Even without knowing the history behind Caligula, this reconstruction looks a lot like the Serial Killer that the neighbors tell the police and the news reporters, "He was such a nice looking person. Very quiet and private. We never suspected him of anything . . . ."
Most serial killers aren't quiet; they're extroverts. That's how they lure people in. With their charm. As George Carlin once said: "While you're busy watching the quiet ones a loud one will f%$kin' kill ya."
It’s the music, the dark shading under the eyes, and the slight malicious smile they gave him. The people who made this reconciliation are purposely making him look unsettling.
I've never forgotten John Hurt's portrayal of Caligula in "I, Claudius", originally broadcast on "Masterpiece Theatre" back in the 70's. He was remarkable depicting Caligula's descent into madness. The whole series was brilliant. Thank you for this intriguing video.🌿💚
Christopher Hitchens once said as a war correspondent he had witnessed evil so diabolical it must surely consume even itself.... ditto this creep and his ugly sisters
@@thinker8286 Maybe her death was the last straw for his mortal enemy, whoever organized the successful assassination attempt. Some men would feel extreme outrage over a beautiful woman being killed like that.
@@jonathancummings6400 You don't know much about Roman history, do you? Julia Drusilla died in 38AD, probably of disease. Julia Livilla was executed by Claudius after she fell out with Messalina, Claudius' then wife in either 41 or 42 BC. She probably died of starvation. Her ashes were placed in the Mausoleum of Augustus by her sister Agrippina the Younger when she married Claudius after the fall of Messalina.
I"m obsessed!! LOVE Roman/Ancient history and this is just soooo fascinating! THanks for being out there in the internet land showing this incredible work
Malcolm McDowell was extremely similar to Caligula's appearance when he played the character in 1979's movie Caligula. Caligula was a tall man also: 1,93 m... Making him even more scary...
Some scholars would say that Caligula's reputation as an absolute madman is based on writings dated several decades after his death, written by "historians" who discredited emperors who, like Caligula, were very autocratic. Caligula in particular seems to have strived towards a monarchy as there had been in the Near East (Egypt, Mesopotamia) before the Roman conquest. There are some interesting documentaries on youtube that try to sift fact from fiction about this emperor.
Incredible work; to look at the face of an emperor madman is just surreal and amazing.... these depictions make you want to read and learn more about them!!!! Άριστη δουλειά
This is realistic, it gave me chills...fantastic work. Other versions of kings, queen's, emperor's, etc tend to be beautified in excess, perfect teeth, jawlines, noses, skins without a blemish... This looks like real people, not Hollywood actors. Thank you👍✨😘
From the reconstructions, it looks like Caligula's youngest sister Julia Livilla was the prettiest. Too bad her uncle Claudius, who became Emperor after Caligula, had her executed by starvation because his wife Messalina was jealous of her.
These are pretty cool. I wish the hair styles and head adornments of the period were also reproduced exactly to enhance the time travel effect of the person as they were then in Ancient Rome. Also the titles pass by really quickly. Maybe just a little more time. But yeah really cool faces 🙌🙌
Sometimes the notifications go by too fast & you have to keep scrolling back to read them. A lovely, innocent looking boy. Did he see too much when growing up? Tiberius was known for his debauchery. Caligula spent quite a bit of time around Emperor Tiberius. Livia, Tiberius’ Mother, had so many people who stood in her way, murdered. Was Caligula an astute observer? Did he see how she operated? Ruthlessly, deposing of people for ambition, & getting away with everything. Did Livia not ask Caligula to erect statues, & make her a Goddess, on her death bed when he became Emperor? So that she would not be damned to Hades for all eternity, because of all her wicked crimes. Caligula refused her this dying request. Caligula was so depraved, mentally ill, & dangerous. Everyone was terrified of him. Interesting to look into the face of an Emperor who held the highest position in the empire. Yet he was utterly insane There is something so sinister in Caligula’s eyes, as an adult, it gives you the creeps.
Caligula could have been deranged from illness but anybody could go mad from how he was forced to live. After his father died, Caligula was at the mercy of Tiberius who was a sick pervert. Tiberius was known for putting children in the pool and training them to swim between his legs and nibble his genitals like fish nibbling bait. He may have forced Caligula to join the other fish or engage in any other sick sexual fantasy that crossed Tiberius” mind. Plus, Caligula didn’t know from one day to the next whether he would be executed for any reason or no reason at all (like others in his family had been). His daily life was one of extreme mental duress and he endured it for years. How could anybody grow up normal in such a twisted environment?
Excellent work as always..............you could tell that something WAS GOING VERY WRONG with him by the look in his eyes, as you depicted it.....i beleive that always our eyes are our soul mirror. Suetonius' description is the most accurate of course. 👍👍👍👍🎇
Caligula's sisters looked just crazy as him. By then, Rich Women were just as powerful as men, in some cases even more lethal, such as Agrippina (Caligula's Sister) who managed to killed Claudius, his son, and a lot of people.
Very nice. One gets the sense that one is looking into the face of Caligula. I don't know that there is anything else like this out there. Very Kubrickian. I love the dramatic music. I knew that Caligula executed people for looking down at him from above due to his thinning hair, but I never heard the one about mentioning a goat in his presence being a capital offense. I guess he had excessive body hair. Kudos on your work.
They all are so cute!!! Incredible reconstruction and when they look at you and they smile..... you don't really know what's going on in their minds....
Wow well done! Fascinating work please produce more "living" portraits. I would really like to see Elagabalus or Heliogabalus 218-222 AD. A Syrian born teenager made Emperor who was nearly as crazy as Caligula. He was killed in a latrine by his own Praetorian Guard who had had enough of his nonsense.
Well done! Especially capturing a certain traumatic wariness in the sisters---because of course they had no say in the matter. To refuse an emperor meant death.
Most likely, people have the wrong impression about Caligula. When we think about his madness, cruelty and sadism, we need to keep in mind that major historical sources such as Seneca and Suetonius sometimes tried to ridicule him or make him worse than perhaps he actually was. Exaggeration or not, his face really was a little disturbing or repulsive.
Quoted by Caligula and documented by Suetonius in- ( The twelve Caesars; section 11 ) " LET THEM HATE ME, SO LONG AS THEY FEAR ME". ("Ordering dum metuant")
I came back after well over a year to look at this again. Because the first time I found the eyes of Caligula so disturbing with the look of insanity so realistically captured. A year later I got the same creeps looking into the face of madness. Excellent work. Only slow the historical excerpts down a bit.
I don't particularly agree with the women's hairstyles. The sculptures clearly show long hair styled up with lots of curls. The depictions show short and straight hair. Otherwise, pretty cool work.
Tiberius played a big part in shaping his character into the monster he became. He killed in his brothers and possibly his father Germanicus too, and forced him to live in constant fear.
Fascinating recreations; love your work. However, your faces generally look better and have softer traits than the sculptures and maybe look too much like today?
Why wouldn't they, though? Even today's statues look "harder" than the people they depict. Also, how different could they be from us today, regarding face traits?
Probably the simple hairstyles the artist chooses makes his reconstructions look more modern. Romans and Greeks used curling irons on their hair, if it lacked natural curl. Curly hair was considered beautiful.
@@mareltheo4246 well for me the girls don’t look similar to their statues especially the middle sister, but I’m sure the statues have differences to the real person when being made since photo shopping has always been a thing.
It looks like quite a bit of this is guesswork and artistic license. I enjoy these renditions because they suggest what the people *might* have looked like. I think the artist who created these assumed the ancient sculptors were exaggerating features, but maybe they didn’t. Also, it seems unlikely that inbred Roman aristocracy were as attractive as they appear in these renders. I still like these renders, but it would be interesting if some of the less attractive features depicted in the statues were kept in the renders. There are some things that the statues obviously don’t depict correctly - like the eyes. Most of the statues don’t have eyelids.
@@thetooginator153 Why do you think they're inbred? Caligula's father Germanicus and his mother Agrippina the Elder weren't related by blood: Germanicus's uncle Tiberius (yes, that one) was married to Agrippina's mother, Julia the Elder, but had no children: Agrippina's biological parents were Julia and Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa. Agrippa's family was of plebian origins from outside of Rome.
The first of the five bad Roman emperors? I would have thought Tiberius would surely qualify in the bad collumn. He taught Caligula everything he knew.
@@IvanDmitriev1 but has that really been conclusively determined? I'm not saying you aren't right, I'm just curious what the evidence is that Tiberius was the victim of demonization by false historians. Of course, opening up this discussion, we are faced with the quandry of just how much of any ancient history can be trusted at all...
The music is a perfect accompaniment to this depiction of Gaius (or Caligula as history knows him best) I think he was a handsome young man.......but chilling and cold looking.
It seems the women sculptures have broader faces with more cheek than the reconstructions. Is that artistic license or do the original sculptures look thinner when you examine them from all directions?
Julia Drusilla has asymmetrical eyes, as I do. My family, on my Father's side was from Croatia, and I wonder if she is related somewhere, in the distant past. Who knows, with the lack of morals that existed among the elite...in every age, including ours.
Caligula's face looks scary. Like an entity from another world. It definitely suits his character. Please do them with their curly hair for the real feel.
My favorite scene from I, CLAUDIUS was when Caligula, played by the late John Hurt, dressed up as the Goddess Dawn and performed a choreographic number for his uncle Claudius and members of the palace court. When he finished, they all enthusiastically applauded him to suit his vanity and to stay alive.
They were both exceptional, but personally for my taste Malcom McDowell’ masterful impersonation gave me chills for years, I consider Bob Gucci-one’s Caligula the very best version and depiction, try watching the unrated unexpurgated version, is the best.
I recently came across this channel and find it very interesting. however I have a few questions and would be grateful if someone can answer. First one is how things such as eye and hair color of the reconstructions is known? Second is how the person's age is estimated I have noted that most people look very young. Just curious...
Caligula's smile is nightmare material. Great job by the way!!
Yes- that's what I thought, too. Such a creepy look.
The perfect actor for a horror movie . Caligula : - What should I do ?
Director : - Just smile and it will be perfect .
If the eyes are not smiling too, all smiles tend to be creepy.
Thats the smile of a chad
So true!
I swear I was genuinely terrified, your work is amazing when I saw him smile my heart started racing
Even without knowing the history behind Caligula, this reconstruction looks a lot like the Serial Killer that the neighbors tell the police and the news reporters, "He was such a nice looking person. Very quiet and private. We never suspected him of anything . . . ."
Oh c'mon ... this dude is repulsive
Most serial killers aren't quiet; they're extroverts. That's how they lure people in. With their charm.
As George Carlin once said: "While you're busy watching the quiet ones a loud one will f%$kin' kill ya."
Yeah, it was uncomfortable to look at!
It’s the music, the dark shading under the eyes, and the slight malicious smile they gave him. The people who made this reconciliation are purposely making him look unsettling.
Thanks for bringing the little monster to life
Little victim* correction
Smiling Caligula is scary as fk.😳
Little Boot was absolutely terrifying. He looked mad as in crazy.
I've never forgotten John Hurt's portrayal of Caligula in "I, Claudius", originally broadcast on "Masterpiece Theatre" back in the 70's. He was remarkable depicting Caligula's descent into madness. The whole series was brilliant.
Thank you for this intriguing video.🌿💚
Christopher Hitchens once said as a war correspondent he had witnessed evil so diabolical it must surely consume even itself.... ditto this creep and his ugly sisters
That's an excellent series. I have it in my DVD collection.
Derek Jacobi as Claudius played the fool beautifully around John Hurt’s Caligula. Great series and great acting!
"Don't go in there..."
(I can't remember what he'd done, or who to, but that line gave me goosebumps.)
As Hurt said in the movie---There will be no pain---I promise...!
The reconstruction of Caligula seems spot on with his nature, and Julia is extremely beautiful in this reconstruction.
Julia Livilla that is.
All three sister are quite beautiful.
Julia Livilla was like that girl many men would like to protect.
@@thinker8286 Maybe her death was the last straw for his mortal enemy, whoever organized the successful assassination attempt. Some men would feel extreme outrage over a beautiful woman being killed like that.
@@jonathancummings6400 You don't know much about Roman history, do you? Julia Drusilla died in 38AD, probably of disease. Julia Livilla was executed by Claudius after she fell out with Messalina, Claudius' then wife in either 41 or 42 BC. She probably died of starvation. Her ashes were placed in the Mausoleum of Augustus by her sister Agrippina the Younger when she married Claudius after the fall of Messalina.
I think, if you saw this guy smiling at you, it meant your life or something very nasty was about to happen to you.
Right, Joffery in real life.
I think I would much preferred having Lord Tywin Lannister smiling at me than this guy.
Jeffrey Dahmer in a Nutshell
He looks uncannily like Malcolm McDowell, who played him in the 1979 film.
Lol, that was bugging me, lashings of ultraviolence anyone? Anyone?
I"m obsessed!! LOVE Roman/Ancient history and this is just soooo fascinating! THanks for being out there in the internet land showing this incredible work
OK, young Caligula is a dead ringer for King Joffrey.
I do believe he was in fact at least partly based on Caligula.
Exactly what I thought when I saw the stone before it was colored! Like a reoccurring nightmare that whining little wretch.
You beat me one month earlier bout Geoff😂😂😂
OMG! I just was thinking the very same thing! *gasps*
Omg I thought that too! And yikes that guy looked scary as hell. Made my skin crawl
2:11 thankyou now he will haunt me in my nightmares
Malcolm McDowell was extremely similar to Caligula's appearance when he played the character in 1979's movie Caligula. Caligula was a tall man also: 1,93 m... Making him even more scary...
Some scholars would say that Caligula's reputation as an absolute madman is based on writings dated several decades after his death, written by "historians" who discredited emperors who, like Caligula, were very autocratic. Caligula in particular seems to have strived towards a monarchy as there had been in the Near East (Egypt, Mesopotamia) before the Roman conquest. There are some interesting documentaries on youtube that try to sift fact from fiction about this emperor.
Incredible work; to look at the face of an emperor madman is just surreal and amazing.... these depictions make you want to read and learn more about them!!!! Άριστη δουλειά
This is realistic, it gave me chills...fantastic work. Other versions of kings, queen's, emperor's, etc tend to be beautified in excess, perfect teeth, jawlines, noses, skins without a blemish... This looks like real people, not Hollywood actors. Thank you👍✨😘
From the reconstructions, it looks like Caligula's youngest sister Julia Livilla was the prettiest. Too bad her uncle Claudius, who became Emperor after Caligula, had her executed by starvation because his wife Messalina was jealous of her.
Makes you wonder, maybe disease played less of a role in his sociopathy than family.
I've seen lots of facial animations of roman emperors but Caligula on this vid gave me chills . Straight up.
Caligula's face remind me of the evil Joker in the Batman series and his bust looks more creepy than that of Nero's.
Wow how'd you get him to have the serial killer gaze??
The computer probably was just very accurate in depicting how he would've lookes
Nah... is just the soundtrack.
Yes I could sense evil in his eyes that sent chills up and down my spine!
These are pretty cool. I wish the hair styles and head adornments of the period were also reproduced exactly to enhance the time travel effect of the person as they were then in Ancient Rome. Also the titles pass by really quickly. Maybe just a little more time. But yeah really cool faces 🙌🙌
Great job on bringing him to life! His eyes were spine chilling!
Sometimes the notifications go by too fast & you have to keep scrolling back to read them.
A lovely, innocent looking boy.
Did he see too much when growing up?
Tiberius was known for his debauchery.
Caligula spent quite a bit of time around Emperor Tiberius.
Livia, Tiberius’ Mother, had so many people who stood in her way, murdered.
Was Caligula an astute observer?
Did he see how she operated?
Ruthlessly, deposing of people for ambition, & getting away with everything.
Did Livia not ask Caligula to erect statues, & make her a Goddess, on her death bed when he became Emperor?
So that she would not be damned to Hades for all eternity, because of all her wicked crimes.
Caligula refused her this dying request.
Caligula was so depraved, mentally ill, & dangerous. Everyone was terrified of him.
Interesting to look into the face of an Emperor who held the highest position in the empire. Yet he was utterly insane
There is something so sinister in Caligula’s eyes, as an adult, it gives you the creeps.
Caligula could have been deranged from illness but anybody could go mad from how he was forced to live. After his father died, Caligula was at the mercy of Tiberius who was a sick pervert. Tiberius was known for putting children in the pool and training them to swim between his legs and nibble his genitals like fish nibbling bait. He may have forced Caligula to join the other fish or engage in any other sick sexual fantasy that crossed Tiberius” mind. Plus, Caligula didn’t know from one day to the next whether he would be executed for any reason or no reason at all (like others in his family had been). His daily life was one of extreme mental duress and he endured it for years. How could anybody grow up normal in such a twisted environment?
Stop reading Suetonius 😅 😉 Try to be more objective
Excellent work as always..............you could tell that something WAS GOING VERY WRONG with him by the look in his eyes, as you depicted it.....i beleive that always our eyes are our soul mirror. Suetonius' description is the most accurate of course. 👍👍👍👍🎇
A very creepy emperor
His sisters look low key sad
'His sisters look low key sad' Can you blame them when they're stuck with this monster as their brother (and ruler)?
I subscribed yesterday and I’m really enjoying this channel. Thank you for sharing your hard work and talent! I’m learning so much 🙏🏽❤️🥰
Awesome! Thank you!
Recent sources have pointed that Caligula didn't sleep with his sisters, that was just a gossip made by his rivals.
What sources?
I read a book about sex in History and that WAS the trend at the time.
Caligula's sisters looked just crazy as him. By then, Rich Women were just as powerful as men, in some cases even more lethal, such as Agrippina (Caligula's Sister) who managed to killed Claudius, his son, and a lot of people.
I love this channel. The descriptions make it perfect.
I've seen 3 of these videos now: extraordinary and to see such a close approximation of these people's faces is fascinating and humbling. Thank you.
LOVE
Very nice. One gets the sense that one is looking into the face of Caligula. I don't know that there is anything else like this out there. Very Kubrickian. I love the dramatic music. I knew that Caligula executed people for looking down at him from above due to his thinning hair, but I never heard the one about mentioning a goat in his presence being a capital offense. I guess he had excessive body hair. Kudos on your work.
They all are so cute!!! Incredible reconstruction and when they look at you and they smile..... you don't really know what's going on in their minds....
U CALLING A MADMAN CUTE???? HE LOOKS LIKE HE CAME FROM AN INSTITUTE 😨🤢🤮
@@shadmanhasan4205 hahahahaha 😆 😂 🤣!
Truly amazing, thank you!
Wow well done! Fascinating work please produce more "living" portraits.
I would really like to see Elagabalus or Heliogabalus 218-222 AD. A Syrian born teenager made Emperor who was nearly as crazy as Caligula. He was killed in a latrine by his own Praetorian Guard who had had enough of his nonsense.
there is already a video depicting him
Well done! Especially capturing a certain traumatic wariness in the sisters---because of course they had no say in the matter. To refuse an emperor meant death.
Most likely, people have the wrong impression about Caligula. When we think about his madness, cruelty and sadism, we need to keep in mind that major historical sources such as Seneca and Suetonius sometimes tried to ridicule him or make him worse than perhaps he actually was. Exaggeration or not, his face really was a little disturbing or repulsive.
Suetonius isn't a Reliable source. He lived eighty years after Caligula's death and wrote several slanders about him
Music was perfect!
Fantastic work! Although every time they start to move it creeps me out. Still great job! 👍
Quoted by Caligula and documented by Suetonius in- ( The twelve Caesars; section 11 ) " LET THEM HATE ME, SO LONG AS THEY FEAR ME". ("Ordering dum metuant")
I came back after well over a year to look at this again.
Because the first time I found the eyes of Caligula so disturbing with the look of insanity so realistically captured.
A year later I got the same creeps looking into the face of madness.
Excellent work.
Only slow the historical excerpts down a bit.
Absolutely well done and definitely keep it up!!! 👍👍👍👍👍
3:03
*Emperor's great-granddaughter*
*Emperor's granddaughter*
*Emperor's sister*
*Emperor's mistress*
*Emperor's wife*
*Emperor's mother*
Caligula looks a lot more handsome in the other video of Roman emperors. Maybe the reference statue for that one is more kind to him.
I don't particularly agree with the women's hairstyles. The sculptures clearly show long hair styled up with lots of curls. The depictions show short and straight hair. Otherwise, pretty cool work.
I'm not sure if the software he uses allows him to manipulate hairstyles to that extent.
Caligula, the son of the Legions, was a beloved emperor. People and especially soldiers loved him very much.
Sure when he was two or three ! Don't forget he was Germanicus' son and Germanicus was very popular amount his soldiers.
@@aquarius4953 no, he was always popular, until his death.
Tiberius played a big part in shaping his character into the monster he became. He killed in his brothers and possibly his father Germanicus too, and forced him to live in constant fear.
Now I'm getting hooked on these.
Reminds me of the actor that played Ramsey Bolton on Game of Thrones... these renderings makes Caligula look like a psychopath, which he was.
You sure he was?
Sounds like senatorial propaganda.
More like a psychotic.
Fascinating recreations; love your work. However, your faces generally look better and have softer traits than the sculptures and maybe look too much like today?
Why wouldn't they, though? Even today's statues look "harder" than the people they depict. Also, how different could they be from us today, regarding face traits?
Probably the simple hairstyles the artist chooses makes his reconstructions look more modern. Romans and Greeks used curling irons on their hair, if it lacked natural curl. Curly hair was considered beautiful.
@@mareltheo4246 well for me the girls don’t look similar to their statues especially the middle sister, but I’m sure the statues have differences to the real person when being made since photo shopping has always been a thing.
It looks like quite a bit of this is guesswork and artistic license. I enjoy these renditions because they suggest what the people *might* have looked like. I think the artist who created these assumed the ancient sculptors were exaggerating features, but maybe they didn’t.
Also, it seems unlikely that inbred Roman aristocracy were as attractive as they appear in these renders. I still like these renders, but it would be interesting if some of the less attractive features depicted in the statues were kept in the renders.
There are some things that the statues obviously don’t depict correctly - like the eyes. Most of the statues don’t have eyelids.
@@thetooginator153 Why do you think they're inbred? Caligula's father Germanicus and his mother Agrippina the Elder weren't related by blood: Germanicus's uncle Tiberius (yes, that one) was married to Agrippina's mother, Julia the Elder, but had no children: Agrippina's biological parents were Julia and Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa. Agrippa's family was of plebian origins from outside of Rome.
Great work there. I really liked the creepy background music. It was perfect.
Y does Caligula remind me of a feminine version of Joffery from GOT?
Edit: and of course he looks like a Psychopath from an adolescent institute 🙄
The music is appropo! Gives the idea of the very old times with some evil thrown in for good measure.
Wow!! Love this. Thank you.
You did an amazing job of getting a cruelness into his features.
Thank you very much!
You're welcome!
Wow this is really amazing work❕❕❕
The first of the five bad Roman emperors? I would have thought Tiberius would surely qualify in the bad collumn. He taught Caligula everything he knew.
Tiberius, was a victim of a "dark legend" or of bad PR and paparazzis (written by Christians and political competitors), as we would say now.
@@IvanDmitriev1 but has that really been conclusively determined? I'm not saying you aren't right, I'm just curious what the evidence is that Tiberius was the victim of demonization by false historians. Of course, opening up this discussion, we are faced with the quandry of just how much of any ancient history can be trusted at all...
The music is a perfect accompaniment to this depiction of Gaius (or Caligula as history knows him best) I think he was a handsome young man.......but chilling and cold looking.
It seems the women sculptures have broader faces with more cheek than the reconstructions. Is that artistic license or do the original sculptures look thinner when you examine them from all directions?
2:09 Jesus !! Your work is outstanding
tenía cara de loco "he had a crazy face"
This was awesome! Man, you've got to leave the graphic up slightly longer,don't have time to read it
Malcolm McDonnell's version of Caligula was brilliant in the Penthouse edition .!
2:09 I literall scared me, that is definitely the devil's smile...
Your videos are awesome.But I think the hair on these images must be the same in the statues and must reflect the hair fashion in ancient times.
Eyes are extraordinary, you could see his insanity in them. You see anyone look at you like that and you run away very quickly.
Julia Drusilla has asymmetrical eyes, as I do. My family, on my Father's side was from Croatia, and I wonder if she is related somewhere, in the distant past. Who knows, with the lack of morals that existed among the elite...in every age, including ours.
Caligula's face looks scary. Like an entity from another world. It definitely suits his character. Please do them with their curly hair for the real feel.
Wonderful work. Thank you
For some reason the sculpture often shows a small mouth?
My favorite I Claudius scene ,Caligula's assassination ( Im a God! ,Im a God! ,Im a God!!! )
My favorite scene from I, CLAUDIUS was when Caligula, played by the late John Hurt, dressed up as the Goddess Dawn and performed a choreographic number for his uncle Claudius and members of the palace court. When he finished, they all enthusiastically applauded him to suit his vanity and to stay alive.
Bravo!amazing work as always
These videos are awesome.... Thank you
He looks like he can play a villain.
Menacing eyes. Thanks for your work
lol Uh I believe that that's exactly what he did!
The capstone is that creepy smile of Caligula. BRRRRRR
Me encanta las transformaciones, me parecen muy reales, pero me encantaría fuera también en español..🤗🙏👌🏻
calugula's eyes and lips looks insane.
That seque to the smile sure creeped me out!
Love this!!
The pure Romans (royal houses) were white, blond, and light-eyed, but as the empire expanded they began to mix. but originally the romans are white
Ahahahah.........blond and light-eyed? Studia di piu'......
italians are white too.. and a few of them are blond and light eyed
Sure... like Julius Caesar 😂😂😂
Unbelievably awesome!
Thank you very much!
We know next to nothing about Caligula. What we have are "accounts" written approximately eighty to hundred years after his death.
Couldn't be more creepier the moment Caligula grinned.
These are really great faces, but how much difficulty would it be to reproduce the hairstyles from the statues? It would make more impact, I think....
Beautiful.👍👍👍💖🌹
He also had his horse made senator and had his army collect sea shells.
I think he made his horse senator to mock the parliament and collecting seashells is a beautiful bonding experience lmao
For the horse, absolutely not true. For the sea shells, I'm not sure about that one either.
So who portrayed the more compelling Caligula on screen? Malcolm McDowell or John Hurt?
They were both exceptional, but personally for my taste Malcom McDowell’ masterful impersonation gave me chills for years, I consider Bob Gucci-one’s Caligula the very best version and depiction, try watching the unrated unexpurgated version, is the best.
The creepiest smile next to Pennywise!😬
Wow! They all looked so alike!
I recently came across this channel and find it very interesting. however I have a few questions and would be grateful if someone can answer. First one is how things such as eye and hair color of the reconstructions is known? Second is how the person's age is estimated I have noted that most people look very young. Just curious...
Makes me uncomfortable just looking at him. Masterful job at capturing that 'something off and unsettling' about him.
Fantastic good job.Could you al animate the portrait oh Shah İsmail Khatai or portrait of Shah Abbas?
which apps did u use?
this is very interesting. Subbed!
Here all this time I thought Little Boot's pops was named "Dramaticus".
I discovered
your channel and I love it . Amazing
Thanks and welcome
You’ve got a good family resemblance between Gaius and his mother. Calling him Caligula was not good for the health. He hated it.
Incredible!