Комментарии:
Worshipping demons
Ответитьmovi kon si hai full movi in hindi
ОтветитьKali stop motion.
ОтветитьYeah! Thrat' Kali!
ОтветитьЭто возможно, Богиня Дурге. Будьте осторожны.
ОтветитьTípico predador
ОтветитьSimilar to Ashura/Shiva in Prince of Persia (SNES)
ОтветитьThe stop motion in this is phenomenal and really holds up, the automatis, semi ridged movement really givesit a feeling of a living stone statue, and is almost as good as what you'd see in a similar scene nowadays
Ответитьsuper cool : )
ОтветитьWhat happened here? Can anyone explain for me, please?
ОтветитьAs a person who always scared of statues, this scene traumatized me as a kid. Stop motion scene is much scarier than modern cgi that we have now.
ОтветитьWatching this as a kid in the 80's i found it both amazing an terrifying.
ОтветитьStill creepy
ОтветитьI would like to hve one, to entertain me
ОтветитьVery scary!!!!!
ОтветитьRelax this real!
ОтветитьNgl these effects look great even today. Wtf
ОтветитьMagnificent!!!
ОтветитьΑΧ ΘΕΑ ΚΑΛΙ ΜΟΥ. ΕΧΩ ΚΑΙ ΕΓΩ ΠΟΛΛΟΥΣ ΕΧΘΡΟΥΣ ΠΟΥ ΜΕ ΓΥΡΝΑΝΕ.ΜΑΚΑΡΙ ΝΑ ΣΕ ΕΙΧΑ ΒΟΗΘΟ ΜΟΥ ΝΑ ΤΟΥΣ ΕΞΟΝΤΩΝΑ.ΘΑ ΓΙΝΟΤΑΝ ΕΝΑ ΟΝΕΙΡΟ ΜΟΥ ΠΡΑΓΜΑΤΙΚΟΤΗΤΑ.
Ответитьவணக்கம்
ОтветитьTony and the other three men were charged with conspiracy to commit armed robbery
Ответитьstill super sexy
Ответитьkkkkkkkkkkkkkk que coisa tosca
ОтветитьI thinl.it’s Natraja, not kali.
ОтветитьChuslim's ass filled brain😂
ОтветитьTypical Western orientalist perspective
ОтветитьSorry this is not Kali but Nataraja (Dancing Shiva)
Ответитьkali is very much like Buddha.
ОтветитьI always thought this was Indiana Jones.
ОтветитьIt's not even mata kali it's more like a not so well made statue of lord natraja the dancer form of Shiva. All in all great scene but god's ain't dancing for no one lol
ОтветитьThis freaked me out when i was little i was scared of statues until i was 5.
ОтветитьLalrothang haoginlal
ОтветитьO Mago S.L.😂😂😂😂
ОтветитьI Love It you can see the shadows and dust Ray Harryhausen was a genius
ОтветитьМое почтение богине Кали, Парвати.
ОтветитьThe Power of Hinduism
ОтветитьAs an Indian and Himdu, I am not offended, instead really well done with the screenplay.
ОтветитьRavi shenket
ОтветитьNataraj
ОтветитьImagine thinking anyone can be mightier than Might itself. She is the universe Herself personified.
ОтветитьAbsolute love this !
ОтветитьShadows and dust I LOVE IT!!! Ray Harryhausen was a Genius
ОтветитьLove the stop-motion skills in this movie, and for those whining about how it is not an accurate representation of Kali... quit ya b*tchin and enjoy the cringe.
ОтветитьAs if Kali could be commanded 😂
ОтветитьCant stop myself hahahahhahahh
ОтветитьIt will certainly sound obvious, but - as much as I greatly appreciate Harryhausen's works (the Cyclops in The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad is among my favorite monsters) - I think that stop motion particularly stands out on skeletons and statues, given the movements at shots that this animation entails, especially knowing that he had to animate the movements of six different arms and integrate them into a film with real actors.
Little P.S.: is there seriously anyone who would be offended by a Kali appearing in a 1974 film?
Cultural Appropriation at its finest,if this scene would have realised now or early 2000s.There would have definitely a controversy against it.This is disrespect to millions of people who pray to kali as their mother.
ОтветитьThat's actually Shiva not Khali
ОтветитьIs there a name for the music?
ОтветитьHey: I just wanted to revisit this video and stress that I apologize if anyone finds this offensive. :( I in no way intended to insult anyone's deity and am truly very, very sorry if this has caused distress. (I myself am a religious person and know just how hurtful it feels when someone makes a mockery of what you hold to be highest and dearest, and don't wish that on anyone, regardless of what religion it is.) I just love the creativity and diligence that went into this work of art, and think modern films lack a lot of the 'heart' that one may find in older films like this one.
If you still must take this scene personally, I ask you to perhaps think of it this way: This is NOT anyone usurping a god; this is just a sorcerer controlling a statue, a piece of stone, through black magic. After all, this statue falls off a ledge and breaks into a bunch of pieces in the battle scene where Koura bewitches the statue to fight for him; no real god would break or fall apart, of course (and no real god would allow itself to be controlled by a mere human, either!), but stone certainly would! :)
So, again, I'm very sorry, and hope that perhaps you can see this through my eyes someday, with wonderment and appreciation instead of anger and pain. But if not, I fully accept and understand that. Peace~