Shashi Kapoor

JVL
Xuebing Du
art blog(derogatory)

Andulka
todays bird
Peter Solarz
official daine visual archive

@theartofmadeline
will byers stan first human second

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tannertan36
Game of Thrones Daily
occasionally subtle
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Kiana Khansmith
Mike Driver
Stranger Things

roma★
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seen from Germany
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seen from United States
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seen from Germany

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seen from United States
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seen from Sweden
@thebombaysaga
Shashi Kapoor
Neelam
Hema Malini
Mamta Kulkarni
Artwork from Naami Chor,1977
Shabana Azmi in Shatranj Ke Khiladi, 1977 A film by Satyajit Ray
Waheeda Rehman in Khamoshi,1969
Bombay Velvet, 2015
Jackie Shroff & Tina Munim
Meena Kumari
gorgeous Rekha in Silsila (1981)
Meena Kumari in Dil Apna Aur Preet Parai,1960
Artwork from Chetna,1970
Mani’s ability to take you into various zones of time is one of his greatest qualities and is rare even in great film-makers. He devoted several years of his life to the study of dhrupad. The slow-moving alaap that opens a dhrupad has something primeval about it. At the end of his film on dhrupad Mani moved his camera over the cityscape of Bombay at 120 frames per second, slowing time down to one-fifths of its normal flow. As the camera glides over the city, in a never before seen slow speed and gradually goes out of focus, it takes the viewer into an experience that is near mystical. It is an experience of a universe that is gradually dissolving before your eyes to return to a state that is nirgun and nirakar, without attributes and without shape.
– Arun Khopkar, “A Partial View: Il Miglior Fabbro; A tribute to Mani Kaul, the film-maker, who died on 6 July” (Economic & Political Weekly / August 27, 2011)
Vintage bollywood lobby cards Shree 420 | A film by Raj Kapoor