Showing posts with label monsters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label monsters. Show all posts

Saturday, October 5, 2024

October Horror Movie Challenge: Eyes of the Beholder

The Trollenberg Terror / The Crawling Eye (1958)
Tonight is a little bit of a stretch, but whatever, I can make it fit. And while I am doing it, lets make it a Drive-In Double Feature! It is a Saturday after all. 

The Trollenberg Terror / The Crawling Eye (1958)

Another older one, and one I have seen in the past, but as the MST3k version.

This one takes place on a Swiss mountain, Trollenberg, and, well, let's be honest, it's not good. It's slow and the monster is not very good.

It starts out with a mountain climber getting killed by something. We switch over to two sisters, Anne (Janet Munro) and Sarah (Jennifer Jayne) Pilgrim. Anne is psychic, which is convenient. They meet Alan Brooks (F-Troop's Forrest Tucker). Anne knows about the accident and who was killed. 

Two more climbers go up and go missing. Our psychic girl sees them in the cabin, and our heroes look for them. 

Soon they discover a group of horrid "crawling" eye creatures living in the radioactive mists.  They have psychic abilities and can detect humans with ESP.

While it is never explicitly stated they are aliens, I think there is implication that they are.

The Trollenberg Terror Crawling Eye


It Came from Outer Space (1953)
It Came from Outer Space (1953)

It has been years since I have seen this one. Decades really. But what does it have? Yes, you know it, giant eye monsters. 

The monsters here are a little benevolent, but still alien.  They look more like giant jellyfish with one central eye; so not totally dissimilar to beholders.

They are able to assume human shape, or at least the appearance of a human, and can act like someone they have encountered. 

This is more sci-fi with some horror elements, as were many of the sci-fi movies from the 1950s. 

The movie proceeds to deal with the aliens, who are more benign than most, with them leaving Earth saying that they will be back one day.


Featured Monster: Beholder

Ok. We know that the Beholder began as a bit of joke; as in "Eye of the Beholder" and was the creation of Terry Kuntz. The Eye monsters here make for a passible, if weak, Beholders. Or as the kids say, "When you order your Beholders off of Wish.com" 

Beholder

But what can we get from these movies to help our games?

A bit, to be honest. There was an obvious need or at least a want for eye monsters and alien ones at that. In both movies, the eye monsters have some advanced psychic abilities and are clearly "alien."

Game Ideas

Beholders are woefully under utalized in D&D in my mind. They are a "boss monster" but rarely are they given much more to do. Beholders should be at the center of a vast network of lackeys, spies, assassins and other disposable mooks for their own, often alien, ends.

Xanathar is a good example of this, but even Xanathar is relatable. I mean REALLY alien. 

I also think beholders should have psionic powers as opposed to magic. I have always liked the idea that beholders and mind flayers are two great alien species who have been at war with each for millennia. 

These movies might not be great, but they are full of ideas. 

October Horror Movie Challenge 2024
Viewed: 6
First Time Views: 3

Monster Movie Marathon

Thursday, October 3, 2024

October Horror Movie Challenge: The Gorgon (1964)

The Gorgon (1964)
 This movie might be one of the best convergence of movies from my youth, Greek Myth, and monsters from the Monster Manual. Tonight's feature is 1964's The Gorgon from Hammer Films.

The Gorgon (1964)

Ok what does this movie have? Well, Christopher Lee (as a good guy!), Peter Cushing (as a bad guy! sort of), the "Hammer Hamlet"" pre-Doctor Who Patrick Troughton, Barbara Shelley, an angry mob, a monster, basically it hits all the notes. But does it is hit them right?

The plot features a bunch of seemingly random murders. The odd thing is that the murder victims are all turned to stone. Peter Cushing is out local doctor covering up for the murders, but we don't see why till the very end. 

Lee is the friend of a family where one brother is blamed for the murders, his father is later turned to stone while investigating, and the last brother comes to investigate and falls in love with Barbara Shelley's Carla.

We learn through various sources that the spirit of "Megeara" one of the last Gorgon sisters haunts this small village in Germany. The three Gorgons were named Stheno, Euryale, and Medusa. Megeara must have sounded better to them.

Turns out Megeara's spirit is living on in Carla and every full moon she is released again on the world. 

Believe it or not, I have never seen this movie till tonight. 

There are a TON of liberties taken with the ancient Greek myth, but honestly that is fine. I am more annoyed they went with Megeara instead of Stheno or Euryale.

Featured Monster: Medusa

I think it is a bit obvious that the art in the Monster Manual was very inspired by this movie.

MedusaThe Gorgon

There is even some evidence that the Medusa of D&D is also based on this movie to a degree. Not the spirit or the coming out at the full moon, but the general behavior.

The great thing about this movie? It takes a classical mythology monster and gives it a solid horror feel to it in the special Hammer way. If you want a good working template on how to add horror to your games, this is a good place to start.

Of course, and this is an old gripe of mine, why is the monster called a Medusa and not a Gorgon? More to the point why is there also a bull-like creature called a Gorgon in the MM?

There is a "Gorgon" in a 1607 Bestiary by Edward Topsell titled "The Historie of Foure-Footed Beastes." Note, the link here is to the revised and combined Beasts, Insects, and Serpents and is over 1000 pages. 

The Historie of Foure-Footed Beastes

That looks like our bull-Gorgon sure enough. I am sure that this is creature Gygax had in mind. And he said as much [1][2][3].

Two monsters for the price of one? No. I'll keep this one for the Medusa. 

October Horror Movie Challenge 2024
Viewed: 3
First Time Views: 3

Monster Movie Marathon

Wednesday, October 2, 2024

October Horror Movie Challenge: Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire (2024)

Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire (2024)
 Every year, I also watch a Godzilla movie. I mean these were the "Monster Movies" my dad and I watched. So this time I was joined by my oldest son to watch this. We had an absolute blast.

Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire (2024)

Let's not pretend this movie is anything more than what it is, a big fight by giant Kaiju. This is the second Kong and Godzilla team-up, and they are going after another giant primate, The Skar King, and his pet dragon. 

Is this movie a horror? No, unless you count the horrors committed to the laws of physics here. But it is a fun romp with a great soundtrack.

Kong fights monsters, gets his butt kicked, and has to go get Godzilla as backup. Godzilla, suspecting something was up anyway, got supercharged by feeding on the energies of Tiamat (much to my son's delight and explaining why the big G was pink). 

I DO find the Hollow Earth very entertaining. While it makes as much sense as a gigantic Kaiju, it is still fun and reminds me I should write more Hollow Earth content.

This is not an Oscar-winning entry in the Godzilla franchise, but no one, least of all me, goes into these expecting that.

Featured Monster: White Dragon

The Kaiju/Titan Shimo is a white dragon in all but name. She doesn't have wings, but I can live with that. The Kaiju/Titan Tiamat does not have any resemblance to the D&D Tiamat, but maybe to the mythological Tiamat if you squint your eyes.

White Dragon

Shimo doesn't have wings, but she does make for a good White Dragon. There is a great bit where Shimo breathes frost into the sky to make it cloud over. It was not a damage-causing attack, but fun, all the same.

--

October Horror Movie Challenge 2024
Viewed: 2
First Time Views: 2

Monster Movie Marathon

Tuesday, October 1, 2024

October Horror Movie Challenge: A Virgin Among the Living Dead (1973)

A Virgin Among the Living Dead (1973)
I want to start this "Monster Movie Marathon" with a new one. I got this movie for my birthday and waited till tonight to see it. While I have seen a version of this one before, there are in a sense three movies here. Franco's original, Pierre Querut's added "X-rated" (really only a hard R or NC-17, I have seen worse on Netflix), and Jean Rollin's 1981 additions. I saw the Jean Rollin version, but never the original Jesús Franco version. It is this version I am basing my monster connection on.

Plus I start off with a movie that ticks all the boxes on my checklists. Before 1977, check. Jesús Franco, check. Jean Rollin, check. Another Britt Nichols and Christina von Blanc collaboration, ok that is not on my list, but it should be. And of course a monster from the Monster Manual.

A Virgin Among the Living Dead (1973)

Original and other titles include The Night of the Shooting Stars (La nuit des étoiles filantes), Christina, Princess of Eroticism (the release title for the Franco version), and The Erotic Dreams of Christine.

Our tale concerns Christina (Christina von Blanc), who returns to estranged (and strange) family in Europe for the reading of her father's will. Here she meets Aunt Abigail, Uncle Howard, Cousin Carmencé (Britt Nichols), and creepy ground's keeper Basilio, played of course by Franco himself.

The plot is paper thin, but that is not why you watch it. Ignoring for a moment all the times Christina and Carmencé run around the villa naked (hard I know) there is something sinister going on here. The plot is very, very similar to a lot of these Euro-horror movies where estranged young (most likely female) relative visits creepy family in Europe only to discover they are Satanists/Vampires/Ghosts or something else.

While there are zombies and the living dead in this film, that is mostly in the Rollin version. The pure, uncut Franco is a bit more subtle.

I did watch all three, but there is not enough differences here to merit counting this as three movies. 

Featured Monster: Ghost

We do see the ghost of Christina's dead father. He was hung and can't enter into the afterlife. We also meet a character known as the Queen of Night. But the only thing that makes sense here is that everyone, including Christina, is dead. 

Ghosts vs. Wraith vs. Spectres. Sometimes it can be bit difficult to determine what a movie monster is in terms of a D&D monster. This is never more true than with the various incorporeal undead like ghosts. In this case I picked Ghost because they seem to be "alive" to each other. A specter is more like the Ghosts of A Christmas Carol and Wraith is something a little more insubstantial.

Groaning Spirits (Banshees) and Shadows are a little easier to tell apart from the others and easier to pick out in a movie. Banshees have a very solid history.


October Horror Movie Challenge 2024
Viewed: 1
First Time Views: 1

Monster Movie Marathon


Monday, September 23, 2024

Monstrous Mondays: The Monster Movie Marathon & RPG Blog Carnival

 It is that time of year again! Ok, that's lie, it is always that time of year for me. But it is that time of year when I start talking about it. And by "it" I mean my October Horror Movie Challenge

The goal is basically the same every year: Watch 31 Horror movies, with at least 20 of them as first-time views.  I often throw in a little twist to the theme. One year, it was all Vampire movies; another movie just before 1973 when The Exorcist came out.  This year, we will have a theme as well. 

The Monster Movie Marathon

To celebrate 50 Years of Dungeons & Dragons, I am going back to watch a bunch of classic (say pre-1977) movies featuring monsters from the AD&D 1st Edition Monster Manual.

Monster Movie Marathon

This all works out great for me.

"Monster Movies," as my Dad and I used to call them, were a big influence on my childhood and primed me for when Dungeons & Dragons came into my life. 

So I am going to watch a bunch of horror movies, mostly from before the Monster Manual was printed in 1977, featuring monsters that would later appear in those pages. 

I am not making any claims that these movies inspired these monsters, but certainly, they would have been known by the authors and artists of D&D at the time. They WERE certainly an inspiration to me at the time. The challenge here will be finding 20 I have never seen.

I have been reviewing my lists of monsters and comparing them to the book "The Classics of the Horror Film" I mentioned about a month ago. Along with other books, that for me, were the pillars of my love of monsters and ultimately D&D.

I'll watch the movie and talk about their Monster Manual counterparts. 

Should be great! So join me all month long next month.

I am also hosting the The RPG Blog Carnival for October. My theme is "Horror and Fantasy." Many of the monsters I'll be talking about have a toe, or tentacle in both. Monsters like the vampire, Medusa, and the mummy are featured in both genres. Creatures like the ogre and goblin began as horror monsters (of the time) and became more fantasy. Greek Myth for example has a lot of fantasy creatures that would later appear in horror.

So I have my work cut out for me to be sure! So join me in talking about Horror and Fantasy in your games and I'll link to you in future posts.

RPG Blog Carnival


Monday, September 9, 2024

Monstrous Mondays: Monsters in Miniature

 I picked up the new D&D 5.5 last week, I also picked up some of the new 50th Anniversary minis and the next two Monster Manual classic minis. 

D&D 50th Anniversary minis


The packs come with one large and three medium or small minis. We lucked out and got a Pit Fiend and Goblin in both 1st and 5th Edition versions. I will admit, I do like the 1st Edition versions more.


D&D 50th Anniversary minis - Red Dragon

D&D 50th Anniversary minis - Red Dragon

We also got the David Sutherland III Red Dragon from the Holmes Basic set. That one is sold separately.

Monster Manual Minis

I also picked up two sets of Monster Manual minis. Sets K-N and O-R.

Lizard Man

Lizard Man

Lich

Lich

Merman and Mind Flayer

Merman and Mind Flayer

Minotaur

Minotaur

Naga (and photobombing Otyugh)

Naga (and photobombing Otyugh)

Mummy

Mummy

Otyugh and old-school Owlbear

Otyugh and old-school Owlbear

Pseudo-Dragon

Pseudo-Dragon

Quasit

Quasit

Remormaz

Remormaz

Rust Monster

Rust Monster

Roper

Roper

Rakshasa

Rakshasa

So pretty happy with those.

AND last night one of gamers my son's regular group brought me this!

LEGO Tasha

LEGO Tasha

LEGO Tasha

LEGO Tasha! She comes with cauldron, hat and a spell book with what can only be Tasha's Hideous Uncontrollable Laughter.

I'll have to compare her to all my other Tasha/Iggwilv minis.

Monday, August 19, 2024

Monstrous Mondays: The Classics of the Horror Film

 Today's Monstrous Monday is a special treat for me. I scored what I consider to be one of the pivotable books of my childhood and one that led to my love of horror movies and my love of monsters in D&D and other RPGs.  William K. Everson's The Classics of the Horror Film.

The Classics of the Horror Film

My dad had a bunch of these classic film books by William K. Everson. They were all black with some gold lettering on the spine. They covered silent movies, westerns, there was one on "The Bad Guys" and think one on the movies about WWII. But this is the one I read over and over and over again.

I was not much more than 4 or 5 and I already knew who Bela Lugosi, Lon Chaney, and Boris Karloff were. I remember making mental lists of movies I wanted to see from this book. It is, among some other influences that lead to love horror movies and vampire movies in particular.

When I got older, and our access (well, everyone's access) to older movies went beyond the occasional re-run on Saturday afternoon classic movies or the Friday or Saturday night Creature Features, my dad and I would watch these movies. We talked about the differences between American, British, European and Japanese horror movies. How the Universal Classics differed from the Hammer Horror era, and how the Exorcist and later Jaws changed everything.

Flipping through this book now is like flipping through a high school yearbook. I am seeing picture of old, almost forgotten friends. 

William K. Everson's The Classics of the Horror Film

William K. Everson's The Classics of the Horror Film

William K. Everson's The Classics of the Horror Film

Elsa Lancaster left a deep mark on my psyche from 1975 on.

William K. Everson's The Classics of the Horror Film

William K. Everson's The Classics of the Horror Film

William K. Everson's The Classics of the Horror Film

Mary Pickford, an unlikely "Final Girl*," but was enough to make me remember her and use bits of her movies in my D&D games. 

Ok she is not a real "Final Girl" here, but if this movie was remade today she would be.

William K. Everson's The Classics of the Horror Film

My dad and I used to rave about this scene in Dracula above. Not just how impressive it was to film and the set to build, but how it conveys Dracula's command over the scene. 


William K. Everson's The Classics of the Horror Film

I always liked that photo of Pamela Franklin in "The Legend of Hell House." You know some scary shit is going on here, even if there is nothing in the photo that is scary on its own. Just her eyes and her bare feet just barely touching the ground. You get the feeling that she is safe, as long as she just doesn't get up and walk away. BTW, she is still alive today.

My fascination with horror movies, giant monster movies, monsters in general, and to no small degree, these posts for Monstrous Mondays, all come from this book.

I already added it to my Appendix O I am planning on using it for my October Horror Movie Marathon.


Wednesday, June 12, 2024

The Enchanted World: Magical Beasts

The Enchanted World: Magical Beasts
I love monsters. Monsters and mythology is what got me into Dungeons & Dragons to start with. Well, that and the fact that everyone in my school seemed to be playing it all at once. So, today's Enchanted World volume, 1985's Magical Beasts, is a rather nice treat for me. In a way, it was a major publisher that paid tribute to my hobby's roots.  While I have no concrete evidence that the Enchanted World series came about due to D&D's popularity, I am not ruling it out either. 

Magical Beasts

by Editors of Time-LIFE Books, 1985 (144 pages)
ISBN 0809452294, 0809452308 (US Editions)

This book is divided into the standard three sections, as with Wizards and Witches it is divided into larger chronological sections. 

Chapter One: Vestiges of the Elder Days

We begin back 40 centuries ago when humans were still primitive hunter-gatherers and how the monsters of our lives, the cave bear, the wolf, the large cat, were just animals that we were barely equal to. Monsters, it seems, go back as least as far as magic. This is not the first or last parallel this volume will have with the W&W book.

This chapter largely covers the creatures of ancient Greece and their mythology. We begin with the minotaur, though its conception is glossed over. The greek myths have quite a number of animal-human hybrids like the minotaur. Also discussed are the centaurs, both noble and savage, satyrs, and stranger creatures like the chimera. Thrown in are the maenads, who look human (are human), but can be as savage as any other monster. From Greece, we head to Egypt to discuss Set, Hours, Tawret, and other animal-hybrid gods. From here, we go on to Ireland and the Fomorians, described as animal-like, though they interact and inter-marry with the more noble Tuatha Dé Danann. The Tuatha defeat the Fomorians and their great ruler Balor of the Evil Eye. 

Chapter One: Vestiges of the Elder Days

We make quick stops to talk about various dog headed humans, like the inhabitants of the islands of Andaman and Macumeran, whose locations are lost to time. 

In the sub-section, The Tale of the Monkey-God, we go to India and recount the tale of Hanuman, the Monkey King, and Ravana, the many-headed king of demons (Rakshasa). Humans and Monkeys joined forces to defeat the evil king.

Chapter Two: Riders of the Wind

Humankind has always looked to the sky and marveled at the flight of birds. So it is natural that there are so many flying creatures. From the legendary Pegasus, to China's Feng-huang, Japan's tengu, to the Roc, Griffins,  and the Harpies. This chapter hops (flys?) around the globe to give us tales and creatures from all over. Even the hubris of man is discussed in the tale of Daedalus and Icarus. 

An Enchanted Bestiary gives us a brief overview of some "lesser-known" creatures—lesser known if you weren't playing fantasy games in 1985, that is. 

Chapter Two: Riders of the Wind

Chapter Three: Paragon of Purity

Lastly, we get to the unicorn. Following the format of the other books in this series, they equate the death of the last unicorn with the death of magic in the world. But before we get to that the unicorn is discussed at great length. We even get coverage of related creatures like the Yale and the Japanese Ki-rin. And more distantly related creatures like the Mi'raj and Shadhavar.

A Peerless Mount for World-Conquering Alexander ends our talk on unicorns with a tale of the Macedonian King and his quest for a unicorn mount.

Chapter Three: Paragon of Purity

Reading this, I think they maybe could have made a book of Unicorns like they did for Dragons

This particular volume feels like an extended "Ecology Of..." article. Indeed, of all the ones I covered so far, this one might have the most actionable content for your Fantasy RPG. Especially if you want to add more details to some tried and true monsters.

Monster books

There are only a few monsters here that will be new to anyone who has ever played D&D; this is still a great resource.  I *do* have more than a few of these new ones ready to go for Basic Bestiary, but I was still happy to see one or two that were still new to me.