OP
Lotuswheels22
Yellow Belt
- Joined
- Oct 2, 2019
- Messages
- 23
- Reaction score
- 0
- Thread Starter
- #21
Probably not on a local level.
Maybe I'll go the more fiction route like they did in Karate Kid/Cobra Kai series.
How do you get a writer to never speak to you again?
Tell him "This is great! A few suggestions..."
No one wants to speak to me now?
Honestly, I think that making up a fictional martial art style is probably your best bet. If you use a real martial art style and depict it very inaccurately, then people who actually do that style will complain or laugh at you (see: the recent Nicholas Cage "jiu-jitsu" movie, which BJJ people were making fun of for months). But if you make up a fictional style, then you can take more artistic license. I think it's still good to ground it in reality and draw inspiration from real martial arts training and tournaments, if the story is supposed to be somewhat realistic. (Heck, even if it's more of a superhero/fantasy thing, it's still good to have some realistic aspects, to make the fantasy elements more believable.)
I think I will, afterall this is still fiction. The Cobra Kai series has done a good job of doing it. I thought about adding fantasy elements but that might make it feel less grounded and I'm not sure how the martial arts communities would react to it. There was going to be supernatural elements with the mascots of each schools like a lion spirit, wolf spirit, viper, chimera, etc. But if I make it based off of real martial art rules but with made up styles mixed of different skills, I think it will work.
I heard a lot of martial art schools aren't doing much competitions now or even teaching at clubs like regular classes. Is this true? I can set the story pre-covid or just a different universe.