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Tears of Kali

  • 2004
  • Unrated
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
5.3/10
906
YOUR RATING
Tears of Kali (2004)
Folk HorrorFantasyHorror

A creepy three-part anthology which is actually constructed from a trio of German-produced independent short films that form a narrative around a mysterious cult in 1983 India as a wrap-arou... Read allA creepy three-part anthology which is actually constructed from a trio of German-produced independent short films that form a narrative around a mysterious cult in 1983 India as a wrap-around story. In the first story "Shakti", a reporter talks to an institutionalized cult survi... Read allA creepy three-part anthology which is actually constructed from a trio of German-produced independent short films that form a narrative around a mysterious cult in 1983 India as a wrap-around story. In the first story "Shakti", a reporter talks to an institutionalized cult survivor who claims to have murdered her boyfriend. In the second story "Devi", a man awakens f... Read all

  • Director
    • Andreas Marschall
  • Writer
    • Andreas Marschall
  • Stars
    • Peter Martell
    • Anja Gebel
    • Magdalena Ritter
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.3/10
    906
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Andreas Marschall
    • Writer
      • Andreas Marschall
    • Stars
      • Peter Martell
      • Anja Gebel
      • Magdalena Ritter
    • 20User reviews
    • 25Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 wins & 1 nomination total

    Photos25

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    Top cast60

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    Peter Martell
    Peter Martell
    • Lars Eriksson (segment "Poona, India 1983")
    Anja Gebel
    • Kim (segment "Poona, India 1983")
    Magdalena Ritter
    • Erkisson Pupil (segment "Poona, India 1983")
    • (as Magdalena Fernandez Ritter)
    Nicole Ludwig
    • Pupil (segment "Poona, India 1983")…
    Gabriel Maunsell
    • Pupil (segment "Poona, India 1983")
    Chole Micky
    • Pupil (segment "Poona, India 1983")
    • (as Micky Chloe)
    Simon Mayer
    • Pupil (segment "Poona, India 1983")
    Alexander Matakas
    • Pupil (segment "Poona, India 1983")
    Udo Bittner
    • Taylor (segment "Poona, India 1983")
    Leoni Oefelein
    • Taylor's Wife (segment "Poona, India 1983")
    Irena-Heliana Jandris
    • Shakti…
    Celik Nuran
    • Tansu Yilmaz (segment "Shakti")
    • (as Nuran Celik)
    Adrian Topol
    Adrian Topol
    • Florian (segment "Shakti")
    Joey Bozatt
    • Samarfan (segment "Shakti")
    • (as Joey Bozat)
    Mai Christa
    • Patient Anna (segment "Shakti")
    • (as Christa Mai)
    Thomas Otto
    • Dr. Fischer (segment "Shakti")
    Peter Domsch
    • Keoma (segment "Shakti")
    Thomas Luszeit
    • Male Nurse (segment "Shakti")
    • (as Tom Luszeit)
    • Director
      • Andreas Marschall
    • Writer
      • Andreas Marschall
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    5.3906
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    Featured reviews

    5Fella_shibby

    Was put off by the amount of gore but it is a creepy low budget horror anthology.

    I first saw this almost a decade ago on a dvd which I own.

    Revisited it recently.

    The movie centers around the fictional India-based Taylor-Erikkson cult group during the 80's.

    There are some faults with the film that keep it from being truly excellent but it is an original and very creepy movie.

    The movie is obviously low budget n some of the acting is pretty lousy.

    It is quite creepy and genuinely disturbing at times.

    If you are into splatter and gore, then u may enjoy this.

    Somebody shud make a movie on the other cult involving the cult of The Noida serial murders (also known as Nithari serial murders, Nithari Kand).
    6BA_Harrison

    Bloody low-budget German horror—worth a watch.

    Three macabre and bloody tales are loosely connected by a mysterious cult which practices bizarre rituals.

    The first story tells of a woman named Shakti, an ex-member of the Taylor-Erikkson cult who is now an inmate at a mental hospital. A journalist (supposedly investigating the cult) interviews Shakti, but it transpires that she has other reasons for wanting to talk to the woman...

    The next story follows a violent young drug abuser who is sentenced to rehab. His doctor turns out to be a follower of Taylor-Erikkson and his methods of treatment are far from orthodox.

    The final tale deals with a faith-healer who unwittingly releases an evil force from one of his group (who is terminally ill). The malign monster is seeking a new healthy host, and has got its evil eye on the healer.

    The movie is obviously low budget, and the dubbing on the version I saw is pretty lousy, but Tears of Kali is original enough and has plenty of nastiness and gore to make this movie worth a viewing. It takes a while to get going, but those willing to make the effort will be rewarded by some nice death scenes which don't skimp on the red stuff.

    The second story is my favourite as it manages to be quite creepy and genuinely disturbing (and it also features a scene in which which a guy has to peel off his skin!).

    It may not be a wholly successful venture, but the makers of this film certainly have to be praised for trying something a bit different.
    5BrandtSponseller

    Very good schlock, but a very disappointing "masterpiece"

    I don't quite get the hyperbole of some of the reviews of this film on either end. Tears of Kali is not at all a slightly flawed masterpiece, but it doesn't completely suck, either.

    On the low budget and cheesy end, aspects of the film play like a stereotypical Uwe Boll flick; it's difficult to not cynically think of this as another German tax shelter film. Stylistically and atmospherically, Tears of Kali occupies a weird middle ground between recent microbudget schlock like Insaniac (2002), The Crucifier (2005) and The Bonesetter (2003), and a major studio, high-budget horror film. If you watch it expecting microbudget schlock, as I did after seeing the DVD title screen sequence (like most films, I purposefully avoided knowing much about the film before I popped it into my DVD player), you'll be impressed with the level of professionalism exhibited. But if you've only watched major studio, high-budget horror, it's entirely understandable that you'd come to the conclusion that this is one of the worst films ever. The bottom line, then, is that you should probably only watch Tears of Kali after you've watched at least a dozen or so microbudget films. That way the technical clunkiness, the relative incoherence of much of the story, and the numerous other problems with the script, performances, direction, editing and so on won't be such culture shock, and you'll be able to better appreciate what Tears of Kali does get right.

    The premise of the film and even many ways in which the story is developed are impressive. There are a lot of good ideas here, both plotwise and structurally. I'm a fan of "anthology" films as well as television shows like The Twilight Zone, The Hitchhiker and Tales from the Crypt, so the fact that the script is broken up into three separate but related stories along with bookended segments worked well for me. Writer/director Andreas Marschall even weaves in a fair amount of sophisticated, nuanced threads, thematically and more literally, allowing viewers to interlock the stories more with the bookended segments in their heads as they watch.

    However, Marschall errs on one serious front--the "show, don't tell" rule. Far too much of the film consists of people talking about interesting events that we do not get to see. The first story after the opening bookend is especially guilty of this, and it doesn't help that the story being told is fairly complex and kinda gobbledy-gooky (it hinges, as does the whole film, on a maybe ridiculous but fun mixture of mystic, new-agey psychology, cults and a couple ideas from Indian religions), and it doesn't help that the story being told has lots of characters, most of whom have odd names (and the film doesn't have the greatest English dubbing job, and the DVD has no subtitles).

    Surely the show-don't-tell violation was chosen to keep the budget down. Even with the bookends, Marschall only needed four settings, most limited to just a couple rooms, and he avoided having to hire lots of extras, having to work his way through complicated logistical issues of location shooting and so on. While that's a good excuse for limiting the film, it's not a good enough excuse to violate the "show don't tell" rule in the way that it's violated here, because it seriously hurts the film.

    Horror fans who enjoy gore and special effects will also find enough to like here, as long as they're not the kind of gorehound who gets wrapped up in arguments about what film is the goriest. Quite a few scenes are a bit brutal and difficult to watch, and especially compared to most microbudget films, the effects and make-up are extremely impressive. Each story hinges on some twist of character or another that results in a good, suspenseful and visceral extended sequence. Marschall has his mechanics down well for those kinds of scenes, with the exception that occasionally "battle" scenes are a bit too choppy and blurry. In terms of visceralness, the bookended sequences reminded me a bit of the Nix-cult scenes in Lord of Illusions (1995), but unfortunately they're not shot, acted or constructed quite as well.

    In any event, if you're a horror fanatic to the extent that you're a completist--that is, you try to see every horror film ever made--there's plenty to enjoy in Tears of Kali as long as you're generously forgiving. By definition, though, you must be generously forgiving of horror in general to be that kind of fan (otherwise you wouldn't subject yourself to all of those schlocky films, and that's pretty undeniably a large number of films). If you can the positives to fare like The Christmas Season Massacre (2001) or Silo Killer (2002), then you'll find plenty of positives in Tears of Kali, too. Just don't expect anything close to a masterpiece.
    6Ekkard

    For extremists only!

    This episode movie uses demons, meditation and a strange sect as its vehicle for the ultimate traumatic horror movie: the whole atmosphere of this film is extremely frightening though you never believe the esoteric background that is supposed to be there! The people doing the movie obviously never had real contact to the Baghwan ideology. But who cares? I don't think John Wayne ever was a professional cowboy nor was Louis De Funes a french Policeman. Anyway, there are some professional actors in this flick doing their best, some horror movie buffs just playing actors. Good old German Matthieu Carriere plays a spiritual healer in the last episode. Attention: The special effects are not for those with weak stomachs: eyelids are cut off, a guy skins himself alive and there goes your breakfast! If you are into splatter and gore but to old to take Fulci seriously – give these young film makers a try.
    6ThrownMuse

    Very creepy movie

    Unfortunately, the R1 DVD of "Tears of Kali" is dubbed in English with no subtitle option. It was hard to fully immerse myself in the creepiness of the film considering that the dub job is one of the most hideous these ears have ever heard. I would love to revisit this in the future with English subs. The movie has a fair share of sick gore, but more interesting to me is that it has a unique and more familiar take on cults than most horrors (especially 70s exploitation) do. It works sort of like an anthology horror in that it consists of three shorts that take place in present time. The catch is that each features characters who were once connected to the Taylor-Erikkson cult in India in the 80s. Very original and creepy movie, but damn that dub job!

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    Related interests

    Florence Pugh in Midsommar (2019)
    Folk Horror
    Elijah Wood in The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001)
    Fantasy
    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The segment 'Poona, India 1983' was shot on a children's farm in Berlin Kreuzberg, Görlitzer Park.
    • Crazy credits
      End titles text: THE PERSONS AND EVENTS IN THIS PRODUCTION ARE FICTITIOUS. NO SIMILARY TO ACTUAL PERSONS; LIVING OR DEAD (OR LIVING DEAD), IS INTENDEND OR SHOULD BE INFERRED.
    • Connections
      References Keoma (1976)
    • Soundtracks
      Post Ludium
      Written by Bjørn Alexander Brem (as Björn Alexander Brem)

      Performed by Gothminister

      ©2003 Drakkar Entertainment / e-wave records

      Published by Edition Drakkar / adm. BMG - UFA

      Distributed by BMG

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 16, 2004 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • Germany
    • Official site
      • Anolis Entertainment (Germany)
    • Language
      • German
    • Also known as
      • Welcome to the Dark Side of New Age - Tears of Kali
    • Filming locations
      • Berlin, Germany
    • Production companies
      • Cut and Run Production
      • Mainland Media
      • Sterling Screen Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • €650,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 46m(106 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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