Glaken same as Mosalar?
At the end it looks like prosthetic were applied to Scott Glenn's brow and seemed more beefy. Kinda looking more like the demon. I wonder what the intention was? Maybe it's in the book.
shareAt the end it looks like prosthetic were applied to Scott Glenn's brow and seemed more beefy. Kinda looking more like the demon. I wonder what the intention was? Maybe it's in the book.
shareThey are two sides of the same coin- one good, one evil. I believe the final stage of Molasar's face was from a lifecast of Scott Glenn.
shareIn the German dubbed version of The Keep that was for a short time streaming in HD on YouTube there is a scene of Eva and Glaeken sitting on a hill talking (right before the love scene).. Eva asks "why are you here" Glaeken replies "I am it"... A friend of mine that speaks German watched the scene several times and swears by it... Interesting stuff!
shareIn the mythology of the book series, it's not really Good and Evil. Molasar serves a force (the Otherness) that is, by our definition, evil. It definitely actively tries to spread suffering, decay, death, and corruption. OTOH, the force countering it is not "good" as we know it. Earth is merely a single, rather trivial, piece in a multidimensional chess game. If it meant a victory over The Adversary (Molasar, later revealed to be Rasalom)/The Otherness, the Ally thinks nothing of murdering anyone whose presence is inconvenient to its goal of checking the power of The Otherness.
The best outcome for humanity we can get from the "good" side is benign neglect.
Glaken same as Mosalar?