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I've done a lot of this during my years of teaching but it was mainly with certain people. Whenever they got that Hollywood kung fu vibe, I would step on it and I would step on any of the dreams that were tied to it lol. I teach Kung Fu. I do not teach Fight choreography. In this class fight choreography will get you hurt.I also teach a weapon art that includes swords and knives. Part of the role of a teacher (in my view) is to disabuse those notions, not disown those students.
The reason I'm so hard on students about that is because I fell into same perception that kung fu is supposed to look like the moves so I kept trying to use it like that and failed. It took about 2 years for me to get that out my mind. I knew from the start it was incorrect but it didn't make it any easier to erase all that I had seen in martial arts movies and how people watching those moves and think that they understand the martial arts system by watching the movie. Since then, I don't watch many martial arts movies and I don't pay attention to the fight scenes like I did back then.
But it's like you stated "Address those inaccuracies not the person." The problem isn't the person. It's the perception that kung fu is what David Carradine is doing and is how it works in real life. When I was kid I remember seeing some kids trying to fight at Tai Chi slow speed. They said that their movements conserved energy lol. Gotta love the 70's and 80's mindset.