonderful video. Brilliant history. 👏👏

  • @wishusknight3009
    @wishusknight3009 Před 3 lety +34

    13th warrior was a great film. Among my favorites.

    • @alexs5814
      @alexs5814 Před 2 lety

      Remember Banderas in the Expendables?
      i was hollering on the floor^^

    • @rhoonah5849
      @rhoonah5849 Před 2 lety +1

      Mine too. I recently bought the DVD to add it to my collection. Great movie.

    • @tyrionas
      @tyrionas Před 2 lety

      great movie but not especially known for its historical accuracy

    • @federicogiana7430
      @federicogiana7430 Před 2 lety

      @@tyrionas Well, since "the 13th warrior" is a fictional defictionalized "Beowulf" written by a historical character, they actually had a long road to walk with realism ;)
      Tod is triggered by the helmet... I'm triggered by the cavemen: there's so much wrong in them that I don't even know where to begin.

  • @davidioanhedges
    @davidioanhedges Před 4 lety +155

    Some things they do wrong because of safety, because of convenience, for a particular look
    But some things are wrong because the director/writer/producer said so ... and when they were told it was wrong, and everyone would know it looked out of place (including the masses) and were given a better, still unique looking option they insisted ... these are the ones I notice as it means the filmmaker just didn't care ....

    • @GasAirSpark
      @GasAirSpark Před 4 lety +9

      David Hedges right, safety sure. Technical problems sure. Director/actor ego? Never, those idiots shouldn’t be paid a tenth of what they are.

    • @zakremmington6297
      @zakremmington6297 Před 4 lety +6

      Yeah those are the worst, like spins it doesn't add anything and everyone who has even spent a second thinking about how real life works hates them.

    • @sshep86
      @sshep86 Před 4 lety +7

      Films are not educational. They are entertainment.
      You guys clearly confusing Netflix with the documentary channel?

    • @ethanfields3853
      @ethanfields3853 Před 4 lety +1

      Yeah, that's what this video is about.

    • @DoktorWeasel
      @DoktorWeasel Před 4 lety +25

      Yeah, the big example of this that comes to mind is the Laurence Olivier Henry V. Where it had the infamous scene of a knight needing a crane to mount a horse. I remember seeing that the historical consultant begged the Olivier not to include it because it's not remotely historical and looks absurd, but he did it anyway.

  • @Ora_
    @Ora_ Před 4 lety +302

    I as a fan of movies would love to see:
    1. Knights fighting with helmets on. (maybe they don't speak when they fight? They can do the talking before and after the actual fight.)
    2. Scabbards (and other items and clothing) that have some color to them. I'm sick of all the fantasy/medieval movies with only gray and brown.
    3. Single handed swords and shields.
    4. Less leather. (Its not as cool as movie makers think)
    Hollywood is just scared of trying anything different from the norm.

    • @LucifersLandLord
      @LucifersLandLord Před 4 lety +15

      The King on Netflix tried something different. Imo it worked a charm.

    • @CATGPlbCapacityPneumaticTireFo
      @CATGPlbCapacityPneumaticTireFo Před 4 lety +7

      @@LucifersLandLord not amazing in terms of "trying something different" but certainly not close to the worst. As a movie it's phenomenal, but historically speaking it's definitely not amazing. It's like they just read some critical comments on a fantasy medieval youtube video and picked out the most prominent criticisms then made sure to give a quick nod to them.
      For example the duel near the beginning of the movie, where two stumbling knights slashed their swords at eachother for a bit was far from sensical, however they made sure they grappled and used daggers at the end. Armored opponents would be taken down using daggers in CQB. Other than that, there wasn't much to go on.
      The whole movie had a drab appearance, which while that is a result of the style they chose (and it worked great) it isn't really how you would want to go for a historical feeling movie. The Agincourt battle scene showed men at arms getting slaughtered by longbow arrows through plate armor. The whole battle was a giant pool of disorganized knights breaking off into one on one duels practically giving up on any sort of formation in the first second. Henry V's armor was very wonky and did not fit well. Henry V, the king, immediately ditched all his armor and more specifically his helmet and it all being conveniently explained away (like a king is going to rely solely on maille and a cuirass in the age of near full plate). Archers shot straight up in the air and rained their arrows on top of their enemies (which by all accounts did not happen). And the extras generally had really shitty armor.
      Basically most of the movie does fall victim to common medieval misconceptions and movie tropes. However, while there is alot to criticize historically about the movie, there is much to praise. It is certainly a very good movie, and it's historical shortcomings aren't overly prevalent enough to take away from the entertainment value. (Besides maybe the archer thing).

    • @APioneerInTheSeaOfStars
      @APioneerInTheSeaOfStars Před 4 lety +8

      WH40k 5 Part series on youtube, Astartes, shows helmet work in cinematics.

    • @terryfeynman
      @terryfeynman Před 4 lety +7

      well here is the thing, making movies costs serious money. Are you gonna risk that on something that might not work ? Or use the route you know does work ? Especially if the new route, even if it does work, might not make a huge difference. It is risk versus reward.

    • @FunkyAceFR
      @FunkyAceFR Před 4 lety +1

      Have you watched The King on Netflix? I thought they had some great knights fights..

  • @718Insomniac
    @718Insomniac Před 4 lety +1

    This channel is beyond awesome. So much good entertaining info.

  • @shanekrauchi2465
    @shanekrauchi2465 Před 3 lety +1

    Very eye-opening. Which makes me further appreciate the craftsmanship and nuances that are involved in these types of projects.

  • @hermesconrad5283
    @hermesconrad5283 Před 4 lety +31

    Kurosawa managed to make great films without making very many of these compromises. Perhaps it was because he valued his culture over the minor inconveniences of his crew and his crew thought it worth the effort to portray things properly.
    Essentially this is the missing element from western cinema... respect. In this light it's hard to watch any of it regardless of how fun it might seem at first.

    • @akafuguvids
      @akafuguvids Před 4 lety

      Didn't he have a bunch of fights with katanas used to parry each other's blows? And isn't that very inaccurate in that they would shatter if used this way? I'm not an expert on this, but that is what I remember reading somewhere.

    • @detolerandisstultorum
      @detolerandisstultorum Před 4 lety +1

      Correct

    • @jonharker9028
      @jonharker9028 Před 4 lety +7

      Katanas don't shatter under extreme stresses; if anything, they snap.
      And no, direct parries-which are more actions of necessity than the deflects typically used-won't themselves cause either of two katanas to snap. However rigidly we may think they're held (even in the most firm hands), the way one holds a sword at the hilt has a fair lot of give.
      On top of that, the sorts of high-carbon steel used in katana blades aren't entirely brittle enough for two swordsmen to clash with blade-breaking force at first collision. A well-prepared blade won't snap.

    • @Matt-sf9ky
      @Matt-sf9ky Před 4 lety +1

      @@akafuguvids Isn't that accurate? Ideally you won't parry in that way, but if its what you have to do to not get iron in the face... you do it. If they hit like that you'll get a nick or a splinter, and maybe they will snap. It's not an instant snap when two swords touch though, otherwise they'd never have survived the age of shields.

    • @DehJarlorNoob
      @DehJarlorNoob Před 4 lety

      This. It's showing respect to reality and having a movie be actually better than its CGI or flashy props.

  • @ImBarryScottCSS
    @ImBarryScottCSS Před 4 lety +212

    Well informed, factual, properly reasoned behind the scenes look at peoples pet peeve.
    Absolutely unacceptable content for CZcams 😆

  • @thereturningshadow
    @thereturningshadow Před 3 lety +19

    "Alright! We'll call it a draw."
    Most historically accurate film ever.

  • @duncanbrave3465
    @duncanbrave3465 Před 4 lety +60

    The closest thing I have to an orc hunting sword is a Bowie knife made by Tod Cutler

    • @tods_workshop
      @tods_workshop  Před 4 lety +22

      Clearly a good choice!

    • @13tuyuti
      @13tuyuti Před 3 lety +5

      I have some Cutlery made by David Bowie. Would that also work?

    • @Maric18
      @Maric18 Před 3 lety +8

      @@13tuyuti nah, thats for fae and spirits

    • @alexandernewman9735
      @alexandernewman9735 Před 3 lety +3

      Underrated thread, we should run all the way down the labyrinth with this one.

    • @WretchedRedoran
      @WretchedRedoran Před 3 lety +2

      @@alexandernewman9735 I have a book full of Brian Froud (the concept artist behind the Dark Crystal and The Labyrinth) artwork!

  • @chadfalardeau9162
    @chadfalardeau9162 Před 4 lety +270

    I agree about the fact that they need to pander to the masses. But that proves that the masses need to learn more.

    • @arnaudpascal1691
      @arnaudpascal1691 Před 4 lety +27

      Agreed. Plus, there is plenty potential to have very appealing visuals and atmosphere more more realistic elements.

    • @wulfheywood1321
      @wulfheywood1321 Před 4 lety +26

      As a re enactor one of my pet hates was ' ah but they didn't do that in (insert movie of choice)' . We spent so much time trying to teach people and that was what you got back 80% of the time, There were people who'd spent hundreds of pounds getting the right fittings and ornaments on their kit and get 'Saxon shields are square!'.
      On the point about the scabbard decoration, no most audience members won't be going ' oh flowers, I wonder what that means?' to use GOT as an example , there are people arguing ' Dany went mad because of Sansa/ Jon/Tyrion, that's why she burnt KL.' never mind the fact she's been lighting people up since she got the dragons . Seriously , they really aren't noticing a scabbard design, well apart from the re enactors/ history buffs who will move it frame by frame to see said design and call it out for being ten years to early or in the wrong country.

    • @stormveil
      @stormveil Před 4 lety +4

      @@wulfheywood1321 Yes! This is a big point I think. The 'Average movie goer' treats what they see in the movie as historical fact. It may just be an inherent bias in humans to believe everything we see, but in any case that's where people get to.
      So actually, on the contrary, average people DO want to be informed of historically accurate things... and be entertained at the same time!

    • @ENIGMAXII2112
      @ENIGMAXII2112 Před 4 lety +6

      Yes indeed the the masses need to learn more...

    • @glenbe4026
      @glenbe4026 Před 4 lety +11

      I would also think these were not just excuses if bloody they were ubiquitous. They are not, so they are just excuses. For example, backscabbards are mentioned. BUT we often see side scabbards in productions. So the talk about backscabbards being about solving the "issue" of side scabbards becomes just a bloody excuse for the poor ability of those involved in the production.

  • @CosmicDuck494
    @CosmicDuck494 Před 4 lety +253

    I'm sure all of those points are valid, but there is also the matter of immersion. Inconsistencies tend to take you out of the moment. A perfectly historically accurate movie may not be desirable for most people, but historical accuracy is a continuum, and moving more towards accuracy is certainly possible.
    I would also differentiate between functional differences and purely aesthetic ones. Black fletchings or unhistorical family crests still work the same way. Rectangular Shields and back scabbards do not.
    But in the end I really think there is room for both the more realistic and the more fantastical historical movies. We have both in SciFi too, like for example Star Wars vs The Martian. You could make very similar points about the more realistic end of the SciFi genre, but there are still lots of people who like (or even prefer) that.

    • @AaronMcLin
      @AaronMcLin Před 4 lety +22

      "Inconsistencies tend to take you out of the moment." This seems like an over-generalization. Wasn't Tod clear that for 99% of the people who watch movies, it doesn't matter? Not that I specifically disagree with you; _Aliens_ drives me crazy to this day, but for most people, rectangular shield are just shields. The functional differences that irk you are somewhere between completely unknown and random trivia to most moviegoers.

    • @CosmicDuck494
      @CosmicDuck494 Před 4 lety +33

      @@AaronMcLin That can certainly be the case. But just to offer an example of particularly bad design: in the last Hobbit movie (ok, not exactly a historical story, but even so...) the dwarves' armour is so horrendously impractical that the actors had to take it off in order to do the fight scenes. To someone who never thought about armour design, that makes absolutely no sense whatsoever. They see a bunch of warriors in armour, and then they see these warriors taking off their armour before going to battle.

    • @benstoyles1297
      @benstoyles1297 Před 4 lety +14

      Your point reminds me of the "I swear by these swans" scene in Outlaw/King which had basically everyone (even the "experts") googling what the hell they just watched.

    • @AaronMcLin
      @AaronMcLin Před 4 lety +3

      It's true, @@CosmicDuck494, that sometimes movies do a poor job of explaining character actions to the audience. It seems to me that if the armor doesn't work for the _actors_ then it would have been redesigned; so if we're seeing the warriors taking off their armor before going into battle, then the audience is meant to understand that the armor doesn't work for the _characters_ on-screen. The movie may have done a poor job of conveying that to the audience, but no-one's perfect.

    • @AaronMcLin
      @AaronMcLin Před 4 lety +1

      Thank you, @@tods_workshop.

  • @lucisferre6361
    @lucisferre6361 Před 3 lety +1

    This was my introduction to your channel, sir. And as a lowly stagehand, (pre- & hopefully post- covid) your knowledge of your craft and expertise is very impressive to me. And since I just discovered you, I'm sure I will be enjoying your catalog in the very immediate future. Probably Matt Easton's channel recommended you to me in my feed, btw. Thanks, looking forward to whichever is next...

  • @egyas
    @egyas Před 2 lety

    Great video Tod! Very enlightening.

  • @skepticalbadger
    @skepticalbadger Před 4 lety +264

    The Mandalorian proves that protagonists can be helmeted for extended periods. Iron Man showed in 2008 that you could have a helmeted yet expressive face and unmuffled voice (inside the helmet) using the conceit of a virtual camera.

    • @calebsmith7179
      @calebsmith7179 Před 4 lety +41

      I'd say your second point stands, but the Mandalorian can have protagonists with helmets on for extended periods of time because their actors/actresses aren't your A-list/blockbuster actors/actresses who make $10+ million each film they star in.

    • @IngenieurStudios
      @IngenieurStudios Před 4 lety +20

      @@calebsmith7179 Pedro Pascal isn't famous enough?

    • @calebsmith7179
      @calebsmith7179 Před 4 lety +40

      @@IngenieurStudios Pedro Pascal is not that famous, and I'm saying that as someone who enjoys his acting. Last time I checked Pedro is making six figures in the shows he's been in and his net worth is two million dollars. Now compare that to someone like Robert Downey Jr. who on average makes $33 million a film and whose networth is $300 million. It speaks for itself.

    • @pootispenser5089
      @pootispenser5089 Před 4 lety +39

      Not to mention that this helmet design harkens back to Boba Fett whose face is never seen in the original trilogy so we have an iconic character that has popularized the notion of a helmeted protagonist with an obscured face. The design is probably well-known enough that the audience can accept it as a substitute face for a while.

    • @slightlysublimated1619
      @slightlysublimated1619 Před 4 lety +3

      @@calebsmith7179 Lmao where the fuck did you get his net worth is only $2 million. The low end of estimates are at $30 million, and the highest at nearly $50m. Come on now, get the fuck out of here with throwing out false information.

  • @dylanjones9061
    @dylanjones9061 Před 4 lety +38

    This reminds me of how I'm always making fun of cop shows for those raid scenes where all of the SWAT officers are fully armored, but the heroes go rushing in first with no helmets, even though I know full well this is so that the audience can tell who the heroes are. I think I'm going to keep making fun of movies for getting things wrong even when I know their reasons for it because that's just how I am :P

    • @anthonybanderas9930
      @anthonybanderas9930 Před 3 lety +1

      I get the reasons but I also think that the reasons are stupid. Now if the companies wants to pander to the idiots, sure. But I can also be as aloud and noisy as the masses and try to force the company to pander to my taste.

    • @derricklarsen462
      @derricklarsen462 Před 2 lety

      @@anthonybanderas9930 your right anthony the reasons are stupid and this guy should take a look at the short film knight of hope.

    • @2adamast
      @2adamast Před 2 lety

      No helmet is not the problem, rushing in first is, it's complex and lethal team work.

  • @nigelbrownwellington6514
    @nigelbrownwellington6514 Před 3 lety +36

    I cried almost the whole way through “The Return of the Doric Capitals”

    • @jhend91
      @jhend91 Před 3 lety +2

      Holy cow, I just had surgery and shouldn’t be laughing so hard!

    • @tyree9055
      @tyree9055 Před 3 lety

      😅

  • @MadWiking
    @MadWiking Před 3 lety

    Extremely interesting and educational!! Thanks for sharing!! Best vid I've seen in a long, long time!! Best regards from The land of Vikings, Norway!

  • @ozziejim8472
    @ozziejim8472 Před 4 lety +41

    “Long bows creek “ holy shit I didn’t realise they added that in........ of cause they do!

  • @usmcrvn69
    @usmcrvn69 Před 4 lety +48

    I made two knives for the "Lonesome Dove" series, following exactly the propmaster's directions. The "powers that be" decided they were too "shiny", but did use one in one scene.

    • @sunofpeter2
      @sunofpeter2 Před 4 lety +1

      That's pretty cool. I would like to what you made

  • @gavinclark6891
    @gavinclark6891 Před 4 lety

    Your insight an an individual of the industry is golden, Todd. Thanks for these videos, and i love seeing that you balance this so well with your personal ‘right’ points in your own products

  • @peterwynn4088
    @peterwynn4088 Před 3 lety +34

    Every film should have a medic's input, to ensure that all injuries are accompanied by the correct amount of blood .

    • @phillipsofthedriver
      @phillipsofthedriver Před 3 lety +6

      dunno about anyone else, but the most enjoyable thing about blood splatter in movies for me is how fake it is. Like in some Samurai movies, where off shot a head is cut off, and about forty gallons (US) of blood hits the wall. THAT is funny. Faces of Death style accuracy makes me ill. There is a move called Dead Alive from New Zealand. It was so over the top ridiculous it was the funniest zombie movie I'd ever seen until Dead and Breakfast. I was on a remote job somewhere in the 90's and saw a video for rent in a store that said "Dead Alive Productions" so I rented it without looking at the cover or the back. It was a series of snuff vignettes, of actual people being killed and/or eaten alive by animals. No. Just, no. I LIKE the fake stuff.

    • @toro5280
      @toro5280 Před 2 lety +2

      @@phillipsofthedriver I think it is Peter Jackson's first film. It is the one with the priest "kicking ass in the name of the lord" and with the dude who strapped the lawnmower to his chest to kill zombies, right?

    • @Krieghandt
      @Krieghandt Před 2 lety

      @@phillipsofthedriver Check out Texas Chainsaw Massacre. My mother is like you, after 50 years in ER, she likes the fake stuff, and Texas Chainsaw had her howling in laughter.

    • @dumpygoodness4086
      @dumpygoodness4086 Před 2 lety

      I hate how everyone DIES INSTANTLY when shot anywhere on their body.
      Cripes.
      In my graphic novels, I mock everything and every one. EX: every time someone's head is chopped off or ripped off....i have their head on the ground, wondering why it takes over 3 minutes for them to die, and how awful it is just being that head on the ground, ha ha.

    • @themonsterunderyourbed9408
      @themonsterunderyourbed9408 Před rokem

      @@phillipsofthedriver You must like Kill Bill and Django Unchained.

  • @wordwoman9900
    @wordwoman9900 Před 4 lety +47

    I get this way with things like knitting, crochet, and spinning in historical films. I get that it just looks like she needs to be doing something industrious with her hands but THAT'S NOT HOW THAT TOOL WORKS AUGH! Thanks for the insightful video. :D

    • @thearcanehunter2736
      @thearcanehunter2736 Před 3 lety

      @@parad0xheart They should be more responsible though. Like it or not, people use movies to educate themselves, even if unintentionally.

    • @Kaucukovnik666
      @Kaucukovnik666 Před 3 lety

      @@parad0xheart Popular culture used to get away with anything easily for ages, because only isolated individuals among the audience recognized particular flaws. These days one person recognizes a sci-fi engine room as the brewery it is and the wole internet can be made aware overnight.
      I think this does call for a change of approach on the filmmakers' part.

  • @robinthrush9672
    @robinthrush9672 Před 4 lety +276

    You give a guy a purple scabbard with flowers on it in a movie and people are going to say, "So he's gay?" Sad, but true.

    • @damo5701
      @damo5701 Před 4 lety +55

      Given the rapid increase of Identity Politics cutting a swath through popular culture with gender swapping and color washing of a hero/main characters the norm these days we can expect a proliferation of purple flowered scabbards in historical stories. Soon we will be told half the greatest heroes of history were gay; no matter how inaccurate to actual history.

    • @jimandaubz
      @jimandaubz Před 4 lety +51

      @@damo5701 uh. Bub. You've got the wrong idea.
      Purple scabbards with flower inlays would have been showing off.
      Something for a ladies man to carry.
      Or a man's man.
      Because... frankly there wasn't any give a darn about anything we would consider LGBTQ till the 16th century. Heck. The Roman Catholic church used to do "brotherhood" and "sisterhood" unions, ie gay marriage.
      Seriously. Its a modern disfunction to care at all.

    • @damo5701
      @damo5701 Před 4 lety +30

      @@jimandaubz No you have misunderstood my post. I am aware of the significance of the flowers on scabbards in history and that it wasn't gay. The OP mentioned today it may be considered gay by some in the population. Given the propensity to write so called "minorities" into everything even when historically incorrect then expect more flowers as this is considered gay by people today; it would be signaling homosexuality to people today; not that it did in history.

    • @anonymousstout4759
      @anonymousstout4759 Před 4 lety +26

      Purple is one of the most expensive colour in medieval the sad thing is today It's considered as gay or widow

    • @-.._.-_...-_.._-..__..._.-.-.-
      @-.._.-_...-_.._-..__..._.-.-.- Před 4 lety +8

      Movies can break social constructs just as easily as they create them.

  • @TheKamikazenaz
    @TheKamikazenaz Před 4 lety

    I think you've explained things very clearly and informatively mate, thanks for the video.

  • @user-cu9mr1fd5u
    @user-cu9mr1fd5u Před 3 lety +1

    I really like this video. It makes me appreciate choices made in film and TV.

  • @zachstanbery4060
    @zachstanbery4060 Před 4 lety +10

    You want to cast an actor that will let you cover his face for an entire film and he will crush it, Tom Hardy is your man. Also Karl Urban. Let those two play medieval knights and it will blow everyone’s mind.

  • @jacobnion2525
    @jacobnion2525 Před 4 lety +103

    Since when are pointed sabatons not cool anymore?? I wear those all the time. And guess who's always the centre of the party.

    • @opwards
      @opwards Před 4 lety +6

      not the greatest for playing soccer though hey! lol.

    • @delphicdescant
      @delphicdescant Před 4 lety +41

      Naturally you're at the center since everybody else forms a wide ring around you as they try to avoid getting stabbed in the shins.

    • @robertlewis6915
      @robertlewis6915 Před 4 lety +4

      Awesome for kicking people in the rear too, punches right through the pants and into the flesh for a painful wound.

    • @ironpirate8
      @ironpirate8 Před 4 lety +2

      How are they for driving?

    • @robertlewis6915
      @robertlewis6915 Před 4 lety +2

      ​@@ironpirate8 I had to get my car refitted a bit, but they're workable. just have to be careful getting out.

  • @rkstevenson5448
    @rkstevenson5448 Před 4 lety +143

    "When you went hunting orcs, what was the sword you took? Because I'm reckoning you can't answer that question."
    *laughs in Dungeons & Dragons*

    • @htennek1
      @htennek1 Před 4 lety +4

      *Laughs as ranger with Favored Enemy: Orc*

    • @restlessfrager
      @restlessfrager Před 3 lety +4

      Last time I went hunting orcs I was using a war pick, really does their tough leathery skin good.

    • @CrownRock1
      @CrownRock1 Před 3 lety +19

      As a half-orc barbarian, I find this entire discussion offensive.

    • @D2PoB
      @D2PoB Před 3 lety

      So what does it mean that I used a steel coated lute, with a axe blade running along the side?

    • @CrownRock1
      @CrownRock1 Před 3 lety +7

      @@D2PoB It means we found the bard-barian.

  • @BreakingBarriers2DIY
    @BreakingBarriers2DIY Před 2 lety

    Such a great explanation. Really liked getting this understanding of this important aspect to entertainment. You have a way of speaking that keeps me to the end.

  • @MaxJNorman
    @MaxJNorman Před 4 lety +4

    Always enjoy your vids, very insightful

  • @franciscodanconia3551
    @franciscodanconia3551 Před 4 lety +29

    16:30 When I go orc hunting, I carry an enchanted flanged mace, a heater shield, and a Rondel dagger. I would also use a bow, but my dexterity is only a 9, so I usually miss anything with an AC above 12 or so.

    • @carbon1255
      @carbon1255 Před 4 lety +1

      They have a high reduction so blunt weapons are a good bet, but you are better off with heavy armour and a 2h tetsubou for the 2k3 damage, reduction ignore whilst keeping the knockdown chance.
      Bow build would be good with high reflexes, so your TN would be high but your DPR would be low due to the high reduction and low arrow damage, at least if the orcs wore armour. This could reduce your chance of getting tainted, but you might get one turn ko'd.
      Alternatively go magic, because magic is cheating.

    • @brucetucker4847
      @brucetucker4847 Před 4 lety +2

      I generally carry an AR-15. AR-10 if I'm expecting Uruk-hai.

    • @matthiuskoenig3378
      @matthiuskoenig3378 Před 4 lety +1

      I carry a monomolecular sword while riding my baneblade

    • @williamcasey1927
      @williamcasey1927 Před 4 lety

      I sell all of the weapons listed in this thread. I make out like a bandit, and avoid battlefields like the plague. Im an aging klutz!

  • @siegfriedkleinmartins7816

    I can see the love you have for you work and historical accuracy in your hands.
    These are hands of a real blacksmith.

  • @sea-ferring
    @sea-ferring Před 3 lety

    really great points - nicely done

  • @lindworm5384
    @lindworm5384 Před 4 lety +187

    LOTR is a proof that it is possible to make good and practical fantasy swords/armor in the movie, pity novadays noone doesnt even try and care about such things

    • @m.s.79
      @m.s.79 Před 4 lety +10

      Funnily enough, i dont think that the books describe any form of body armour other than mail. So the movies are, in a certain sense historically inaccurate.

    • @SuperAWaC
      @SuperAWaC Před 4 lety +7

      @UCuis6c20HsKgWdIwdMbGmJg platemail is not specifically mentioned, however, plate helmets are so it's really not too much of a stretch. ornate helmets are a big deal through all ages in middle earth.

    • @fireteammichael1777
      @fireteammichael1777 Před 4 lety +13

      The books are better! Sorry, had to be that person... though considering Tolkien's probably my favorite author and his works, my most cherished!

    • @Loccyster
      @Loccyster Před 4 lety +24

      @@fireteammichael1777, books are almost always better because the films/tv shows will rarely, if ever, meet the expectations of our imaginations.

    • @juliantrueman6542
      @juliantrueman6542 Před 4 lety +16

      Swords and non-plate were good. But stuff like the gondor armour suffers from a lot of the same fantasy design issues as most fantasy plate does. Breastplates go way too low, the shoulders articulate way too loosely, the weird articulated tassets, total lack of throat or lower limb protection, etc.

  • @DJHalfbarr
    @DJHalfbarr Před 4 lety +119

    Always found the complete removal of colour from movie history interesting, as per your flowery scabbard - first lesson was the room of heads in the Vatican, heads from now marble white statues (removed by the catholics in the cultural cleansing), but still painted in lurid colours, as they were in the day - Apollo's big blue cartoon eyes stick in my memory. I have read the interior of Castles were festooned in colour, yet Hollywood has them as bare stone, as they are now, as ruins. Would love to see just a few shows/films do something 100% accurately, just so we could experience the true culture shock of history. Thanks for the video.

    • @LayneBenofsky
      @LayneBenofsky Před 4 lety +12

      Many cathedrals, too, were wildly colored and painted before many of the "puritan" style movements in later centuries. It's such a funny thing we're missing out on. :)

    • @stubmandrel
      @stubmandrel Před 4 lety +6

      @@LayneBenofsky Visit Stirling Castle and see the restored Stirling heads for a great example.

    • @broncosgjn
      @broncosgjn Před 4 lety +14

      The ancient Greek iconic white marble buildings. Not so much. Scientific analysis has recently discovered microscopic paint samples in the stone. They were wildly colored in primary colors. So were the clothing worn by the Greeks. No white togas at all.

    • @sirrathersplendid4825
      @sirrathersplendid4825 Před 4 lety +7

      Grahame Nicholson - Yep, the Elgin Marbles. All technicolor.
      We did see a glimpse of the colour of the Ancient World in that excellent TV series Rome, but such treats are rare.

    • @kenduffy5397
      @kenduffy5397 Před 4 lety +1

      @Sir Rather Splendid... & unfortunately the reason that AWESOME Show was cut back by 2 or 3 seasons short as it was originally intended to run for by Hirst ( I think 🤔 it was Hirst? maybe not ) Is because it had already had gone WAY over Budget by Millions unfortunately! It's sucks we live in this“NOT interest in History” Century!

  • @darkomalfly1
    @darkomalfly1 Před 3 lety

    I've been engrossed in these videos for a few days. Thanks for the awesome content!

  • @DavidGonzalez-so1eb
    @DavidGonzalez-so1eb Před 3 lety

    Alright. I have Never Said it before in those terms but, that was the best ever historical analysis of filmmaking I have ever had the opportunity to hear and see In deed. Thank you so much... And please, keep going with the videos, I enjoy them so much.

  • @KeefsCattys
    @KeefsCattys Před 4 lety +3

    Such an interesting and insightful video . Many thanks

  • @braddalrymple8615
    @braddalrymple8615 Před 4 lety +3

    This is the third video CZcams has shown me of your work in the last week. I think you are incredible source of knowledge and if this video was a cudgel I know people I would beat to death with it. Thank you for saying the things that we need to do here even if we don't want to and reminding us that there's more things to theatrical production than historical accuracy. You've made a subscriber out of me!

  • @AlanWinterboy
    @AlanWinterboy Před 4 lety

    The most interesting video I've seen in awhile. Well done, thank you!

  • @commanderlabelle1
    @commanderlabelle1 Před 4 lety +3

    Hey :) Thank you so much for enlightening us! I assumed that some of the "inaccurateness" (...that I actually notice, I am by no means an expert on that) partially comes from the requirements you mentioned like seeing the actors faces, or being able to move properly; and some of it maybe stems from bad research, or lack of interest. But it is good to know that advisors are mostly asked to help make movies and series as accurate as possible. I am not bothered when I see things that seem "historically wrong". But it is good to know more about the various reasons behind the conscious decision, or even necessity to do things a certain way.

  • @macfilms9904
    @macfilms9904 Před 4 lety +9

    This was an excellent primer on many of the decisions that go into the historical accuracy (or lack) of a show. I started in Hollywood as a costumer, and worked most of my life in TV & film seeing the kinds of compromises you address here. A pet peeve of mine has always been the lack of helmets, or hats, on main characters in historical shows (up thru the great hat rejection of the 1960s) - but the lowest common denominator of a viewer must be able to distinguish characters in quick shots, and that won't happen if they have a helmet or hat on (just think of the bizarre & torturous lengths characters go to in removing helmets in the middle of combat in a film!). One point you didn't mention is how all the correct historical weapons & armor in the world go right out the window if an A list celebrity 'can't' learn to wield it, or just doesn't 'feel' it represents his or her character - the director will just say 'right, what else do you have?' and now it is on you to solve.

    • @alexaumeyer3573
      @alexaumeyer3573 Před 4 lety +1

      To distinguish a character you can give him a distinguish helmet or shield so that can be easy solved and yes this did happen in combat that William the conqueror removed his helmet to show he was still alive .

    • @kevinsullivan3448
      @kevinsullivan3448 Před 4 lety +1

      The only caveat is when the character is completely distinguishable even when wearing a helmet. You are never going to not know which Avenger Tony Stark is... Or which character is Darth Vader. The trick is to associate the character with the helmet on before we learn who the actor is. Then when we see the distinctive helmet we know who is wearing it. But then they would just get the helmets wrong every time.

  • @Leispada
    @Leispada Před 4 lety +43

    I enjoy how you look like the smithy, but speak like the scholar
    That moment you start mix and matching your DnD character

    • @balrok9959
      @balrok9959 Před 4 lety +7

      Hands of a dwarf and mind of an elf!

    • @jeffbenton6183
      @jeffbenton6183 Před 4 lety +2

      @@balrok9959 Now that's just racial stereotyping ;)

    • @Leispada
      @Leispada Před 4 lety

      @Afqwa You raise a good point. Though I'd wager that while they were highly skilled at making weapons and armors -being topshelf artisans, they would not be able to read/write and do higher math.
      The question then becomes 'what defines a scholar?'

    • @Leispada
      @Leispada Před 4 lety

      @Afqwa lol, fair. it wouldn't be an exaggeration that im going off of skits like that :D

  • @yathomaheads
    @yathomaheads Před 3 lety

    No muss, no fuss; this was a genuinely super informative video and I'm glad it showed up on my feed. Cheers!

  • @nielsandersen6164
    @nielsandersen6164 Před 2 lety

    This would definitely have earned my subscription if I not for the fact that I’ve been a subscriber for years. Thank you so much for creating exceptional, exciting and educational videos like this one.

  • @lutzderlurch7877
    @lutzderlurch7877 Před 4 lety +13

    On the gaudy colours and flower decorations, I would say it is a self fulfilling prophecy:
    For fear of the character being perceived unmanly, they are clad and armed dull and colourless.
    But the audience always sees serious manly dudes in black and brown, and is conditioned to expect a borefest aesthetic.
    I have to say, a decent person who. Ommands respect, can do so in a flowery costume just as well, if he is woth his salt as an actor.

    • @RazorO2Productions
      @RazorO2Productions Před 4 lety

      Lutz der Lurch Like Errol Flynn?

    • @theblancmange1265
      @theblancmange1265 Před 4 lety

      I was disappointed to not see the Boltons in mostly pink clothes in GoT. There's Ramsay's flayed.man armour. It would be expensive and time consuming, but really badass.

    • @paavobergmann4920
      @paavobergmann4920 Před 4 lety +2

      plus the perception at the time, and thus the expectation of the onlookers, could be drastically different. Showing off how filthy rich you are by having all sorts of exquisite jewellery on you scabbard could have been ultra-manly.

  • @KevDaly
    @KevDaly Před 4 lety +74

    For The Last Viking it might've been better to paint crosses on the Saxon shields - not historically accurate either but not as out of place looking as square ones.

    • @7643764
      @7643764 Před 4 lety +3

      Sounds to me like the idea of a dumb director or producer that they had to go with.. The hairs on that show make it unbearable for me, models today don't walk around with hair that pretty and well done, how is this pretty boy in the late migration era pulling that off ? Cut it short or at least make it look bad, it's not like they had shampoo back then ffs.

    • @Aconitum_napellus
      @Aconitum_napellus Před 4 lety +15

      @@7643764 They had various kinds of soap, and they definitely did wash their hair and comb/brush it.

    • @7643764
      @7643764 Před 4 lety +6

      @@Aconitum_napellus Not enough to look like his hair. Models today don't have hair like that on a daily basis. That's just got out of expensive salon level hair.
      The character travels for a week on horseback and has impeccable hair, this is migration era europe, they weren't bathing everyday either.
      It's just too jarring for me..

    • @baysword
      @baysword Před 4 lety +2

      @@7643764 so you don't like all the long hairs in modern military movies either?

    • @7643764
      @7643764 Před 4 lety +8

      @@baysword It depends on the movie and how it looks.
      Another thing that annoys me is loose long hair combat, It's one of the worst things you could possibly do, it gets in the way of your vision and doesn't provide any benefit.
      Tie it up ffs, you're going into combat, you want things as optimal as you can get, looking cool is not relevant when it could cost your life.

  • @richardskinner4198
    @richardskinner4198 Před 4 lety

    A good and informative Vid ,thanks for this. While I have never bothered to moan about historical accuracy as I am too busy enjoying the film ,it is nice to get a deeper insight into all the work and the problems you guys in the industry face on a day to day basis and how you overcome them ,and all to entertain people like me .Thanks again.

  • @davidwickman6272
    @davidwickman6272 Před 3 lety

    One of the best videos on how to be professional on a movie set. Thank you for sharing this info!