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Marduk


MissionVao

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Ja ga vidim uvece posle koncerta kako uredno broji pare od njih, mora da je to taj rad 'u jebote kakve ovce, ne mogu da vjerujem da keshiraju pare za ono sranje od Wormwooda i nase usrane koncerte dje se ja derem i kreveljim jer me chmar razbija od ljute papricice, a ostatak ekipe kao svira instrumente, a ono sve nesto drljaju i lupaju kao kreteni". Ako je tako, svaka mu cast.

:haha:

pa verovatno je i tako.meni se cinio kao ok lik,ali takvo ponasanje na bini mi je skroz neopravdano..jer ma sta bilo u tom bekstejdzu mogao se samo pomeriti ili zvati obezbedjenje,onakav karate kid potez je skroz bio nepotreban...sve se to moglo resiti na mnogo mirniji nacin.

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Guest Шејтанов Чобан

Није у реду пењати се на бину а исто тако није у реду ни ударати оне који се попну горе.За то служи обезбеђење.

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Guest Шејтанов Чобан

Правила постоје да би се кршила,а опет и поштовала зарад одржања неког реда.Никад ми не би пало на памет да се попнем тако,а опет ако девојка воли анално што да не.Нећеш ти на силу

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  • 2 weeks later...

Što se tiče Fantasie i te pesme, tek sad pročitah:

 

Night on Bald Mountain/Ave Maria

 

* Musical score:

o Modest Mussorgsky – Night on Bald Mountain and

o Franz Schubert – Ave Maria

* Directed by Wilfred Jackson

* Story development: Campbell Grant, Arthur Heinemann, and Phil Dike

* Art direction: Kay Nielsen, Terrell Stapp, Charles Payzant and Thor Putnam

* Background painting: Merle Cox, Ray Lockrem, Robert Storms, and W. Richard Anthony

* Special English lyrics for Ave Maria by Rachel Field

* Choral director: Charles Henderson

* Operatic solo: Julietta Novis

* Animation supervision: Vladimir Tytla

* Animation: John McManus, William N. Shull, Robert W. Carlson, Jr., Lester Novros, and Don Patterson

* Special animation effects: Joshua Meador, Miles E. Pike, John F. Reed, and Daniel MacManus

* Special camera effects: Gail Papineau and Leonard Pickley

 

The Night on Bald Mountain segment is a showcase for animator Bill Tytla, who gave the demon Chernabog a power and intensity rarely seen in Disney films. The nocturnal Chernabog summons from their graves empowered restless souls, until driven away by the sound of a church bell. Noted actor Béla Lugosi served as a live action model for Chernabog, and spent several days at the Disney studio, where he was filmed doing evil, demon-like poses for Tytla and his unit to use as a reference. Tytla later deemed this reference material unsuitable and had studio colleague Wilfred Jackson perform in front of the cameras for the reference footage.

 

Chernabog is first seen when he awakes on top of Bald Mountain. It is Walpurgis Night and, using the powers of darkness, he raises ghosts, skeletons, demons, witches, harpies, goblins, and zombies from a nearby town and cemetery. He then summons fire and lava and makes the damned and the other creatures in his control dance and fly around, much to his delight, before he destroys them. In one part he picks up a patch of fire and transforms it into naked women, then into demonic animals, a fleet of imps and finally into fiery, blue satyrs. Ultimately, he drops them into the lava which seals their fiery doom.

 

The horror of the demons, ghosts, skeletons, witches, harpies, and other evil creatures in Night on Bald Mountain comes to an abrupt end with the sound of the Angelus bell, which send Chernabog and his followers back into hiding, and the multiplane camera tracks away from Bald Mountain to reveal a line of faithful robed monks with lighted torches. The camera slowly follows them as they walk through the forest and ruins of a cathedral to the sounds of the Ave Maria. The animation of the worshipers is some of the smallest animation ever done: the camera had to be so close to some of the work that it had to be rendered at only an inch or so high. Even a slight deviation in the width of the final painted line would have been distracting to a movie audience on the big screen. In fact, as told by animator Frank Thomas in the book Disney Animation: The Illusion of Life the entire sequence had to be reshot twice, once because the wrong focal length lens was used, and once because of a small earth tremor that shook the animation planes out of alignment. The multiplane camera then finally tracks through the trees to reveal a sunrise as the film fades to its conclusion.

 

Originally the plan was for the procession to enter an actual church, and there are numerous concept drawings of gothic architecture, stained glass windows, and actual statues of the Virgin Mary as can be seen on the Fantasia Anthology bonus disc. Ultimately, this ending was deemed too overtly religious by Walt, and he opted for a more natural setting instead. However, the forest design in the segment still mimics that of a cathedral with an overtly gothic motif.

 

 

 

 

 

 

CrtIći kvlt! :wub:

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