Vampire Ghost)
Aswang is an intelligent supernatural creature that takes roots in Philippines as early as the 16th century.
The creature is so fearful that some elders in Philippines refuse to even mention the word ‘Aswang’.
There isn’t a clear definition to which class of monsters the Aswang belong to, but they are often depicted as a pretty-faced, fair skinned maiden during the day and transform into hideous vampire in the night with red bulging eyes, disheveled hair and crooked wings. An Aswang can be very deceptive and shy when they are not hunting. They will behave like a normal person and even hold a normal job during the day.
Monday, November 22, 2010
Occult Bestiary: Dakhanavar: The Armenian Vampire
Vampires, at least in the world of entertainment have slowly been outnumbering their human counterparts over the last two years or so.
With the adolescent phenomenon known as Twilight saturating the market with a book series and subsequent book-based films, as well as Charlaine Harris’ charming Sookie Stackhouse series that launched HBO’s “True Blood” series, whose second season premiere this year made it the most watched original program since the finale of “The Sopranos.”
Then there’s films like “Thirst,” critically acclaimed “Let the Right One In” and the 2011 adaptation of “Fangland.” The list going forward or back does not stop there. Human fascination with the concept of the vampire has been around for millenia, with each cultural group having their own interpretations of the undead, including Armenians.
Land of the Rising Dead – Expert Looks at Japan’s Zombie Outbreak Readiness
As an island nation with the world’s highest cremation rate, Japan looks like the ideal spot to ride out a global zombie pandemic, but one expert on the undead says this assumption is dangerously mistaken.
Matt Mogk, Zombie Research Society (ZRS) founder and head researcher, believes Japan would be no safer than other countries in the event of a zombie outbreak and could be even more dangerous.
Japan’s tight border control, which last month denied entry to Paris Hilton, would offer some protection against hordes of rotting corpses brought back to life, but only provided the outbreak starts outside of Japan.
“If the zombie sickness has a long incubation period, hundreds of millions of people could be infected for years, or even decades, without knowing,” said Mogk, who has been sinking his teeth into all things zombie for most of his life. “All we would need is the right trigger to launch an instant zombie pandemic everywhere at once. Japan would not be protected.”
ZRS, a non-profit organization with local chapters on six continents and in Japan, believes a zombie pandemic is not a matter of if, but a matter of when. And Mogk surmises the situation would be particularly bleak if “Z-Day” kicks off in Japan.
“Citizens would have a hard time escaping an island nation, especially if the other countries block their exit out of fear of infection,” he said.
“The embalming process destroys the brain of the corpse, so is functionally the same as cremation in terms of preventing a zombie from inhabiting the body,” he said.
The Max Brooks novel “World War Z” popularized the Japanese katana sword as an ideal weapon for fending off the flesh-eating undead. Mogk sees this as another dangerous misconception.
“Bladed weapons in general are not ideal because they will inevitably get stuck in things and become dull,” he said. “A single strike can find your sword jammed in a tree or ribcage, leaving you to pry it free while zombies chew on your neck.”
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