Now behold the beholder

Comments

  • My D&D Monster Can't Be This Cute
  • My dreams exceed my real life
    Famous Beholders

    xanathar_by_ralphhorsley-d6hcqsl.jpg

    Xanathar

    Laughingbeholder

    Large Luigi

    image

    DJ Devastator 
  • Beholders are such a good monster

    I really want someone to do a thorough analysis on the psychology behind modern fantasy monster design
  • Kexruct said:

    Beholders are such a good monster

    I really want someone to do a thorough analysis on the psychology behind modern fantasy monster design

    This, but moreso. Like, a breakdown on modern monster conceptualisation as compared to those of historical cultures. At some point, we all apparently began riding the dragons into battle and sleeping with the vampires or something? I wonder what gives. 
  • “I'm surprised. Those clothes… but, aren't you…?”
    I think the vampire thing had to do with Romanticism and the shift from the vampire as a symbol of death in the day-to-day nasty sense to representing its more poetic accoutrements.
  • That seems sensible, although I still do wonder if it's part of a broader pattern. 
  • kill living beings
    this could be me talking out my ass, but modern monsterism is more biological and less plotty to me

    like, sleeping with vampires is okay now since they're aliens but also look and act more or less like people. in ye old days sleeping with a vampire barely even made sense as a concept since you only knew of them in the context of stories starting "Miss Smith disappeared one night"

    the cornucopia of weaknesses is, as far as i know, fairly modern. it's not like an old source would write out encyclopediacally "you need to stake the fucker", you would just have a story in which maybe some weapons didn't work and then a stake did
  • “I'm surprised. Those clothes… but, aren't you…?”
    That's true of mainstream horror, but the more literary strain—yes, pretentious, I know, but for lack of a better word, here we are—seems to be more interested in invoking the mythic qualities of the monstrous without establishing more than the simplest and most dream-like of rules, which generally work in the supernatural's favour. But I think that's because horror for a mass audience tends to rely on the idea that we want to slay the proverbial dragon, but horror for people who are serious diehard horror people is about resonating with their own weird personal terrors and scaring the bejeezus out of them.
  • kill living beings
    ok yeah maybe i should ahve said "the strain of modern monsterism you refer to"

    now that i think about it... in mountains of madness, the elder things are described in great detail (in the form of a scientific report, lol) while the shoggoths, who are more "bad guys", are left pretty vague
Sign In or Register to comment.