Knife Expert Breaks Down Squid Game Knife Fight | 오징어 게임 | Scenic Fights

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Published 2021-11-17
Kali Knife Expert, Logan Lo breaks down the Squid Game (2021) knife fight between Lee Jung-jae as Seong Gi-hun (성기훈) and Park Hae-soo as Cho Sang-woo (조상우) with MMA fighter Chad Vázquez.

Here is the breakdown section for each martial arts and kali knife techniques:

00:00 Intro
00:46 Gi-hun vs Sang-woo Fight Reaction
02:04 Laguiole Steak Knives Weapon Overview - Breakdown 1 of 9
02:53 Knife Standoff Escape – Breakdown 2 of 9
03:33 Gi-hun's knife vs Sang-woo's Cloth - Breakdown 3 of 9
04:16 Logan vs Chad $45 Bet - Squid Game Reenactment
05:16 Ridge Wallet Sponsorship Advertisement
06:01 Sang-woo's Eye Gouge Attempt - Breakdown 4 of 9
07:16 Standing Headlock - Breakdown 5 of 9
10:24 Sang-woo's Cloth Choke Attempt - Breakdown 6 of 9
12:24 Knife Targeting - Breakdown 7 of 9
13:44 Logan and Chad Discuss Squid Game
14:44 Sang-woo's Knife Finisher Option - Breakdown 8 of 9
15:49 Gi-hun's Ashi Garami Option - Breakdown 9 of 9
17:39 Fight Scene Grade and Final Analysis

About Fight Scene Breakdown:

Scenic Fights’ Fight Scene Breakdown is the best martial arts fight scene breakdown that not only gives you expert analysis on the action scene, but also visually demonstrates the martial arts fight choreography.

Currently, season 1 features Pekiti Tirsia Kali Expert Logan Lo and black belt Brazilian jiu-jitsu MMA Fighter, Chad Vázquez.

Train with Logan Lo and Chad Vázquez at Paxibellum
www.paxibellum.com/scenic-fights

Watch our other fight scene breakdown episodes which includes John Wick, Captain America, Donnie Yen and more!

Let us know in the comments below, which video game, movie or anime fight scene you’d like to see us breakdown next!

About Scenic Fights:

Scenic Fights is the new place to celebrate the lifestyle and culture of martial arts practitioners, entertainers and action movie fans. We are just a bunch of martial arts action fans trying to grow a community we love. Help us by liking, sharing, hitting that notification bell and subscribing with us.

#scenicfights #fightscenebreakdown #SquidGame #Netflix #오징어 게임 #kali #fsbd #martialarts #knifefighting #expertreact

About Netflix Squid Game (2021) (Source Netflix):

Hundreds of cash-strapped players accept a strange invitation to compete in children's games. Inside, a tempting prize awaits — with deadly high stakes.

About the Characters (Source Squid Game wikia):

Seong Gi-hun (In Korean: 성기훈) is the protagonist of the South Korean Netflix drama show Squid Game. Gi-hun is a divorced and indebted chauffeur, former assembly worker, and an obsessed gambler. He is invited to play a series of children's games, the Squid Game, for a chance at a large cash prize. He accepts the offer to settle his debts without knowing about the horrors of the game.

He is portrayed by Lee Jung-jae, and by Kim Yeon-ung as a child. In English, he is voiced by Greg Chun who voices Garou, Mr Kaji, and Muzan Kibutsuji.

Cho Sang-woo (In Korean: 조상우) is the deuteragonist-turned-final antagonist of the first season of the South Korean Netflix drama Squid Game. He is Seong Gi-hun's childhood friend-turned-greatest adversary in the brutal competition for the ₩45.6 billion prize. Sang-woo is a businessman who needs the prize to pay a ₩6 billion debt and solve his financial problems, especially because they will also cause his mother's financial ruin.

He was portrayed by Park Hae-soo, and by Park Si-won as a child. In the English dub, he was voiced by Stephen Fu.

Watch the Netflix Korean hit series, Squid Game (오징어 게임):
www.netflix.com/title/80018294
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Sound designed and mixed by:
Robert Acocella
www.setandpost.com

All Comments (21)
  • @James-xr2uz
    I guess I'm right. I see Logan holding two knives, which means Chad is going to have a hard time. Wish you the best of luck, Chad.
  • @azuromesser849
    A squid game between Chad and Logan would horrific, brutal, and definitely something I would watch
  • @MostDopeChef
    “I would eliminate you for $45” 😂 man, that’s cold
  • @midnightmosesuk
    I'm one of those untrained people and, thankfully, I've not been in many fights. The headlock thing you talk about is absolutely right though. You see it every time a couple of guys have a fight outside a pub or McDonalds. Usually it ends up as a double headlock, with each idiot having hold of the other's head. I thought girls usually go for the hair, the number of times I've seen videos of girls pulling out their enemy's hair extensions, weaves and wigs would back that up. Watching a wig go flying never fails to make me laugh.
  • @Jayjay-ef2gt
    Do the Shang-Chi knife fight. (After the scaffolding fight, inside the fight club building against the weird mask dude)
  • @Break531
    Take heart, Logan! At least Chad wouldn't end you for 45 cents.
  • @James-xr2uz
    "Not wanting to lose" is stronger than "wanting to win"
  • @harshsingh8956
    I love how the guys instinctively reacts to protect whenever the other guy shows a move, even when they know they are in a safe environment and the other guy doesn't intend to hurt. That's years of training drills for you. Love your guys content keep it up. 👍👍
  • @Boleniana
    I hecking love this approach, of "these are untrained characters, and this is why it made sense for untrained people to do these actions, and THIS is what they could have done if they'd had a bit more training". I wish there were more videos like that; unfortunately, there's very few FIGHT SCENES set between people with no training where it's life-or-death stakes, so yeah, can't do analysis videos if there's no source material to work from.
  • @freestatefellow
    I think that every time y'all get a sponsor, you should analyze how it could be used in a fight :)
  • @richko
    Headlock was so common in my elementary school fights. It's pretty interesting how almost every 2nd untrained guy goes for this.
  • Hannibal vs Jack from season 2 of hannibal, has a knife fight, hand to hand and improvised weapons.
  • @IceDragon978
    You know, I'm not trained at all, but whenever I'm grabbing knives, my gut instinct is always one in a hammer grip and one in an icepick grip. It's just always felt right to hold them that way, so it's nice to have someone with actual training to cosign my noodling around.
  • @EightySix86.
    definetly one of the more disturbing episodes especially with the "tear down" from Logan, that gave me the shivers
  • @Dismiazs
    I think the reason why we naturally went to headlock and/or pin our opponent on the floor is because we just wanna show who is the stronger one and put the enemy in submission not to incapacitate them. Like how when a cat fight they don't use their main weapon, the fang, but nails that have much lower lethality while also screaming to intimidate. Compared to how a cat hunt, the way they fight looks kinda like us. I'm not a biologist, but even lions and dogs don't fight to death when they're fighting for territory.
  • @pepegya5168
    The closeup on Logan's face when he gets strangled is 👌
  • @slackbabo3858
    Are you sure about the eye gouging part? I heard about a fighting style called Gouging that Southerners in the 1700s-1800s would use, and in a book called Duels and the Roots of Violence in Missouri they say "a particularly dextrous fellow could pluck his opponent's eyeballs from their sockets with one good thrust of the thumbs"
  • A great breakdown, and a good show of how scary real-world violence is. It's raining and slipping once could spell your death, and there are knives flying everywhere. I think, for a lot of people (even people with martial arts experience), technique could quickly fly out the window with scenarios like this. Even practicing martial arts in the gym doesn't quite replicate the feral survival instinct and terror in a moment like this.
  • @MrAstro7110
    "knock the man down" gotta love JD Also how about doing the hammer fight in Old Boy (original Korean one)?