Author Topic: David Belle interviews  (Read 9343 times)

EViC

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David Belle interviews
« on: October 21, 2006, 01:06:42 PM »
I was thinking, what about a section where people can find links to / texts from as many David Belle interviews as we have seen?

This struck me when I saw the article referenced by the "ABOUT" article that I had never seen before, and another one someone found on pkaus :

http://www.comingsoon.net/news/indietopnews.php?id=14755

With b13 seems to be a lot of interviews aproaching the "What is Parkour" question from slightly different angles.
Thoughts?

David Belle interviews
« Reply #1 on: October 21, 2006, 02:07:54 PM »
Also known as "freerunning," :(

good idea, we could put them all together so people can get a "what is parkour" in david belles mind.
url=http://www.aparkour.com/]Australian Parkour Association[/url]

David Belle interviews
« Reply #2 on: October 22, 2006, 06:18:24 PM »
good idea...start catalouging them in this thread and we will start putting themin the pkpeadia

David Belle interviews
« Reply #3 on: October 23, 2006, 08:48:29 PM »
Good idea Djordje, very good idea. I'm pretty sure that was me who posted that article up on pkaus ages ago, but no one over there noticed :D. I thought it was a really good article, it had a bunch of quotes from cyril and david explaining about filming and parkour and whatnot, and even includes the basic "about getting from A-to-B efficiently" description of parkour...

Although, as pointed out it does say
Quote from: "danielm"
Also known as "freerunning," :(

at the start, but later on in the article it differentiates between parkour and freerunning, which is good. It was also interesting to hear david's thoughts on freerunning etc, which people on forums are often wondering about.
Quote from: "the article"
David had a few things to say about these separatist movements. "I took what my father taught me about Parkour and stuck to it, keeping that same philosophy. "It was a hard choice sometimes, because I had to give a lot of myself," he confessed. "Then the movement started growing and they have different views and vision and started doing their own thing. I could not control it, and I didn't want to. A lot of them wanted to be involved in the movie industry and start their career and that's it. I just stuck to the real deal from the beginning. Sebastien was walking in my shadows and copying a lot of things that I'd do and not come up with new things. I'm the original and all the others who came after are people who copied what I was doing, but they're reasons for doing Parkour is not as noble a mindset."


I have a few other bits of interviews from various places, but I don't know how great the translation is...

There's a bit of interview with david in this little documentary news item thing, from that big training session that was on in berlin a few months ago. The area they'd constructed to train in looks awesome actually. This is actually a pretty good documentary overall, it really emphasises the safety and training and stuff. The only problems are the mention of that 14-year old kid dying while doing parkour (what I heard was that this wasn't the case at all - he fell off a roof, and was originally believed to be doing parkour but it later turned out he'd been taking drugs and was just being stupid, and certainly wasn't a real practitioner). Oh and the bit about Yann from the yamakasi awaiting the day when there's someone better than him (what about david belle? oops!). Anyway, that's all a bit beside the point, so here's the vid:
http://www.parkour-videos.com/tv-report-pro7-focus-tv-12-05-2006 (I hope this is the right one!)
The translations were done afterwards by Andi I believe who features in the vid.

There's also the interview with Pierre Morel and David Belle and that American guy from when david was in America for the B13 premiere.
I haven't watched this one the whole way through (curse dialup internet!) so I don't know if it's any good:
http://www.americanparkour.com/content/view/650/163/

Of course there's also the huge post by Pkdanno off parkour.net that went with the video of david's bailed sdc-sdb.

There's buckets of TV reports with appearances by david belle on http://www.parkour-videos.com/, including a bunch of old french one. I haven't seen most of these, except for the old TF1 french one, so I have no idea whether there's anything interesting in there...

Finally this thread on parkour.net has a bunch of questions which david belle will apparently answer eventually, so it could be useful eventually:
http://parkour.net/parkour/newbb/viewtopic.php?topic_id=6559

I'm sure there's lots more but I can't think of any off the top of my head. I hope these help anyway...

EViC

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David Belle interviews
« Reply #4 on: October 23, 2006, 11:46:35 PM »
Good stuff Zoop.
I really liked the article you found on pkaus, I just didn't want to post again because my DjordjePAWA username was active in that thread  :lol:

Nice finds, keep it up!

EViC

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David Belle interviews
« Reply #5 on: November 14, 2006, 11:28:47 AM »
Nice stuff getting this up and running Chippa.
 :)

David Belle interviews
« Reply #6 on: November 29, 2006, 10:10:24 AM »
added some more articles

nice
« Reply #7 on: December 26, 2006, 11:10:07 PM »
good work guys this was up quick

David Belle interviews
« Reply #8 on: May 01, 2007, 09:43:51 PM »
the link for the seb/U$F article doesnt work '401 error'.
also, i think the recent article from the new yorker deserves to be added.

David Belle interviews
« Reply #9 on: May 01, 2007, 11:53:47 PM »
Oh and the bit about Yann from the yamakasi awaiting the day when there's someone better than him (what about david belle? oops!).


I don't think he was being arrogant against David, he would be meaning his students or group that he trains, that he's passing the knowledge on to, to one day surpass his ability as all instructors or teachers would want.
That was the way I took it anyway,  I may be wrong.  Good stuff Zoop :)
Complete - Every movement..... Finish - Each technique.... 1≡0

David Belle interviews
« Reply #10 on: May 04, 2007, 09:54:54 AM »
was wondering how long it would take Urban Fruitcakes to get rid of that interview


DB interview added to pkpedia

EViC

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Re: David Belle interviews
« Reply #11 on: August 08, 2008, 10:45:17 AM »
Warning: this topic has not been posted in for at least 120 days.
Unless you're sure you want to reply, please consider starting a new topic.

lololol

I feel like I'm in vista



ADD ADD ADD ADD



ADD ADD ADD ADD

Maybe even link this video in the what is parkour section

Re: David Belle interviews
« Reply #12 on: August 08, 2008, 11:45:04 AM »
is already added, to the new parkourpedia.....coming to a website near you soon

EViC

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Re: David Belle interviews
« Reply #13 on: August 18, 2010, 10:29:38 AM »
Entrevista a David Belle em Berlim


&&

David Belle – The World is a Playground
Posted by misterparkour on November 3, 2009

What follows is the video transcript of a fantastic interview with David Belle called “The World is a Playground.” At the time when we published the interview about 5 months ago we called the video, “…one of the best interviews ever conducted with David…” With the video transcribed and the text posted below you can now read and study the words of the founder himself. If you would like to view the video please click here.

David Belle : The World is a playground

Hello, I’m David Belle, actor, choreographer and also behind the Parkour movement.

Parkour is a real training method to face obstacles. It’s to be strong to be useful. The goal really is to train thinking “what can I do with it”?

In real Parkour, there’s no flip. The goal is to keep it simple, efficient and to train movements in which you trust.

When you’re learning parkour, everything in front of you is training. When you start, during the first two or three years, you never stop. Day and night. Every time you see something you’ll get interested in climbing it, because you know that’s when you’re building your training. Then, with time, when you’re pretty much done everything there was to do, you calm down and see what’s left. At that point, it’s really “the feeling”, it happens that I don’t train at all for three weeks or one month, two months and then for one week I’ll train day and night.

Movements are simple. Cat pass, arm jump, precison jumps, saut de fond [jumping off high stuff], I’d say if you really wanted to know all the different techniques. But Parkour is a mix of them all. You should train sauts de fonds to train your thighs. Precision jumps to help focus and be able to land on a small rail. Focusing is really important. Then, running to build stamina. Parkour is a mix of them all.

Doing Parkour is pretty much forgetting those paths socity traced for us and making our own. Even though people say “Don’t go there, you’ll get hurt”, we’re adults, we know what’s dangerous. Take a little kid, tell him not to do something, he’ll do it. But put him in front of a big gap: he’s not stupid, he won’t jump.

When I’m on top of a building, it’s just like is I was on top of a mountain. I don’t look at the mountain, I look at the sky and I’m comfortable with that height. I could be on a roof or on a big rock: it’s the same for me. It’s a quest for height, for freedom, to take paths no one else takes, were nobody else has been: that quest is what makes Parkour interesting.

The wrong way of doing Parkour is to impress, it’s not a sport where you jump off things and show people you get hurt and you don’t care. No. The goal is to end up in good health, to respect your body, respect others, and not to move with a group showing yourself just because it’s new the crazy thing around.

My brother is a fireman, my father was a fireman too and my grandfather was a fireman for 32 years. So, it’s in our family. It’s a bit for them too. My father went to Vietnam, then went with the firemen and thought me this art. I made it into something more definite: Parkour. The goal is to become more and more confident with their body and for that, Parkour is only a complement.

My advice to young traceurs would be: it’s normal that when you’re 15-16 you want to be someone. But when you’re training Parkour with passion, if you’re good, people will notice you. Don’t go around saying: Hey look at this new move I just got. No. We used to say: if it’s good, we’ll tell you. Do it for yourself first. If people like it or not, who cares? As long as you feel good doing it. Now if with that spirit people notice you then good for you. But you should do it for yourself.

Thank you.

Re: David Belle interviews
« Reply #14 on: August 18, 2010, 05:11:01 PM »
Nice find.
Obsessed is just a word the lazy use to describe the dedicated.

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