The ancient Roman gladiators actually preferred to have a decent layer of fat on them. It helped shield the important stuff better, particularly from glancing surface hits with blades. (Of course the ancient world's idea of a "decent layer" was probably not much fat by 21st century American standards.)
I imagine that a topic like this would depend greatly on the style/conditions of the fighting.
The old gladiators were also were allowed to have more protection on their arms & legs than their torsos. It made for a better fight (and a longer career for the good fighters) when the limbs didn't get injured as much.
The "ultimate warrior" character that has skin like a model's, with no scars, bruises, blemishes of any type. What, they never had any boo-boos learning to fight anyone with a sword?
Yes, I'm directing that to anyone involved in the show, "Into the Badlands" but it's almost everywhere in the genre...
On that same note seeing a "warrior" with a bodybuilder's proportions - as well as the perfect spray on tan.
I think that the big warrior stereotype comes from the common misconception that swords and armor were heavy so you'd need to be big to properly wield a sword and wear armor when in fact neither were particularly heavy. A typical European sword only weighed a few pounds or so, lighter than some modern military rifles and a mail shirt were no heavier than modern body armor. The biggest misconception is that plate armor was extremely heavy, which it wasn't, it was heavier than a mail shirt for certain but it wasn't so heavy that if you fell you were turtled. Plate armor was individually fitted to its wearer and offered minimal encumberance, Henry VIII was reputed to be able to cartwheels in his armor, and as far as weight goes, all of the weight was distributed all across the body so the perceived weight is probably less than modern military body armor.
I find this hard to believe.
Not that a person could do cartwheels in armor - that Henry VIII could do cartwheels at all.
Henry VIII was a pretty agile man before he was injured. Remember, he wasn't 18 yet when he became king. He was badly injured in a jousting incident in his late 20s which many historians feel led to the later medical problems and obesity he suffered from in his 30s and 40s...
I've heard that too and it makes a certain amount of sense and not to mention that nutrition then wasn't the same as it is now so naturally they wouldn't get as lean as they can get now a days, though they were kept on a well regulated diet. They also didn't have any of the kinds of work out equipment that we have these days to target individual muscle groups to help get that chiseeld/sculpted look.
As far as arm and leg protection goes, that depended entirely on what class of gladiator they were, unlike what you see in Hollywood gladiators were divided into specific classes with weapons and armor unique to each class. While none wore full armor of any sort they almost all wore a helmet of some sort, the design of which was unique to their particular class. Some carried shields while others didn't, those that did usually were armed with just a sword while those without shields were often armed with a longer weapon like a trident. The Romans were very big on gladiator classes being a series of trade offs, reach for armor, armor for mobility, etc, and they loved pairing gladiators of dissimilar types against each other like a lighter armored gladiator against one with a shield, you seldom, if ever, saw 2 gladiators of the same, or even similar class go against each other.
Pretty much any movie made by Hallmark Channel...
You take that back! Everybody needs a good cry now and then!! I mean, not me, but somebody else.
Brian
True. And nobody ever bleeds out in movies the amount they would in real life.Someone gets their throat slit and they are dead in 2 seconds. I've never actually seen someone get their throat cut, but I would imagine it would take more than a second or two to bleed out and die.
True. And nobody ever bleeds out in movies the amount they would in real life.
I wish I didn't know this first-hand, but someone bleeding out creates a massive pool of the red stuff.
If they cut or pierce the carotid it's pretty much insta-blackout from the loss of blood pressure in the brain and death within a minute or so.Someone gets their throat slit and they are dead in 2 seconds. I've never actually seen someone get their throat cut, but I would imagine it would take more than a second or two to bleed out and die.
Southpark handled that.Whilst we're on the death subject.
How come dead bodies in movies/tv never fart? I've shifted more dead people than I care to remember and they all let out a sneaky one as the gasses start shifting. So potent they could knock the flies off a bucket of s***, strip the paint off a footlocker!
And they've never crapped or wet themselves either. Hollywood gives a lot more dignity in death than actually exists.
Whilst we're on the death subject.
How come dead bodies in movies/tv never fart? I've shifted more dead people than I care to remember and they all let out a sneaky one as the gasses start shifting. So potent they could knock the flies off a bucket of s***, strip the paint off a footlocker!
And they've never crapped or wet themselves either. Hollywood gives a lot more dignity in death than actually exists.
Darker, and more of a brownish red.Yeah, and blood in the movies never seems to dry out. They come to the death scene days later and the blood is still wet and bright red. Doesn't dried blood turn a lot darker?