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10 Terrifying Folklore Creatures From Around the World

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When it comes to monsters in horror, there is usually some kind of background or urban legend surrounding the creatures that has its base in real world tales. Movies about Bigfoot didn’t invent the creature. Rather, it was the other way around. The story of Bigfoot roaming the countryside has long fascinated people, so it only made sense to have films about such a creature.

While the films often do a good job of portraying the strange creature we’re being made aware of, oftentimes it is the real story that is far more unsettling and eerie. That’s why I ventured into the world of folklore monsters and I found 10 examples that I think are perfect for the horror audience!

Check them out below and then let me know in the comments about some of the creatures from your neck of the woods!


Nykur – Iceland

Thrándur Thorarinsson (Source)

Thrándur Thorarinsson (Source)

A shapeshifting creature that most often took the form of a strangely shaped horse, the Nykur’s method of dispatching its victims was to lure them into mounting it, whereupon it would ride into a lake and drown its unfortunate rider. To defend yourself, you had to yell its name or make the sign of a cross over its rear. The former would send the creature back into the water (sans the rider) while the latter would allow it to be ridden like a normal horse.

A local superstition is that the Nykur is also associated with ice, particularly the sound of it cracking on a lake. When these cracks would appear, the accompanied sound would be said to be the neighing of the Nykur, according to Orkneyjar.


Wendigo – Canada

Hydrallon (Source)

Hydrallon (Source)

A staple of the beliefs of Algonquin-speaking peoples, the Wendigo is a creature that is humanoid yet monstrous in appearance. It is the embodiment of greed and voracious appetite as it is always on the hunt for more to eat, delighting in its taste for human flesh. Perfect for this time of the year, the Wendigo is often associated with winter and the cold. It looks like it is decaying and it is said that what lips it has are tattered, desiccated, and peeled back.

To defeat a Wendigo, there are three suggested methods. The first requires fire, as it will melt the creature’s icy heart. The second states that you must use a large amount of silver to purify the creature. This can be done with bullets, much like with a werewolf. The final method comes from an Ojibwe tale where a hunter simply stabbed the Wendigo in the head multiple times to kill it. Sounds like the third option is what most of us would have to fall back upon should we find ourselves face-to-face with a Wendigo.


Manananggal – Phillipines

The first of two creatures on this list from the Phillipines, the Manananggal is a blood-sucking witch-like creature that has a penchant for tearing itself in half at the abdomen, flying into the night in search of sleeping pregnant women, and then using a tongue-like proboscis to eat the hearts of their fetuses. To defend yourself from such a creature, you can use daggers, sunlight, or a buntot pagi (a whip that is made from the tail of a stingray).

Additionally, if you can smear the upper torso with garlic, salt, or ash, then it will be unable to rejoin with its lower half and will be vanquished by the sunrise.


Mylings – Sweden

Max Magnus (Source)

Max Magnus (Source)

This Scandinavian creature is as tragic as it is haunting. The Mylings are the souls of unbaptized children who are unable to move on after their death. They are forced to roam the world in an attempt to find someone who will bury them in a graveyard, allowing their spirit the opportunity to move on. However, this is not easy for the one that becomes burdened with this task.

What happens is that a Myling will jump on the back of a traveler during the night, demanding that the wanderer carry them to the closest graveyard. Although the Myling are children, their spirits are said to be large and heavy. Each step towards the graveyard sees them grow heavier, to the point that the person carrying them could very well sink into the ground. And should the wanderer fail to take another step, the Myling becomes enraged and will kill the wanderer only to roam the countryside looking for another unfortunate soul.


Black Annis – Leicestershire, England

If you’ve seen the Ridley Scott fantasy film Legend, then just imagine Meg Mucklebones and you’ll have a good idea what Black Annis (also known as Black Angus) looks like. Described as a witchy crone, she has blue skin and iron nails and a fondness for eating children. She lives in a cave in Dane Hills in Leicestershire, which she is purported to have carved herself with her clawed hands.

Her joy comes from wandering the local countryside and finding unsuspecting children or lambs, slaughtering them, and tanning their skins, which she wears around her waist. To this day, she is a warning from parents to children. “If you misbehave, Black Annis will get you in the night!


Bukavac – Slavic Region

Phantos (Source)

Phantos (Source)

Much like the Icelandic Nykur, the Bukavac lives in the water of lakes and rivers. Described as a six-legged beast with large, twisted horns, it leaps from the water onto anything living and strangled them to death. The Pathfinder RPG states that they have a massive roar that can stun its intended meal. Additionally, they describe it as a large creature that is 11-ft long and can weight two tons.


Chupacabra – Central and South America

First spotted in Puerto Rico, the Chupacabra has become an urban legend of epic proportion in a relatively short time. First spotted in 1995, it has since been seen through Central and South America as well as various parts of the United States, although more so in the Southwest. It doesn’t attack people, preferring instead to drain livestock of every drop of blood via three punctures to the chest. As with every urban legend, no actual evidence has been found but there are theories that what people are seeing are canids that have been afflicted with mange.

An interesting tidbit is that the original interpretation of what a Chupacabra looks like was based on Sil from Species. In August of 1995, Madelyne Tolentino stated that she saw the creature and that she believed it to be the Giger-designed alien. She even stated in her report to the police, “It was a creature that looked like the chupacabra, with spines on its back and all… The resemblance to the chupacabra was really impressive. [Source]


Loch Ness Monster – Scotland

lochnessmonsterphoto

Perhaps the most famous of all folklore monsters, Nessie is said to live in Loch Ness in the Scottish Highlands, not far from Inverness. Her rise to popularity came in the early 20th century and since then people have been flocking to those waters to see if they can get real, provable evidence that such a creature does in fact exist.

Described as a sea serpent, Nessie is thought to be over 20 ft. long and can bring her head, which is said to be rather small, up to 4 ft. out of the water. Throughout the years, there has been no photograph, video, or recording of the Loch Ness Monster that has been enough to confirm its existence. However, that hasn’t stopped anyone from looking. Instead, it has only fueled the fire and any new photograph sparks interest and intrigue.


Jersey Devil – New Jersey, United States

The Jersey Devil has a rather interesting origin story, one that involves the Devil himself. Back in the early/mid-18th century, Mother Leeds (thought to be Deborah Leeds), a supposed witch, found out that she was pregnant with a 13th child. Convinced that this 13th child was the son of the Devil, she bore him only to find that he was normal in all respects. However, he quickly turned into a hooved beast with wings. He killed the midwife and flew out the chimney, vanishing into the nearby woods.

The Jersey Devil mostly kills livestock and farm animals, although it is known to sometimes kill children. The remains of these animals are found scattered about. Furthermore, it supposedly has the ability to dry up a cow’s milk by simply breathing on it.

The Jersey Devil hoax has such a following that in the early 60’s, the merchants of Camden, NJ offered a $10,000 reward for the creature, stating that they would build a zoo enclosure for it. That reward is still unclaimed.


Aswang – Phillipines

Ubermonster (Source)

Ubermonster (Source)

Similar in some ways to the Manananggal, the Aswang differs in a few ways. For example, it is a shapeshifter that lives during the day as a citizen of the town where it commits its atrocities. Often mild-mannered and meek, the Aswang can often make friends with its neighbors, who have no idea what kind of creature they are dealing with. And while they also enjoy the hearts (and livers) of unborn fetuses and infants, they are known to replace their victims with makeshift dolls, almost like they are covering their tracks. While each Aswang description varies, there are those who say that some are so thing that they can hide themselves behind a bamboo tree and not be noticed.

As mentioned before, the Aswang can become friendly with those around it. And should it end up marrying a human, their mate will turn into an Aswang.


Editorials

‘Heathers’ – 1980s Satire Is Sharper Than Ever 35 Years Later

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When I was just a little girl I asked my mother, what will I be? Will I be pretty? Will I be rich? Here’s what she said to me: Qué será, será. Whatever will be, will be

The opening of Michael Lehmann’s Heathers begins with a dreamy cover of a familiar song. Angelic voices ask a mother to predict the future only to be met with an infuriating response: “whatever will be, will be.” Her answer is most likely intended to present a life of limitless possibility, but as the introduction to a film devoid of competent parents, it feels like a noncommittal platitude. Heathers is filled with teenagers looking for guidance only to be let down by one adult after another. Gen Xers and elder millennials may have glamorized the outlandish fashion and creative slang while drooling over a smoking hot killer couple, but the violent film now packs an ominous punch. 35 years later, those who enjoyed Heathers in its original run may have more in common with the story’s parents than its teens. That’s right, Lehmann’s Heathers is now old enough to worry about its kids. 

Veronica Sawyer (Winona Ryder) is the newest member of Westerberg High’s most popular clique. Heather Chandler (Kim Walker), sits atop this extreme social hierarchy ruling her minions and classmates alike with callous cruelty and massive shoulder pads. When Veronica begins dating a mysterious new student nicknamed J.D. (Christian Slater), they bond over hatred for her horrendous “friends.” After a vicious fight, a prank designed to knock Heather off her high horse goes terribly wrong and the icy mean girl winds up dead on her bedroom floor. Veronica and J.D. frantically stage a suicide, unwittingly making Heather more popular than ever. But who will step in to fill her patent leather shoes? With an ill-conceived plan to reset the social order, has Veronica created an even more dangerous monster? 

Heathers debuted near the end of an era. John Hughes ruled ’80s teen cinema with instant classics like Sixteen Candles, The Breakfast Club, and Ferris Bueller’s Day Off while the Brat Pack dominated headlines with devil-may-care antics and sexy vibes. The decade also saw the rise of the slasher; a formulaic subgenre in which students are picked off one by one. Heathers combines these two trends in a biting satire that challenges the feel-good conclusions of Hughes and his ilk. Rather than a relatable loser who wins a date with the handsome jock or a loveable misfit who stands up to a soulless principal, Lehmann’s film exists in a world of extremes. The popular kids are vapid monsters, the geeks are barely human, the outcasts are psychopaths, and the adults are laughably incompetent. Veronica and a select few of her classmates feel like human beings, but the rest are outsized archetypes designed to push the teen comedy genre to its outer limits. 

Mean girls have existed in fiction ever since Cinderella’s wicked stepsisters tried to steal her man, but modern iterations arguably date back to Rizzo (Stockard Channing, Grease) and Chris Hargenson (Nancy Allen, Carrie). It might destroy Heather Chandler to know that she isn’t the first, but this iconic mean girl may be the most extreme. She knows exactly what her classmates think of her and uses her power to make others suffer. She reminds Veronica, “They all want me as a friend or a fuck. I’m worshiped at Westerburg and I’m only a junior.” With an icy glare and barely concealed rage, she stomps the halls playing cruel pranks and demanding her friends submit to her will. We see a brief glimpse of humanity at a frat party when she’s coerced into a sexual act, but she immediately squanders this good will by promising to destroy Veronica at school on Monday. However, the film does not revolve around Heather’s redemption and it doesn’t revel in her ruination. Lehmann is more concerned with how Veronica uses her own popularity than the way she dispatches her best friend/enemy. In her book Unlikeable Female Characters: The Women Pop Culture Wants You to Hate, Anna Bogutskaya describes Heather Chandler as an evolution in female characterization and it’s refreshing to see a woman play such an unapologetic villain. 

Heather Chandler may die in the film’s first act, but her legacy can still be felt in both film and TV. Shannen Doherty would go on to specialize in catty characters both onscreen and off while Walker’s performance inspired the 2004 comedy Mean Girls (directed by Mark Waters, brother of Heathers screenwriter Daniel Waters). Early seasons of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Dawson’s Creek, Gossip Girl, and Pretty Little Liars all feature at least one glamorous bitch and mean girls can currently be seen battling on HBO’s Euphoria. Tina Fey’s Regina George (Rachel McAdams) sparked an important dialogue about female bullying and modern iterations add humanity to this contemptible character. With a rageful spit at her reflection in the mirror, Walker’s Heather hints at a deep well of pain beneath her unthinkable cruelty and we’ve been examining the motivations of her followers ever since.

But Heather Chandler is not the film’s major antagonist. While the blond junior roams the cafeteria insulting her classmates with an inane lunchtime poll, a true psychopath watches from the corner. J.D. lives with his construction magnate father and has spent his teenage years bouncing around from school to school. At first, Veronica is impressed with his frank morality and compassion for Heather’s victims, but this righteous altruism hides an inner darkness. The cafeteria scene ends with J.D. pulling a gun on two jocks and shooting them with blanks. This “prank” earns him a light suspension and a bad boy reputation, but it’s an uncomfortable precursor to our violent reality. He’s a prototypical school shooter obsessed with death, likely in response to his own traumatic past. 

It’s impossible to talk about J.D. without mentioning the Columbine High School Massacre of 1999. Just over ten years later, Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold would murder one teacher and twelve of their fellow classmates while failing to ignite a bomb that would decimate the building. Rumors swirled in the immediate aftermath about trench coat-wearing outcasts targeting popular students, but these theories have been largely disproven. However, uncomfortable parallels persist. Harris convinced a fellow student to join him in murder with tactics similar to the manipulation J.D. uses on Veronica. The cinematic character also fails in a plan to blow up the school and the stories of all three young men end in suicide. There is no evidence to suggest the Columbine killers were inspired by Slater’s performance but these similarities lend  an uncomfortable element of prophecy to an already dark film. 

In the past 35 years, we’ve become acutely aware of the adolescent potential for destruction. Unfortunately the adults of Heathers have their heads in the sand. We watch darkly humorous faculty meetings in which teachers discuss what they believe to be suicides and openly weigh the value of one student over the next. The only grownup who seems to care is Ms. Fleming (Penelope Milford) the guidance counselor and even she is woefully out of touch. Using dated hippie language, she stages an event where she pressures her students to hold hands and emote. Unfortunately she’s more interested in helping herself. Hoping to capitalize on her own empathy, she invites TV cameras to film her students grieving for their friends. She treats the decision to stay alive like she would the choice between colleges and asks Veronia about her own suspected suicide attempt with the same banality Heather brings to the lunchtime polls. This self-involved counselor is only interested in recording the answer, not actually connecting with the students she’s supposed to be guiding. 

We also see a shocking lack of support from the film’s parents. J.D. and his father have fallen into a bizarre role-reversal with J.D. adopting the persona of a ’50s-era sitcom dad and his father that of an obedient son. Like Ms. Fleming’s performance, these practiced exchanges are meant to project the illusion of love while maintaining emotional distance between parent and child. Veronica’s own folks display similar detachment in vapid conversations repeated nearly word for word. They go through the motions of communication without actually saying anything of substance. When Veronica tries to talk about the deaths of her friends, her mother cuts her off with a cold, “you’ll live.” The next time Mrs. Sawyer (Jennifer Rhodes) sees her daughter, she’s hanging from the ceiling. Fortunately Veronica has staged this suicide to deceive J.D., but it’s only in perceived death that we see genuine empathy from her mother. 

Another parent is not so lucky. J.D. has concocted an elaborate scene to murder jocks Kurt (Lance Fenton) and Ram (Patrick Labyorteaux) in the guise of a joint suicide between clandestined lovers and the world now believes his ruse. At the crowded funeral, a grief-stricken father stands next to a coffin wailing, “I love my dead gay son” while J.D. wonders from the pews if he would have this same compassion if his son was alive. It’s a brutal moment of truth in an outlandish film. Perhaps better parenting could have prevented Kurt from becoming the kind of bully J.D. would target. We now have a better understanding about the emotional support teenagers need, but the students in Heathers have been thrown to the wolves.  

At the same funeral, Veronica sees a little girl crying in the front row. She not only witnesses the collateral damage she’s caused, but realizes that future generations are watching her behavior. She is showing young girls that social change is only possible through violence and others are copying this deadly trend. Despite the popular song Teenage Suicide (Don’t Do It!) by Big Fun, two other students attempt to take their own lives. Her teen angst has a growing body count and murdering her bullies has only turned them into martyrs. 

Heathers delivers a somewhat happy ending by black comedy standards. After watching J.D. blow himself up, Veronica saunters back into school with a newfound freedom. She confronts Heather Duke (Doherty), the school’s reigning mean girl queen, and takes the symbolic red scrunchie out of her hair. Veronica declares herself the new sheriff in town and immediately begins her rule by making a friend. She approaches a severely bullied student and makes a date to watch videos on the night of the prom, using her popularity to lift someone else up. She’s learned on her own that taking out one Heather opens the door for someone else to step into the vacuum. The only way to combat toxic cruelty is to normalize acts of generosity. Rather than destroying her enemies, she will lead the school with kindness.

Heathers concludes with another rendition of “Que Sera, Sera.” In a more modern cover, a soloist delivers an informal answer hinting at a brighter future. We still don’t know what the future holds, but we don’t have to adhere to the social hierarchy we’ve inherited. We each have the power to decide what “will be” if we’re brave enough to separate ourselves from the popular crowd. The generation who watched Heathers as children are now raising their own teens and kids. One can only hope we’ve learned the lessons of this sharp satire. The future’s not ours to see, but if we guide our children with honesty and compassion, maybe we’ll raise a generation of Veronicas instead. 

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