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[–] ChillyHellion [S] 0 points 1 point (+1|-0) ago  (edited ago)

It's common to do stunts and action sequences at reduced speed and then speed them up on film after the fact. I can only speculate the reasons why, but it would make sense to add precision, prevent mistakes, and prevent injury during fight scenes. Chances are whenever you watch a fight scene it's been sped up at least a little bit. I guess in this case the actors had practiced this fight for so long that they were comfortable doing it at a fast pace. It's pretty impressive because parts of the fight itself are rather quick. I can't imagine doing the same performance without error.

Edit: Bruce Lee was famous for this as well. In fact, he was so fast in fact that instead of speeding up his footage, they had to slow it down. Quote from this website:

Most martial art films are sped up to make fighting scenes appear fast, but not Bruce Lee's. His moves were too fast to be captured on the regular 24 frames per second film - so they had to film him at 32 fps, and run the film slower so you can see his moves.