@aro_shoxan_official: ئارۆ شۆخان - ئارام شیدا - ئاری فاروق - ئاسۆی شۆخان 🌷❤️#foryou #aro_shoxan_official #aro_video_shoxan #kaniba #هونەرمەندان

Aro Shoxan Official
Aro Shoxan Official
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Saturday 13 June 2026 10:31:00 GMT
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mohamad17827
mhamad yasin :
dly mn💙💙
2026-06-14 06:10:07
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ari55667788
𝐀𝐫𝐢 :
linkkk?
2026-06-13 18:15:06
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mohamad17827
mhamad yasin :
ara gian🌺🌺
2026-06-14 06:10:13
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9wolf1
Wolf :
Linke kamliw lia?
2026-06-24 15:54:01
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mohamad17827
mhamad yasin :
💙💙💙🖤🖤🖤
2026-06-14 06:10:01
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Imagine watching Star Wars and thinking, “This is great, but what if Luke Skywalker knew karate, fought mummies, punched boulders into dust, and saved humanity with a magic golden sword?” That’s essentially 1982’s Turkish Star Wars (Dünyayı Kurtaran Adam), a movie so gloriously unhinged that it uses actual footage from Star Wars, then immediately veers into a fever dream involving skeleton armies, desert wizards, giant monsters, and enough martial arts to make absolutely nobody remember there was supposed to be a space plot. Every scene feels like it was created by asking ten different people what should happen next and then saying “yes” to all of them. The best part is that this wasn’t meant to be a comedy. The filmmakers were aiming for an epic sci-fi adventure and accidentally created one of the greatest cult movies of all time. The soundtrack borrows from Hollywood blockbusters, the special effects look like they were assembled during a lunch break, and the hero solves most problems by aggressively punching them. Watching it today feels less like watching a movie and more like discovering an alternate timeline where copyright law, logic, and common sense all took the day off. The story behind Turkish Star Wars is almost as unbelievable as the movie itself. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Turkey had a booming film industry but very limited budgets, so filmmakers often created unofficial local versions of popular Hollywood genres. Director Çetin İnanç wanted to make a big-budget science fiction epic without having anything close to a big-budget science fiction budget. The solution? Use footage from Star Wars, borrow music from multiple Hollywood movies, build costumes and props as inexpensively as possible, and rely on the charisma of action star Cüneyt Arkın to hold it all together. What was intended as a serious blockbuster became a cult legend decades later, celebrated around the world as one of the most wonderfully bizarre films ever made. #starwars #starwarsfan #mandalorian #yoda #fyp
Imagine watching Star Wars and thinking, “This is great, but what if Luke Skywalker knew karate, fought mummies, punched boulders into dust, and saved humanity with a magic golden sword?” That’s essentially 1982’s Turkish Star Wars (Dünyayı Kurtaran Adam), a movie so gloriously unhinged that it uses actual footage from Star Wars, then immediately veers into a fever dream involving skeleton armies, desert wizards, giant monsters, and enough martial arts to make absolutely nobody remember there was supposed to be a space plot. Every scene feels like it was created by asking ten different people what should happen next and then saying “yes” to all of them. The best part is that this wasn’t meant to be a comedy. The filmmakers were aiming for an epic sci-fi adventure and accidentally created one of the greatest cult movies of all time. The soundtrack borrows from Hollywood blockbusters, the special effects look like they were assembled during a lunch break, and the hero solves most problems by aggressively punching them. Watching it today feels less like watching a movie and more like discovering an alternate timeline where copyright law, logic, and common sense all took the day off. The story behind Turkish Star Wars is almost as unbelievable as the movie itself. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Turkey had a booming film industry but very limited budgets, so filmmakers often created unofficial local versions of popular Hollywood genres. Director Çetin İnanç wanted to make a big-budget science fiction epic without having anything close to a big-budget science fiction budget. The solution? Use footage from Star Wars, borrow music from multiple Hollywood movies, build costumes and props as inexpensively as possible, and rely on the charisma of action star Cüneyt Arkın to hold it all together. What was intended as a serious blockbuster became a cult legend decades later, celebrated around the world as one of the most wonderfully bizarre films ever made. #starwars #starwarsfan #mandalorian #yoda #fyp

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