Attila In Hindi Download

Attila In Hindi Download

kafushmi




Attila In Hindi Download

http://urllio.com/r2s6z






















During the waning days of Roman Empire, the barbarian Huns are making their way toward Europe. A warrior named Attila violently assumes Hun leadership and unites the warring clans under his banner. But this is not enough for him, Attila seeks to form an empire, and he sees Rome, bristling under the leadership of the incompetent Caesar Valentinian , ripe for the picking. In an attempt to quell a Hun invasion, ambitious Roman General Flavius Aetius attempts to form an alliance with Attila against their mutual enemy, Visigoth King Theodoric. But this plan backfires, and it soon becomes clear that a violent showdown between all three armies awaits.
A romanced story of Attila the Hun, from when he lost his parents in childhood until his death. Attila is disclosed as a great leader, strategist and lover and the movie shows his respect to the great Roman strategist Flavius Aetius, his loves and passions, the gossips, intrigues and betrayals in Rome, all of these feelings evolved by magic and mysticism.
Despite the historical innacuracies, this film is really quite enjoyable. I think most of the innacuracies can be accounted to the fact that the majority of people do not know much about this history, so the film makers capitalized on what they DO know, sad as that may be.<br/><br/>I think a better male lead could have been chosen for Attila. As other users have said, it is the supporting cast that contribute the most to his character. I feel that Gerard&#39;s performance was quite shallow.<br/><br/>Powers Booth on the other hand, was very strong. In one scene, he prevents the &#39;assassination&#39; of the Emperor, and his acting is so corny (on purpose mind you) that I had to laugh. It gives strength to the scene. His comment &quot;It&#39;s shameful how this city fawns over it&#39;s athletes... some of them have more money than I do&quot; had me in tears for hours. I had to appreciate the humour.<br/><br/>In short, if you can put up with Rambo-Attila, you should be set for this film. It&#39;s still very interesting and captivating and gives really good insight to the political tensions of those times.
The comments here suggesting more violence in the film seem a bit strange. I don&#39;t think the point was to feed blood-lust, or to be factually accurate. It was telling a romanticized story woven around an almost archetypal man about whose personal life we know virtually nothing. I wanted more sex (as I&#39;m sure did Gerard Butler), not violence; and I wanted it more appropriately distributed. That certainly would have been more interesting than seeing severed heads spouting blood, etc. I think most viewers are already aware that &quot;barbarian&quot; conquest was swift and bloody. The question of how believable the &quot;magic&quot; and sword were--those are standard-issue legend elements, which is, again, what any treatment of Attila must be. Some sort of soothsayer was likely part of Hun culture.<br/><br/>As to the speculation about whether the &quot;real life&quot; Attila would have been as attractive as Mr. Butler; it&#39;s not important, but I would imagine he would have been more so. An individual would not have been able to gather and unite diverse cultures and impose himself on history in the sweeping fashion that Attila did, without having tremendously magnetic dynamism and appeal. Of course, in that culture and time, measure of attractiveness wouldn&#39;t have been centered around the idealized form with which we are so preoccupied in the West. Also, given that he was a human being commanding much loyalty and devotion from others, I think it is more than reasonable to assume that Attila was not psychotically cruel in matters close to home. In fact, if I recollect correctly, the one contemporary written first-hand account of him at court (by a Greek emissary), described him as a very restrained individual, humble in dress, and who responded fondly to his son. It is important to remember that a skilled and aggressive warrior would not have been considered an aberrant personality and would have been lauded, rather than villainized. If we&#39;re going to get hung up on what is or is not realistic, some of the ridiculously white and cosmetically improved teeth of the actors, especially those of some age, should have been given the appearance of rot and sparse distribution. Powers Boothe&#39;s are blinding in their artificiality. I love that Mr. Butler&#39;s teeth have not been completely &quot;perfected.&quot; Oh, and what about the ease with which the Roman characters could converse with the Huns? Maybe they had Star Treck-esque universal translators.<br/><br/>I enjoyed the film and thought that the role was particularly well-suited to Gerard Butler. My impression was that he enjoyed the scrapping and riding and striding around in pursuit of conquest. He also got to wear very cool clothes.

a5c7b9f00b

Report Page