Mark wrote:Makes sense, if you need to parry, you don't want to think to long about how.
Or, more importantly, in what position your sword hand will be left after the parry. In saber, for example, it's often preferable to execute a high parry, even though it's a bit slower - because the head is a valid target, and a quick flick of the wrist from an overhead parry can often turn into a scoring riposte to the top of your opponent's noggin.
I can't stand nothing dull
I got the high gloss luster
I'll massacre your ass as fast
as Bull offed Custer
"All this has happened before --"
"But it doesn't have to happen again. Not if we make up our minds to change. Take a different path. Right here, right now."
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Taggart: I got it. I got it.
Hedley Lamarr: You do?
Taggart: We'll work up a "Number 6" on 'em.
Hedley Lamarr: "Number 6"? I'm afraid I'm not familiar with that one...
Taggart: Well, that's where we go a-ridin' into town, a whampin' and whompin' every livin' thing that moves within an inch of its life. Except the women folks, of course.
Hedley Lamarr: You spare the women?
Taggart: NAW. We rape the shit out of them at the Number 6 Dance later on.
Hedley Lamarr: Marvelous.
"All this has happened before --"
"But it doesn't have to happen again. Not if we make up our minds to change. Take a different path. Right here, right now."
There is only one way of avoiding the war – that is the overthrow of this society. However, as we are too weak for this task, the war is inevitable. -L. Trotsky, 1939
I figured someone would. So I'll ask you, what is/was your reaction to the "we'll ride through and kill the first born male child in every household. {contemplation}..too jewish."
I've often wondered how they (and show's like the Simpsons) manage to get away with their lack of political correctness.
"All this has happened before --"
"But it doesn't have to happen again. Not if we make up our minds to change. Take a different path. Right here, right now."
In the case of Brooks' films, the Jewish jokes are often presented as in-jokes; as in Blazing Saddles, when Mel as the Indian chief looks at the black family and says, "Schvartzes?" In some way or another most of those jokes make most mainstream Jews say, "I can relate," rather than, "That's offensive." I'd guess most of the hardcore fundie Jews aren't big fans of comedic film.
In general, the same applies to an extent - in The Simpsons where Krusty's father was discovered, for example, there weren't any jokes which denigrating Judaism - the jokes merely referenced it. If you're the sort of person, Jewish or not, who would actively find something to be offended about, you're probably not watching The Simpsons anyway. I'd probably be more offended by some of the messages on the sign in front of Springfield Catholic Church if I were Catholic, than by any of the Jewish references.
I can't stand nothing dull
I got the high gloss luster
I'll massacre your ass as fast
as Bull offed Custer
Part of it is also that Brooks' makes Jewish viewers feel like they have "insider knowledge." Ex.: in Robin Hood: Men in Tights, Cary Elwes dumps a dead boar on the table in front of Richard Lewis (a la Errol Flynn.) Lewis looks up in exasperation and says: "Traif!" Now, not many gentiles would know what that means. BTW, traif is the Yiddish word for non-kosher food (like pork,) derived from the Hebrew word terefah, "torn." (I'll only other explaining that derivation if someone really wants to know.)
I can't stand nothing dull
I got the high gloss luster
I'll massacre your ass as fast
as Bull offed Custer