JKD (Jeet Kuon Do)These are the best ones closest to my areaand i want to know which one is the best in terms of fighting (got the most effective and powerful swift moves)also one which has the best weaopn training and teaches you good trapping and pressure point techniquesWhich is the one which is shown in the movies most and what movies You dont need answer all of them just the main question which one of these are the best for fightingthnxxx
All 3 styles are great, but I think jkd is more attuned to the reality of the street. There are no preconceptions- what you learn now you can use tonite. They are different things, however.
Er... fake-ish. Any approach that emphasizes stand-up combating and have an impact on-most effective approaches would not have as well an reply as grappling/groundfighting techniques, however hitting any person is larger than not anything in any respect. I additionally do not suppose that the majority streetfights turn out to be at the floor, except you imply one fighter finally ends up at the floor upon getting sucker-punched. And kung fu is a beautiful extensive time period, and it isn't a well concept to color all Chinese techniques, of which I was once as soon as informed there have been over four hundred distinct varieties, with the identical brush. Some techniques, corresponding to puppy boxing, truthfully revolve round a downed opponent attacking a status opponent. But if you are pronouncing that finding out CMA's won't make you a well groundfighter, I agree.
Having done all three systems let me say this, fujian white crane has excellent trapping and pressure point fighting methods contained in the forms, it also teaches weapons such as the long pole, butterfly knives and long sword. It is idea for close in fighting as it protects the centreline (like wing chun), the kicks are low and thus practical. Jeet Kune Do can mean anything you want it to, no two clubs are the same but the good ones stress full-contact fighting, bag work and grappling - all useful stuff on the street and I should know having fought there a few times. Nam Pai is a lovely flowing style but a bit flowery for my tastes and not as practical as the above two. In the movies and on TV you get a lot of Jeet Kune do stuff, mostly done by actors pretending to be special forces guys. I haven't seen much crane or nam pai, which is a shame really.
Fujian White Crane is also known as Yung Chun Pey Hok in the Fujian dialect. I will standardise the Chinese terms in Mandarin. So, Fujian White Crane is Yung Chun Bai He(r) It is a Lan Pai (nam-pai) chuan. The 'nam pai chuan' that you refers to is a synthesised competitive form with elements from a few well-known Lan-Pai styles, like Hung Chia. Lan pai refers to all Chinese Martial Arts originating south of the Yellow River. So, Fujian White Crane is a lan-pai, JKD is also a lan-pai as it draws techniques from Yung Chun (Wing Chun in Cantonese) which itself is a lan pai, being originating in Foshan, Guangzhou. Fujian White Crane is a complete martial arts system in the 'lan-pai' sense. Except for the movies, it has all that the asker is looking for. As in most cases, Fujian White Crane is a general name of a family of White Cranes with each style closely resembling to each other yet with different emphasis in attack and defence techniques. I think that there are about three types of Fujian White Cranes. Why in the lan-pai sense? Comparatively speaking, between the Northern (bei) and Southern (lan) martial arts, the latter do not have wrestling. To the Northern martial arts, bei-pai, Mongolian wrestling is part of the syllabus and that completes the wholeness of Chinese martial arts.