dedicated to the discussion of the chinese internal martial arts of xingyiquan, baguazhang, taijiquan, related arts, and anything else best discussed over a bottle of rum
Old chap looks solid and more like kinda of Xing I for me, not like teacher of the "flowery show " style but I`m not versed in those styles, anyway, if he teach in Chinese army, it should be something more practical, don`t you think Ron?
If some member/s/ care to make brief translation- we can get the answer ...
Looks like Liu He Quan, which is one of the Northern Shaolin styles that modern wushu longfist is based on. Xing Yi also borrowed a lot of concepts from this style. Basic training in Liu He starts out a bit like modern wushu with an emphasis on speed, flexibility and athleticism and adds Xing Yi like power generation as the practitioner advances. Skip to ~10 minutes in to see some Xin Yi Liu He forms.