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Kaa''This article is about a fictitional animal in the writings of Rudyard Kipling. For the island in the Duff Islands, please see Kaa, Duff Islands'' Kaa the Pythonidae is a fictional animal fictional character in the Mowgli stories of Rudyard Kipling. First introduced in the story "Kaa's Hunting" in ''The Jungle Book'', Kaa is a huge and powerful snake, more than a hundred years old and still in his prime. Bagheera and Baloo enlist Kaa's help to rescue Mowgli when the man-cub is captured by the Bandar-log (monkeys) and taken to an abandoned human city. Kaa breaks down the wall of the building in which Mowgli is imprisoned and uses his serpentine hypnosis to draw the monkeys toward his waiting jaws. Bagheera and Baloo are also hypnotized, but Mowgli is immune because he is human, and breaks the spell on his friends. In ''The Second Jungle Book'' Kaa appears in the first half of the story "The King's Ankus". He and Mowgli spend some time relaxing, bathing and wrestling (Kipling may perhaps have been inspired to write this scene by Frederic Leighton, 1st Baron Leighton's statue ''Athlete Wrestling with a Python''). Then Kaa persuades Mowgli to visit a treasure chamber guarded by an old Cobra (snake) beneath the ancient city. The cobra tries to kill Mowgli but its poison has dried up. Mowgli takes a jewelled item away as a souvenir, not realising the trouble it will cause in the second half of the story, and Kaa departs. In "Red Dog" Mowgli asks Kaa for help when his wolf pack is threatened by rampaging dhole (the red dogs of the title). In one of the most striking scenes in the series, Kaa goes into a trance so that he can search his century-long memory for a stratagem to defeat the dogs: “The dhole do not turn and their throats are hot,” said Kaa. “There will be neither Manling nor Wolf-cub when that hunting is done, but only dry bones.”With Kaa's help Mowgli tricks the dhole into attacking prematurely. Kaa takes no part in the resulting battle, but Mowgli and the wolves finally kill all the dhole, though not without grievous losses. Kaa makes his last appearance in "The Spring Running", as the teenage Mowgli reluctantly prepares to leave the jungle for the last time. "It is hard to cast the skin", he tells Mowgli, but Mowgli knows he must cast the skin of his old life in order to grow a new one. ==Disney's version== The 1967 The Walt Disney Company cartoon ''The Jungle Book (1967 movie)'' does not follow Kipling's story very closely. Its biggest departure is in making Kaa a villain. He twice hypnotises Mowgli, once near the beginning of the film (also hypnotising Bagheera in the process) and once about half way through, whilst seductively singing "Trust in Me". His method of hypnosis is through eye contact, and since the film this has been parodied many times. The only reason for the change seems to be that the studio felt that the United States public would not accept a snake as a heroic character. Indeed, Disney virtually reprised the villainous Kaa with Sir Hiss (voiced by Terry-Thomas) in 1973's animated ''Robin Hood (1973 movie) ''. The Jungle Book characters Fictional snakes See other meanings of words starting from letter: KKA | KB | KC | KD | KE | KF | KG | KH | KI | KJ | KL | KM | KN | KO | KP | KR | KS | KT | KU | KW | KX | KY | KZ |Words begining with Kaa: Kaa Kaa's_Hunting Kaa's_hunting Kaa,_Duff_Islands Kaaawa Kaaawa,_Hawaii Kaaawa,_HI Kaab Kaaba Kaaba Kaabah Kaadedhdhoo_Island Kaadu Kaafir Kaafiyaa Kaahumanu KAAL Kaal Kaal Kaal Kaal/Desk Kaaldolmar Kaaleppi_K._K._Juures Kaali Kaalijärv_crater Kaalijärv_crater Kaali_Jarv_Craters Kaalnek Kaalreth Kaalund,_Hans_Vilhelm Kaal_(Hindi_Movie) Kaamos Kaan Kaanapali Kaanapali,_Hawaii Kaanapali,_HI Kaang Kaante Kaapmuiden Kaapse_Afrikaans Kaare Kaare Kaare_Andrews Kaarina Kaarlo_Juho_Stahlberg Kaarlo_Juho_Ståhlberg Kaarlo_Juho_Ståhlberg Kaartaveerya-arjuna Kaartaveerya-arjuna Kaartika Kaasar_Vadavali Kaasar_Vadavali Kaaskerke Kaatsen Kaavi Kaazki Kaa_(Animorphs) Káa_goox |
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