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"THE REAL MONSTERS OF HALLOWEEN" > Page 1, 2, 3

The Mummy
The prevalent image of The Mummy as a monster also comes from the movies, most significantly the 1932 film, The Mummy, again starring Boris Karloff. From the Internet Movie Database is this synopsis of the film by Jeremy Lunt: "In 1921 a field expedition in Egypt discovers the mummy of ancient Egyptian prince Im-Ho-Tep, who was condemned and buried alive for sacrilege. Also found in the tomb is the Scroll of Thoth, which can bring the dead back to life." The mummy then limps around terrorizing and strangling people.


Boris Karloff as
"The Mummy"
- Universal Studios

The film was most probably inspired by the sensational Egyptian finds made in the early 1920s. Since the 1800s, European archaeologists had been fascinated by ancient Egypt. They were aware that the Pharaohs had been mummified and buried with incredible treasures and artifacts to provide them with a comfortable way of life in the land of the dead. Many old tombs had been discovered, but in each case they had been long-ago plundered by grave robbers.

One young upstart English archaeologist named Howard Carter believed that at least one tomb of an Egyptian king lay untouched somewhere beneath the blistering sands of Egypt - the tomb of King Tutankhamen. Carter searched for years without success. But then on November 4, 1922, Tutankhamen's tomb was found, and it contained all of the gold and alabaster treasures they had long sought. But along with the discovery, some believe, came a curse.

On the door to Tutankhamen's tomb, so goes the legend, was inscribed a curse: "Death shall come on swift wings to him who disturbs the peace of the king..." And in the years hence, it seemed like Tut's mummy was making good on his curse:

  • On the day the tomb was discovered, Carter's canary, which he had brought with him to Egypt for luck, was devoured by a snake.
  • A few months later, Carter's financial backer, Lord Carnarvon, died suddenly, perhaps from an infected insect bite.
  • When Carnarvon died, all the lights in Cairo went out from a power failure.
  • Although Carnarvon died in Cairo, back at his estate in England, his favorite dog howled and dropped dead.
  • When Tut's mummy was unwrapped in 1925, his body bore a wound on his face in the exact same spot as Carnarvon's insect bite.
  • "By 1929," says Howard Carter and the Curse of the Mummy, "eleven people connected with the discovery of the Tomb had died early and of unnatural causes. This included two of Carnarvon's relatives, Carter's personal secretary, Richard Bethell, and Bethell's father, Lord Westbury. Westbury killed himself by jumping from a building. He left a note that read, 'I really cannot stand any more horrors and hardly see what good I am going to do here, so I am making my exit.' "

Interestingly, Carter himself did not suffer the wrath of the mummy's curse, but died of natural causes at the age of 66.

Can a mummy come to life and seek revenge on those who violate his tomb? Of course not. Can a mummy kill? Maybe. In 1999, a German microbiologist examined 40 mummies and found that they contained deadly mold spores - lethal enough to kill a person. Upon opening the tomb or sarcophagus, an archaeologist could breath in the ancient, toxic spores... and die.

The Werewolf
The lore and tradition of the werewolf are ancient and complex. A werewolf is a human shapeshifter who, traditionally under a full moon, turns into a wolf. From the popular Wolfman movies of the '50s to the more special-effects laden films like An American Werewolf in London, the werewolf has been a standard character in horror culture and Halloween costumes. But the werewolf legend goes back thousands of years.


A man with
hypertrichosis

"In European folklore," says the Encyclopedia Britannica, "a man who turns into a wolf at night and devours animals, people or corpses, but returns to human form by day. Some werewolves change shape at will; others, in whom the condition is hereditary or acquired by having been bitten by a werewolf, change shape involuntarily, under the influence of a full moon. If he is wounded in wolf form, the wounds will show in his human form and may lead to his detection. Belief in werewolves is found throughout the world. The psychiatric condition in which a person believes he is a wolf is called lycanthropy."

How does one become a werewolf? According to "Werewolf Facts," you can become infected if you:

  • Eat the brain of a werewolf.
  • Drink from a place where werewolves have drank from.
  • Wear or smell the plant wolfbane.
  • Are bitten by a Werewolf.
  • Were born on Christmas Eve.
And how do you tell if someone is a werewolf? They have:
  • Hairy or rough palms.
  • Tattoos of the crescent moon.
  • Slanted eye brows which meet in the middle.
  • A much longer third finger on each hand.

All superstition and folklore, of course. But the reality inspiring the myth, as the encyclopedia states, is most likely the medical condition of lycanthropy, a delusion that "has been most likely to occur among people who believe in reincarnation and the transmigration of souls."

Another rare medical condition that has undoubtedly contributed to the belief in werewolves is hypertrichosis in which a person has excessive hair covering his or her entire body. Very often, people afflicted with hypertrichosis joined circuses and carnival sideshows, with such names as wolfboy, apewoman or missing link. They are otherwise normal people, and certainly don't compulsively howl at the moon.

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