Egyptian Mummies: From Sacred Vessels to Scary Undead | Monstrum

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  • Опубликовано: 3 дек 2024

Комментарии • 334

  • @ospididious
    @ospididious 2 года назад +708

    The sheer cultural ramifications, not to mention the historical damage the practices of the of the early "Archeologists" makes me cry out in horror. The mummy was not the monster in this situation.

    • @almitrahopkins1873
      @almitrahopkins1873 2 года назад +61

      The monster never is in gothic horror.

    • @Capohanf1
      @Capohanf1 2 года назад +5

      How do you feel about the digging up of Prehistoric and/or fossilized bones from the graves of the Neanderthals??? Seems like just because they were about 15000 years earlier, they would deserve the same feelings.

    • @shaider1982
      @shaider1982 2 года назад +65

      @@Capohanf1 huh? The Neanderthal and Denisovian remains were preserved and studied. The egyptian mummies on the other hand were turned into medicine of dubious utility.

    • @jonathanmartin3767
      @jonathanmartin3767 2 года назад +2

      @@Capohanf1 , 100% agree. This is basicly a point for people to publicly say something but do nothing.

    • @glitterberserker1029
      @glitterberserker1029 2 года назад +51

      @@Capohanf1 that's a completely nonsensical comparison. The idea that studying neolithic sites is basically the same as ransacking ancient civilizations selling artifacts to the highest bidder and then EATING their corpses are comparable shows a lack of critical thinking. Especially when you think for even a moment about why those people took such care to preserve their dead for the afterlife, only to be eaten by Victorians with more money than sense. There are ethical discussions to be had about keeping human remains in museums but at the very least curators aren't grinding them down to make paint.

  • @brettwood1351
    @brettwood1351 2 года назад +160

    One the most interesting things for me is how the Mummy can vary from a mindless shambling dried out zombie, and one the weaker seeming of the classic movie monsters, to a nigh unstoppable sorcerer with powers requiring divine intervention to defeat.

    • @Texasmade74
      @Texasmade74 2 месяца назад +1

      The sorcerer nonsense came in the modern era

  • @wimvanderstraeten6521
    @wimvanderstraeten6521 2 года назад +248

    The actor Arnold Vosloo (who played Imhotep in the 1999 Mummy movie) once remarked that there's actually nothing scary about mummies as they're presented in horror movies. They"re so slow that you can easily outpace them. You don't even have to run.

    • @cayreet5992
      @cayreet5992 2 года назад +24

      Yes, just walk a little more quickly. Or at a regular pace, really.

    • @jamesmarshall6619
      @jamesmarshall6619 2 года назад +16

      It's all about stamina.

    • @brettwood1351
      @brettwood1351 2 года назад +50

      Course he ended up playing a mummy that would just start sending sandstorms after you...

    • @Oiltuber
      @Oiltuber 2 года назад +5

      That's why you put good boots on Amumu. 😉🤣😭

    • @rafaeltiburcio6624
      @rafaeltiburcio6624 2 года назад +12

      You say that until they got magic and stuff

  • @theasinclaire52
    @theasinclaire52 2 года назад +44

    I remember mummies being huge in the 90s. There was the Mummy franchise, Mummies Alive, even an episode of Buffy with an Aztec mummy.

    • @nunyabiznes33
      @nunyabiznes33 2 года назад +4

      I remember Mummies Alive! It would be nice to see a live action but then again I don't want them to ruin it.

  • @mascadadelpantion8018
    @mascadadelpantion8018 2 года назад +41

    When talking about the Epic monster otherwise known as "The Mummy" Jane Loudon is not mentioned nearly as much as she should be and she really does deserve more credit in the monster fandom community

  • @ReynaSingh
    @ReynaSingh 2 года назад +142

    Would be great to see a comparison of mummification myths/processes throughout the world

    • @agnostik1360
      @agnostik1360 Год назад +3

      It’s really interesting actually even from a non mythological perspective. Because mummies really are just bodies that have passed the test of time . Thus there can be natural mummies in environments with extreme heat or in dump environments such as northern countries . Although a comparison as you said would be ideal

    • @tunesquicklee
      @tunesquicklee Год назад +1

      I could be wrong, but Caitlin Doughty(sp?) aka Ask a Mortician might have a video on this, or a chapter in one of her books. She talks about death rites in much detail. One of my favorite channels!

  • @TylerRakstis
    @TylerRakstis 2 года назад +97

    I was hoping you finally get to mummies and how they became one of the undead monsters in media like ghosts, zombies, and vampires. Plus it's kind of both sad, and a bit disturbing, that many mummies were lost to time due to using them as medicine. Like how many dinosaur fossils before we started doing paleontology, were grounded up for pharmaceuticals.

    • @andrewmalinowski6673
      @andrewmalinowski6673 2 года назад +11

      It's also interesting how both zombies and mummies went from a respected aspect of their respective cultures to something of terror barely appreciated. The first time I heard about the true concept of a zombie was actually on Science Friday and how it was less mindless and more drug-induced "mind control"

    • @nicolaezenoaga9756
      @nicolaezenoaga9756 Год назад +4

      Really sad that the people of Egypt lost so much of they're historical patrimonyum.

  • @merlapittman5034
    @merlapittman5034 2 года назад +56

    Excellent video! I've always liked the Karloff mummy best. Karloff was a marvelous actor who made the characters he played more real than most actors of his generation.
    The way the Victorians treated mummies and Egyptian artifacts and culture was shameful. You can't blame the fictional mummies for attacking and consuming the Victorians. They were just responding in the same way the Victorians treated them!

  • @katrinka9781
    @katrinka9781 Год назад +12

    As a history/anthropology nerd and a generally compassionate human being, hearing how the corspes of Ancient Egyptains were treated by Europeans made me sick to my stomach. These people were ripped from their resting places, sailed across the ocean to be either examined without any diginity to people who didn't care about their name and THEN EATEN OR TURNED INTO MEDICINE. When you take in account how the Ancient Egyptians viewed their afterlife and the relation to the body, it gets even worse. Absolutely horrifiying.

    • @ginsu_pd
      @ginsu_pd Месяц назад

      they've dehumanized frankly the entire humanity. they're the only kind of people that thrived off being intrusive and dehumanization. Just appalling

  • @animeevergreenathena
    @animeevergreenathena 2 года назад +22

    Thank you so much again Monstrum for making this video! It has been so long since I was last in touch with my fascination towards Ancient Egyptian culture. I have to admit that looking back on what I've learned about mummies, I find the practice of unwrapping mummies and using them as "medicine" to be disrespectful. Right now, I hope that those beings could finally rest in peace and be treated with better respect.

  • @bryangonzalez1398
    @bryangonzalez1398 2 года назад +27

    I'm so excited you did a mummy video!! The mummy is my favorite of the universal horror films and I'm sure like many here I was obsessed with ancient Egypt after getting one of those golden ancient Egypt history books as a kid.

  • @JonSolo
    @JonSolo 2 года назад +123

    Fantastic episode about the origins of mummy monsters in cinema!! We should collaborate and make something epic for the folklore and mythology community (☞゚ヮ゚)☞

    • @VaderInVr
      @VaderInVr 2 года назад +4

      Please do it! I love watching both of your channels and a collab would be very entertaining and informative. ❤

    • @solidonseraindogthetenth1679
      @solidonseraindogthetenth1679 2 года назад +3

      You watch this channel, J S?! This is the first time I saw a youtuber comment inside of someone else's video.

    • @theredwhirlwin
      @theredwhirlwin Год назад +1

      That would blow my mind

  • @KwanLowe
    @KwanLowe 2 года назад +13

    This is fascinating. When I heard that some cultures dig up their dead ancestors I was at first horrified. Seeing videos like this does take off some off the horror.

  • @thelorax355
    @thelorax355 2 года назад +132

    Not exactly related to this particular episode, but I feel like an episode looking at the monsters of dungeons and dragons could be really interesting. The original ones and the creatures lifted from folklore across the world. Also how the game represents a modern form of communal oral storytelling intimately intertwined with the monsters and stories of our past

    • @brettwood1351
      @brettwood1351 2 года назад +6

      Hey, there's Mummies in D&D! Including fermented ones. I've got to watch that video sometime.

    • @Mr.HotDogShirtGuy
      @Mr.HotDogShirtGuy 2 года назад +10

      Owlbear! Mindflayer! Beholder! These are some iconic monsters. I think it’s an interesting idea!

    • @SanjayMerchant
      @SanjayMerchant 2 года назад +2

      @@Mr.HotDogShirtGuy Well, for those Momstrum is going to need to consult an attorney who understands Fair Use.

    • @mikegould6590
      @mikegould6590 2 года назад +4

      @@SanjayMerchant Not necessarily. Orcs, Goblins, Kobolds, Elves, Dwarves, Satyr, Unicorns, Pegasi, Hags, Merfolk, etc all come from our mythology, yet appear in D&D. If one avoids the "exclusive" monsters, there's no legal issue.

    • @brettwood1351
      @brettwood1351 2 года назад

      @@Mr.HotDogShirtGuy Origins are a dollar store dinosaur toy, a skull with roots growing through it, and I dunno. Definitly have some interesting real world history though.

  • @kirbymarchbarcena
    @kirbymarchbarcena 2 года назад +5

    I taught humans about mummification but they turned it into a horror movie genre...now where's my popcorn?
    - Anubis

  • @DoctorWortspieler
    @DoctorWortspieler Год назад +8

    Karloff's version of the Mummy has always been my favorite. Unlike most portrayals of the mummy, he actually doesn't seem to care about the archaeologists who dug him up; he doesn't harm the archaeologist's assistant who inadvertently brought him back to life, rather it's implied that his insanity was caused by the curse that the people who entombed the mummy put on it, not the mummy himself. Karloff's mummy isn't particularly malicious, either, with his main goal to be reunited with his lover, and only gets murderous when it's necessary for his plan.
    And even if it's based on a gross misunderstanding of Ancient Egyptian spiritual practices, I do think it's cool that the mummy was not defeated by either of the male leads, but instead by the *female* lead praying for intercession from a *female* goddess. Quite progressive for 1932.

  • @shoesncheese
    @shoesncheese 2 года назад +3

    14:00 give the sound tech or VA who was told "just make mummy sounds" a bonus

  • @cammielinford9919
    @cammielinford9919 2 года назад +12

    Love your conclusions about mummies threatening those who seek to commercialize or literally consume them! Ha! It always tickles me to think about those proper upperclass folk back in the day essentially cannibalizing mummies as a cure for their illnesses. I’d be interested to hear more of your analysis on female mummies being so common in the early days of the trope! I hadn’t heard really anything about that until this video.

  • @TheRhuen
    @TheRhuen Год назад +2

    The sheer number of bodies lost to stupidity and artifacts lost to greed whose where abouts remain unknown and could be sitting in thrift stores, private collections, discarded as mistaken for replica, or sitting in safes is all so staggering.

  • @richewilson6394
    @richewilson6394 2 года назад +7

    The 2001 Mummy movie was done was a great rewrite of the script of the original universal horror movies. I was that kid looking into encyclopedias reading about Egypt.

  • @Lohengrin1850
    @Lohengrin1850 2 года назад +4

    Loved learning more about mummies and how they became popular in Hollywood! Perfect timing with the new discoveries happening in Egypt right now!

  • @evolancer211
    @evolancer211 Год назад +2

    Thank you for not using the Tom Cruise mummy film. When you showed the first movie clip all I was thinking the whole video was "please don't show the Tom Cruise version" lol

  • @skyden24195
    @skyden24195 Год назад +1

    When I was in the first grade (beginning of 1980s) I wore a store-bought plastic "The Mummy" costume for my school's Halloween party and school parade in which I won "Scariest Costume." lol.

  • @davivignola5895
    @davivignola5895 2 года назад +12

    First, the opening makes you look like a Lovecraftian protagonist hunting the ancient secrets of forbidden lore.
    Second, as a former anthropology major, the 19th century stories of egyptologists, makes me twitch and recoil in horror. Ugh, just... so much history lost.
    Mummy brown, well, the 19th century version, was just baffling to me that it was a thing. Just... so bizarre.

  • @Jayjay-qe6um
    @Jayjay-qe6um 2 года назад +5

    "He was to remain sealed within his Sarcophagus, the Undead for all eternity. The Medjai would never allow him to be released, for he would arise a walking disease, a plague upon mankind, an unholy flesh eater with the strength of ages, power over the sands, and the glory of invincibility." -- Ardeth Bay

  • @SeanM375
    @SeanM375 2 года назад +5

    I always love the bloopers at the end, and great content as usual!

  • @gwendolyn2001
    @gwendolyn2001 2 года назад +4

    I didn't have time to watch the whole video, but it is ironic that the Egyptians did not perceive mummies as being animated or walking. They believed that there were three (some say five) components of the soul. The dead could return to be among the living, but it would be the Ka that a human might see. Mummies and statuary were repositories for the Ka which needed a body--or a semblance thereof--to stay "alive." The Ka also needed food and drink.
    And the movies that show people being mummified as punishment is pure bunkum. Mummification was to preserve the body so the elements of the soul could live in the afterlife. Had Egyptians wanted to punish someone, they would have left the person to rot or to be torn apart by animals; oblivion was worse than punishment in the afterlife.

  • @tomripsin730
    @tomripsin730 Год назад +1

    6:53 There's a Radio drama version of The Ring of Thoth from a series called Escape, starring Mr. Dragnet himself Jack Webb.

  • @XRaym
    @XRaym 2 года назад +11

    Excellent video! My favorite mummy story is probably Mummy Daddy in 1985 Spielberg produced serie Amazing Stories:
    "A dedicated actor in a realistic mummy costume that he can't take off is shooting a movie in a swamp. When he hears his wife is in labor, he runs towards the town but the local rednecks think he's the real deal and form a posse." (IMDB).
    Both funny and scary. Must watch 😇

  • @bectionaryadams8046
    @bectionaryadams8046 2 года назад +7

    I love hearing Americans say local names! I'm Welsh and not too far from Caernarfon and we tend to almost drop the first r and pronounce it more like 'cunarfen' or 'canarfen'
    Love the video!

  • @beth8775
    @beth8775 2 года назад +20

    The way they treated these remains was just appalling.

    • @iqbaalannaafi4944
      @iqbaalannaafi4944 Год назад

      Perhaps it was the Victorians' way of showing cultural and scientific domination over people from outside their countries.

  • @omnitoad2187
    @omnitoad2187 2 года назад +7

    Was kinda hoping for a mention of the obscure "Mummies Alive" cartoon that aired briefly in the 90's. I barely remember it, but it actually had a fresh spin on mummies as good guys, in that it was like a fish-out-of-water story about a squad of royal mummies who return to aid and protect the descendant of Ramsis (a kid because all protagonists were kids in that era).
    It was basically mummies as super heroes, which was an idea different enough to stick with me for years.

    • @SuperSongbird21
      @SuperSongbird21 Год назад

      I remember "Mummies Alive" too, would love to see a reboot/remake.

  • @SamButler22
    @SamButler22 2 года назад +2

    We definitely still had an Egyptian thing in Britain in the 90s - at primary school Ancient Egypt was on the history curriculum, and even the small museum in my home town, Bolton, had an Egyptian section

  • @tmcelhi1
    @tmcelhi1 2 года назад +1

    The mummy is my all-time favorite monster. It lead me to an interest in ancient Egypt

  • @tremorsfan
    @tremorsfan 2 года назад +2

    One thing that nobody talks about with Lord Carnarvan is that the reason he was in Egypt in the first place was because he was in poor health already.

  • @colonelhammerhead3025
    @colonelhammerhead3025 2 года назад +8

    Will you do a monstrum video on dinosaurs? Their bones have inspired a good amount of our mythology and are now used in sci-fi and horror.

    • @Cec9e13
      @Cec9e13 2 года назад +7

      I know she did do an episode of fossils that inspired monsters. Or, collaborated with SciShow on one

    • @colonelhammerhead3025
      @colonelhammerhead3025 2 года назад +1

      @Cec9e13 could you send a link to that video, please ?

    • @Cec9e13
      @Cec9e13 2 года назад +4

      @@colonelhammerhead3025 ruclips.net/video/Do-ihwWeS3Y/видео.html I stand slightly corrected, it was a collaboration with PBS Eons.

    • @Cec9e13
      @Cec9e13 2 года назад +4

      @@colonelhammerhead3025 a specifically dinosaur-centric one would be cool.

  • @jamestipton3342
    @jamestipton3342 2 года назад +1

    Thank God that Many Anthropologists still follow the required Moral standards and Respect for the Cultures of Study, especially Egyptology.

  • @stormbourbon8379
    @stormbourbon8379 2 года назад +4

    My all-time favourite Anne Rice book is not about a vampire; it's "The Mummy: Or, Ramses The Damned". I had it on tape being read by Michael York, and I played it to death (it started to squeak for mercy).

  • @matthewjacobthefifth
    @matthewjacobthefifth 2 года назад

    im in love with Dr. Z i could watch her outtakes all day.

  • @davidm.4175
    @davidm.4175 2 года назад +1

    I love this channel sooo Much 😊 Thank you for existing

  • @Gio-ce8ob
    @Gio-ce8ob 2 года назад

    First off, looking beautiful as always Dr. Z. Secondly, love the info and the history you provide in your videos. Yours is one of my favorite RUclips channels, thank you!

  • @MonkeysEmperor
    @MonkeysEmperor 2 года назад

    This, this is why I keep coming back to youtube

  • @mypal1990
    @mypal1990 2 года назад +16

    I was gonna bring up a daddy joke but I'm too wrapped up writing this comment.

    • @VrJR42
      @VrJR42 2 года назад

      Why daddy and not just dad mate

    • @raptorstryke92
      @raptorstryke92 2 года назад

      I hate you, take my like

    • @ChuckMeIntoHell
      @ChuckMeIntoHell 2 года назад

      Borris Karloff may have been the iconic mummy, but Brendan Frazier was the iconic daddy.

  • @VioletWhirlwind
    @VioletWhirlwind 2 года назад +1

    Apparently, people used to make - of all things - PAINT out of mummies. When I found that out, it blew my mind!

  • @renecorrea892
    @renecorrea892 2 года назад +56

    I would like all these chapters to be in the future seasons of Monstrum.
    *Sea Serpents
    *Leviathan
    *The Headless Horseman ✅
    *Phantom Vehicles
    *Boogeyman
    *Ghosts
    *Possessed Dolls
    *Shadow People
    *Undead
    *Goblins
    *Bigfoot
    *Man-Eating Plants ✅
    *Creepy Clowns
    *Killer Robots
    *Swamp Monsters
    *The Mummy ✅️
    *Scarecrows
    *The Invisible Man
    *Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde
    *Merfolk
    *Demons
    *Skeletons
    *Stingy Jack (Jack of The Lantern)
    *Gnomes
    *Sea Monsters that attacked Submarines
    *Alien Abductions ✅
    *Ogres
    *Ghouls
    *Lich
    *Cyborgs
    *Witches
    *Kaiju
    *Cthulhu ✅
    *The Rake
    *Revenants
    *Vampires
    *Dagon
    *Ogopogo
    *Colossal Claude
    *Spectral Carriages
    *Kappa
    *Flatwoods Monster

    • @monstersociety3360
      @monstersociety3360 2 года назад +9

      Merfolk were touched upon in the episode on Sirens, but that's not the same as having an entire dedicated episode I guess.
      Vampires in general were covered much more in the Dracula episode.

    • @cannibalisticrequiem
      @cannibalisticrequiem 2 года назад +8

      You should really do your research, because then you'd know that there has already been a bunch of episodes on quite a few monsters/urban legends you mentioned.

    • @renecorrea892
      @renecorrea892 2 года назад +4

      @@monstersociety3360 There are many varieties of vampires not just the Dracula's species.

    • @miller_niki1982
      @miller_niki1982 2 года назад +5

      She’s already done one on kaijū.

    • @solidonseraindogthetenth1679
      @solidonseraindogthetenth1679 2 года назад +2

      She has already done some of it.

  • @brandondavidson4085
    @brandondavidson4085 2 года назад +1

    2:01 Well, I was eating. Now I'm not.

  • @TheCanadiangirl4
    @TheCanadiangirl4 2 года назад +1

    I would like more of these videos, I love Monstrum

  • @Guydude777
    @Guydude777 2 года назад

    Man, little more than a minute in, and already I'm blown away. This is gonna be a good one.

  • @DreemurrB0i02
    @DreemurrB0i02 4 месяца назад

    3:09-3:37 I recognize that melody from Dropout's "Gods of Food" Mockumentary! "The Four Seasons, L'inverno (Winter), Concerto 4, Op. 8, RV 297, Alegro Mon Molto".

  • @cazador7131
    @cazador7131 2 года назад +6

    You should cover The Flying Dutchman.

    • @aka99
      @aka99 2 года назад +1

      I guess not many are familiar with this story, tale. Especially not in usa

    • @cazador7131
      @cazador7131 2 года назад

      @@aka99 Yeah, the only things I know about it is a pirate song by the jolly Rogers and that one Scooby Doo movie.

  • @simonashtear2739
    @simonashtear2739 2 года назад +4

    Thank you for covering The Mummy! I always wondered whether a Mummy was a reanimated body like a zombie, that can be destroyed by striking the head, or is it reanimated by a spirit, and needed to be put down with an exorcism. Maybe I'm asking the wrong question. I still don't seem to have any definitive answer. But thank you for trying!

  • @Sean76G
    @Sean76G 2 года назад

    Another interesting episode. I particularly enjoyed the pronounciation of Carnarvon.

  • @ponyote
    @ponyote 2 года назад

    Thanks for another great video, Dr. Z.

  • @pdzombie1906
    @pdzombie1906 Год назад

    Great as usual, Dr. Z!!! Thanx!!!!

  • @briarrose7584
    @briarrose7584 Год назад +2

    And also popular toys and dolls like Cleo De Nile and her Sister Nefera De Nile from the Monster High franchise

  • @rami_ungar_writer
    @rami_ungar_writer 2 года назад

    Great timing, Doctor Zarka: I'm working on a mummy novel right now, so this was quite relevant to the story.

  • @blaircolquhoun7780
    @blaircolquhoun7780 2 года назад +2

    They were also robots in the Doctor Who episode Pyramids of Mars. (1975).

  • @NewMessage
    @NewMessage 2 года назад +4

    Mummy issues... it's therapy all over again.

  • @raynemykels3416
    @raynemykels3416 2 года назад +2

    Is there any particular reason as to why we don't get the best stories before and during Halloween season? It's like they always wait till right after Halloween to hit us with the best shows

  • @nepsit219
    @nepsit219 2 года назад

    I love this show so much 🥹🥹

  • @Lack_of_response
    @Lack_of_response 2 года назад +1

    Iremember there being an irish bog mummy movie called The Eternal, with christopher walken in it

  • @gabrielt.3181
    @gabrielt.3181 Год назад +1

    It's interesting how she brought up the fact that mummies are real people's dead bodies and were mistreated by people who took them out of their resting places. I've never thought about this before 🤔

  • @Just_Some_Guy_with_a_Mustache
    @Just_Some_Guy_with_a_Mustache 2 года назад +4

    No amount of sugar will make that medicine go down in a delightful way. Unless your name is Hannibal Lector, I guess...

    • @aka99
      @aka99 2 года назад

      Speaking of Sugar, do you know what happend to the bones of the fallen in the waterloobattle about 20 years after 1815? 😉

  • @TheBlindDyslexic
    @TheBlindDyslexic 2 года назад +4

    The mummy has appeared in Doctor Who several times between the Original series and the updated.
    The two I love the most are Tom Baker's "Pyramids of Mars" and Peter Capaldi's "Mummy on the Oriental Express"
    (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyramids_of_Mars EXTRA: Mic Jaggers home was used as the backdrop for this episode
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mummy_on_the_Orient_Express)

  • @ingersollelliott
    @ingersollelliott Год назад

    Fascinating! As an amateur magician, I didn’t know the origin of Egyptian Hall

  • @miguelschoedel7691
    @miguelschoedel7691 2 года назад

    Great episode

  • @Primal-Mythos
    @Primal-Mythos 2 года назад +1

    This is a stupid but real fear I had as a child, but my dad had me watch the 1999 film 'The Mummy' which gave me nightmares of Mummies chasing me, glad I've shook the fear off but still...wasn't a pleasant part of my childhood.

  • @elizabethdavis1696
    @elizabethdavis1696 2 года назад +4

    Please do some fairy tale videos the stories of little red riding hood, Goldilocks and jack and the bean stock must have a good story behind them

    • @monstersociety3360
      @monstersociety3360 2 года назад +1

      I support this idea, and also I'll give you a preview on what the Jack and the Beanstalk episode will be like:
      You might notice that a LOT of old fairy tales from across Europe star a main character named "Jack" - that's not a coincidence! They're all meant to be the same guy! Absolutely the same character.
      Jack and the Beanstalk, Jack & Jill, Jack Horner, Jack be nimble Jack be quick, Jack O'Lantern (that one started out as an Irish legend before it was a Halloween tradition) and several others. "Jack" is more or less a trickster archetype, comparable to the African folklore character "Anansi" or the character "Coyote" as is celebrated by many Native American tribes, meaning that Jack is often rewarded not for being good or kind, but by being clever and outwitting his foes.

  • @gregcampwriter
    @gregcampwriter 2 года назад

    Librivox has the Jane C. Louden novel as an audiobook--thanks for the recommendation.

  • @christianbontempo8859
    @christianbontempo8859 2 года назад +12

    I’d like to see a video the impact Tyrannosaurus Rex has had in monster movies. Considering that’ Trex is one of the ultimate monsters of our childhoods, I think it would be cool to pay some respects to the King Of The Dinosaurs.

    • @mds_main
      @mds_main Год назад

      A video on dinosaurs as monsters would actually be interesting. They already had something similar for bugs and sharks after all.

  • @CBMOA
    @CBMOA Год назад +1

    Mummies are pretty cool

  • @calebbusing6171
    @calebbusing6171 Год назад

    I hope to see a video sometime about mad scientists in this series. Also a Baku video

  • @brendakrieger7000
    @brendakrieger7000 2 года назад

    Great information

  • @mjolnirfan
    @mjolnirfan 2 года назад

    I find it interesting the Monstrum episode before this was about the Universal Monsters

  • @kingwillsadventures2217
    @kingwillsadventures2217 2 года назад +1

    Do an episode on Indrid Cold AKA The Grinning Man

  • @richewilson6394
    @richewilson6394 2 года назад

    I can't believe that it has been 100 years since king tut was found.

  • @timurtheterrible4062
    @timurtheterrible4062 2 года назад +4

    Are there any horror stories about more modern mummies, like Lenin? We seem to always focus on the Ancient Egyptian ones.

  • @kennethadler7380
    @kennethadler7380 2 года назад +3

    Still i'd rather have him chasing than the wolfman

  • @robbabcock_
    @robbabcock_ 2 года назад

    Great video!

  • @nickroy8387
    @nickroy8387 2 года назад

    I love Lot 249, it had a great adaptation in Tales from the Dark Side

  • @mathieuleader8601
    @mathieuleader8601 2 года назад

    I did love the South Park Halloween episode the Tegridy Farms Halloween special which involved a clingy mummy following Butters everywhere.

  • @josephmueller
    @josephmueller 2 года назад

    Can you make a video about the revenants.
    Been 1 of those that deeply into the occult and folklore.

  • @Demonslayer232
    @Demonslayer232 2 года назад +2

    Imagine getting your body prepped and ready for the afterlife, only for some poncy twits to steal your body, cut it open, and even EAT it. Jeebus...

  • @kingrahzar9351
    @kingrahzar9351 2 года назад +2

    Man, mummies had it rough no wonder they want us to suffer in cinema and on Halloween I mean they were turned into firewood and were left to disintegrate at parties for crying out sakes!!!

  • @ابراهيمالشرف-ش4م

    You should make a video of the necronomicon

  • @LucyPlushie-yc9lv
    @LucyPlushie-yc9lv Год назад

    Awesome video

  • @pendragon2012
    @pendragon2012 2 года назад +11

    Sheesh. The West really couldn't humiliate Egypt enough, could they? :-( Great video, Dr. Z!

  • @datafoxy
    @datafoxy 2 года назад

    I did not know that detail where the bones were broken after death.

  • @MJDP1840
    @MJDP1840 2 года назад

    Tanna leaves brought the mummies back to life!

  • @CAP198462
    @CAP198462 2 года назад

    Hey Dr. Z, I don’t know if she’s still around the department but if she is Professor Dahliwal could be a treasure trove of information about Slavic folklore. Invite her to a cheeseburger at the Chuckbox, just a suggestion.

  • @chickadeestevenson5440
    @chickadeestevenson5440 2 года назад +1

    Natural fossil Mummies > Anything humans have dreamed up.
    There's one from the PERMIAN.

  • @christianchauhan23
    @christianchauhan23 2 года назад +1

    💛 all your video's mam👍

  • @Zimisce85
    @Zimisce85 2 года назад

    6:39 why showing the cover of the Italian edition of the book though?

  • @menkomonty
    @menkomonty 2 года назад

    When I hear a mummy being brought back to life by electricity, my mind immediately sprung to Carry On Screaming's Rubbatiti

  • @ravensthatflywiththenightm7319
    @ravensthatflywiththenightm7319 2 года назад +1

    One of the biggest questions in my head is why British people refer to their mothers as Egyptian zombies. I just don't see the connection.

  • @genghisgalahad8465
    @genghisgalahad8465 Год назад

    Thumbnail Zombie just really wants to settle it with a hug! Name's Ham.

  • @ericreativecuts
    @ericreativecuts 2 года назад +5

    Even choosing Imhotep is a hint at the western imperialist view. Imhotep was a scribe and architect who designed the great step pyramids who was then deified. Why was he made the bad guy and not say, Amunhotep III who burned the ruling class of a cananite city alive in a pit? Or the super imperialist Ramesids?

  • @AnimeShinigami13
    @AnimeShinigami13 2 года назад +1

    More japanese monsters! I love Toriyama Sekian's woodcuts!!!

  • @AdamTehranchiYT
    @AdamTehranchiYT 2 года назад

    Can't say I've heard about Mummy Rx but I had heard about Mummy Brown which isn't much better

  • @tenebrousoul9368
    @tenebrousoul9368 2 года назад

    Please cover Thoth, thank you