Avatar

Odds and... odds...

@thenightling

The pentacle / Pentagram's multiple purposes in werewolf pop culture.

The pentacle / Pentagram's multiple purposes in werewolf pop culture.

In media over the last century the pentacle / Pentagram has become the multi-purpose symbol with werewolves.

In traditional folklore the pentacle could also ward off or bind demons, djinn, and even vampires (any symbol of faith, if believed in, is supposed to work against vampires.)

A five pointed star made from Rowan twigs bound with red string, red thread, red ribbon, or some other red string-like material, is supposed to also offer protection. The rhyme goes "Rowan twigs, and strings of red, deflect all harm, gossip, and dread." Rowan is another term for Mountain ash, though this protection ward may work with several other kinds of twigs as well.

This is a list of how the five pointed star applies to werewolves in modern pop culture (within the last hundred years or so.)

Note, I mention Pentacle and Pentagram to indicate that the version with and without the ring around the star have been used for these purposes.

_____________________________

1. In The Wolfman (Original 1941 version) and Dark Shadows (TV series), if a werewolf saw a pentacle on another person (Especially in palm reading) it meant that person would be the next victim of the werewolf OR become a werewolf. Here it's a warning. In The Wolfman it was the pentacle with the ring around it. In Dark Shadows it was the pentagram without the circle.

2. In some werewolf lore a pentacle is somewhere on the body of the werewolf, viewable while in his human form, like a birth mark as a telltale sign of what he is but pop culture tends to replace this with a claw mark scar or bite scar instead as being bitten or clawed by a werewolf (or both) will change you into a werewolf in some media.

3. In The Wolfman (1941) and in Dark Shadows (TV series) wearing a pentacle necklace talisman made of silver will prevent a werewolf from transforming against his will OR (If warn by a regular human) it will protect a potential victim from a werewolf attack, much like a cross warding off a vampire. In The Woflman it's the Pentacle with the circle around it. In Dark Shadows it's the free-floating pentacle (No ring) around it. In An American Werewolf in London a pentacle was drawn (in red) on the interior wall of The Slaughtered Lamb tavern to keep the werewolf out. (This one was without the circle).

The below image is the stylized pentacle created specifically by Universal Studios for their Wolfman franchise with a cute little wolf pup on top of the star. This version is depicted on the Curse of the Werewolf roller coaster in the Dark Universe section of the Epic Universe theme park. A variation of this is also on Lawrence "Larry" Talbot's wolf-head cane in The Wolfman.

It's actually very disrespectful that so many descriptions of the Rougarou say "Like a werewolf." It's alternate name is the Loup-garou. That's literally French for werewolf. The French literally call him "The werewolf." He's not "Like a werewolf." He's a werewolf, he's THE werewolf of the bayou. "But he can take his wolf form at will!" That's actually common in traditional, pre-Wolfman werewolf folklore. "But he's bipedal in his wolf form." So are a lot of werewolves and some look like literal wolves in their lore. "But he can talk in his man-wolf form!" So can the werewolf in Monster Mash (2024 Asylum film), and the werewolf henchman in The Vampire Returns, and the werewolf in Cursed. There's nothing of Rougarou / Loupgarou lore that isn't found in werewolf lore.

End of Cryptozoology rant.

I absolutely love this. To commemorate Thursday Night's total lunar eclipse / The Crow Blood Moon, Capri Sun (for the first time ever) has released "Moon Punch." It's actually a cherry Punch in glow in the dark packaging. And you can collect all the glow-in-the-dark phases of the moon on the packet.

Not only is it clever, and vaguely magical, it's also educational. You can teach children lunar cycles with their lunch beverage. Too bad it's for a limited time.

Disclaimer: The Full Moon phase Moon Punch Capri Sun may or may not induce Lycanthropic transformation. :-P

Werewolf weaknesses

Two nights ago was the first night of the Full Wolf moon (First full moon of the year). It usually lasts a few days. And Friday is the release of Blum House's Wolf man (More of a remake of The Beast within than the actual Wolf Man story).

So to celebrate here are a list of the actual traditional werewolf weaknesses. Many people forget that werewolves, in folklore, and even in the old Universal monster movies were mostly immortal. Only certain things could actually kill them and they often didn't age.

Also in many lore the werewolf took the form of an actual wolf instead of a bipedal man-wolf. And they could change at will, not just on the full moon, though many were more animal-like and prone to losing control on the full moon.

The oldest known werewolf story is the Greek myth of King Lycaon of Arcadia. Lycaon served human flesh at a feast for Zeus. Zeus was so offended that he turned Lycaon into a wolf, only his eyes remained human. Over time Lycaon learned how to turn himself into a man again at will and back into a wolf at will but while a man his eyes were those of a wolf and while a wolf his eyes were those of a man so he was never truly of one world or the other. He formed his own cult when he learned how to spread what he was to other and this was the origin of lycanthropes (Werewolves) in Greek legend.

A short version of the story can be found in The Werewolf Handback by Dr. Robert Curran (Also called Bob Curran).

Now on to the werewolf weaknesses.

One final thing before I proceed. Many of these weaknesses overlap with vampires. This is because in the nineteenth century there was a common belief that if a werewolf was killed he'd come back as a vampire so there were overlapping weaknesses.

And no, I'm not listing chocolate or most things toxic to real dogs. Now, I'm very tired so please excuse the typos.

Werewolf weaknesses:

1. Silver. Curt Siodmak popularized this weakness in the 1941 movie The Wolf Man Though the weakness was popularized with this movie there are actually some eighteenth century werewolf stories that already had werewolves vulnerable to weapons made of silver. In many works of literature and popular culture silver will also work against a vampire.

2. Cold iron was a common weakness against supernatural threats such as Sidhe (Faeries) and so was also a weakness of werewolves in many traditional folklore. Neil Gaiman used this weakness briefly in The Sandman issue The Hunt. Toward the end of Anne Rice's Vampire Chronicles she had it that iron restraints or prisons could supress her vampires' psychic powers.

3. Certain woods / plants. This list includes Yew, Hawthorne, Mistletoe, holly, roses, rose wood, and Wolfsbane (which I'll address separately).

4. Wolfsbane is the most common herb against werewolves. In J. K. Rowling's Harry Potter books a Wolfsbane potion could control a werewolf's more feral side on the full moon. This is one of Rowling's weirdest bits of law since Wolfsbane is a real plant and highly toxic to all mammalian life. It's a deadly neurotoxin with no antidote. Don't feed ANYONE Wolfsbane, werewolf or otherwise. It's a pretty flower also know as Acconite or Monkshood. In Frankenstein meets The Wolfman, Lawrence Talbot, The Wolf Man (who had previously been killed by being beaten with a silver handled cane with a pentacle carved into it) was able to be revived from the dead by removing the wolfsbane that had covered his grave. 5. Fire. Burning a werewolf to ash will usually kill him. In the Auvergne of France there were cases of people actually tried and convicted of werewolfism (deliberately taking wolf form and killing livestock or people) and they were burnt at the stake. This will also work against a vampire.

6. Decapitation will kill a werewolf in many folktales. This may also work against a vampire.

__________________

7. The Pentacle. A five pointed star or a five pointed star within a circle works as effectively on a werewolf as a crucifix does on vampires in the novel Dracula. The pentacle was used against werewolves in The Wolf Man 1941 movie, Dark Shadows (TV series) and An American werewolf in London movie.

The Pentacle has many uses against a werewolf.

A. Wearing a silver pentacle amulet will protect you from a werewolf attack. The symbol can ward off a werewolf. A pentacle drawn on the wall of a building, inside or out, may keep the werewolf from entering, especially without an invitation.

B. According to The Wolf Man and Dark Shadows, a werewolf will see the pentacle somewhere upon the next person they are likely to kill on the full moon. C. If a werewolf wears a pentacle amulet it will prevent them from taking wolf form, especially if the transformation is against their will.

D. In some lore, a werewolf will have a pentacle shaped mark somewhere on their body, whether a scar, weird birth mark, or some other blemish. This is the tell-tale warning that they are a werewolf.

E. In many legends a symbol of faith can protect against supernatural threats. This suggests that for those who have faith in it, a pentacle will be just as effective against vampires as it is against werewolves. This comes up in Jim Butcher's The Dresden Files.

________________

8. Being born on Christmas Day is often considered a warning that you will become a werewolf.

9. Being born feet first and surviving the birth is considered a warning that you will be a werewolf.

10. Having eyebrows that meet is considered a warning you might be a werewolf (or a vampire).

11. Having purple urine is an obscure clue one might be a werewolf.

12. If the middle finger of either or both of your hands is longer than the rest this might be a hint you are a werewolf (Or a vampire. But this seems to be quite common actually.

13. If your ears come to a slight point this might be a clue that someone is a werewolf. (Or a vampire.) 14. Being the seventh son of a seventh son was supposed to mean you were a werewolf (or a vampire). Similarly being the seventh daughter of a seventh daughter was supposed to mean you were a witch. 15. Having hairy palms was supposed to be a sign that someone is either a werewolf or a vampire. 16. Sharp or pointed o fingernails is supposed to be a sign that someone might be a werewolf or a vampire. 17. Being the child of a werewolf will usually mean you are a werewolf. It's not like Monster High where you can be a "half-werewolf." You either are a werewolf or you aren't. It's like having diabetes. You either have it or you don't. There is no "half." In some stories, however, it is only passed to the male descendants, so werewolfism is likely carried by the Y chromosome. _______________________ 18. Calling a werewolf by their true name (not necessarily their birth name but the name they most heavily associate with themselves) will sometimes supposedly make them revert from their wolf form back to human form, especially if this is done by a loved one. So yes, a werewolf can be scolded out of wolf form. 19. Throwing the human clothing of a werewolf at them while they are in human form will supposedly sometimes cause them to revert from wolf to human form. 20. In some stories only someone who truly loves a werewolf has the power to kill the werewolf. 21. In some stories werewolves cannot stomach eating hair or clothing though they sometimes do eat human flesh. 22. If you became a werewolf via bite or scratch from another werewolf, killing that werewolf will remove your werewolfism. 23. Drinking water (particularly rain water) from the paw print of a werewolf is believed to be a way to become a werewolf. This means a werewolf might be vulnerable to being used by someone who wants to become a werewolf without their maker even knowing it. 24. In the UK series and American remake of Being Human, and inAn American werewolf in London and An American werewolf in Paris, werewolves have the power to see ghosts, particularly of their own victims. They can be haunted and driven to madness. So if you're dealing with a werewolf threat, your best weapons are silver, and a pentacle. Good Luck!

So I was browsing Tubi's home screen when a new category appeared. "Werewolf mysteries and thrillers." Well, that's oddly specific. And the had a surprisingly big selection. A few things popped into my head. 1. Tubi is coming up with some very interesting selections. That's like having a roster of "Vampire cooking and dating shows." 2. Wow, Tubi really is starting to know me! Not bad for a free streaming service. Uh, oh. Have they figured out why I never take off a silver pentacle necklace? (Joking... Maybe.) :-P @lamb90 have you been logging into my Tubi account? :-P

My favorite film of 2024 (despite being pure shlock, Asylum's "Monster Mash" is now available to watch for free and legally on Tubi. (And yes, subtitles are available for those who need it). I love this movie. It's pure cheese, and very low budget but it's so much fun. When Dracula's daughter is kidnapped he recruits the other classic monsters to help him rescue her from a dying Dr. Frankenstein. Dr. Frankenstein means to harvest parts from each of the monsters to create the ultimate monster body to transfer his soul into.

It's pure cheese and very low budget but its fun. There aren't too many new live action movies with the classic monsters co-existing these days.

I know there are far "higher quality" horror films that just came out like Abigail and are about to come out, like the new version of Nosferatu, but I still love this and recommend it for anyone who loves the classic movie monsters. It is pure cheese but it's so much fun.

I'm surprised it's already on Tubi considering it only came out about six months ago. Warning: This IS the quality of a Syfy Original movie. In fact Asylum is who usually makes the Syfy Original Movies.

The woman who plays Dracula's daughter even sings the movie's main song (which is not a cover of the Bobby "Boris" Pickett classic Monster Mash.)

Tomorrow is the last Supermoon (Fifteen percent brighter and seemingly larger than usual full moon) of the year. This is your reminder to check in on your werewolf friends!

Spooky peanut butter werewolf conspiracy theory!

Spooky conspiracy theory.

According to Romanian folklore one way you may become a werewolf is by drinking rain (or any water really) water from a werewolf paw print AKA a werewolf track.

Movies usually only show being bitten or scratched (or both) as a means to become a werewolf or being born one or cursed like Quentin in the TV show Dark Shadows. So a lot of people don't know that drinking water from a werewolf pawprint is another way you might become a werewolf. The series Hemlock Grove acknowledged this method of becoming a werewolf.

Now Reece's has a new Halloween treat out called Werewolf Tracks. It's a half White chocolate / vanilla and half milk chocolate peanut butter cup.

It doesn't sound very werewolfy when you think about it. However these werewolf tracks contain peanut butter. And peanuts are 4% water.

You are drinking water from a werewolf track.

Conclusion: Reece's wants to turn us all into their army of werewolves!

Suddenly the recent Reece's slogan of "Sorry, not sorry." has taken on a whole new and sinister meaning!

Disclaimer: This is not to be taken seriously... or is it? :-P

I just found out about a Faust story I never heard of before. It's a nineteenth century, English language novel called Wagner the Wehr-wolf.

The plot deals with an old man (Wagner) who makes a deal with a Mephisto-like stranger who offers him restored Youth and increased intellect but in exchange he must become a werewolf and be his companion for a year and half.

It turns out the mysterious man making this offer is Faust. (I guess he misses Mephisto).

And Wagner must undergo his werewolf transformation once a month. This might be the earliest English language fictional depiction of a monthly werewolf transformation and it is described as excruciating.

I don't own the novel so I don't know more than that about the plot. There's no Wikipedia page for it, just for the author. George W. M. Reynolds. And the summary there claims Wagner's deal is with The Devil, but The Werewolf's Modern Metamorphosis says it was John Faust (the name the Historic Faust had was Johannus and that's the name Christopher Marlowe used for him. Goethe renamed him Heinrich and Kamelot (the power metal band that did a two album retelling of Goethe's Faust called "Epica" and "The Black Halo") renamed him Ariel.)

In Goathe's version of the Faust story, Wagner was the name of Faust's assistant. In an early German chapter book verison of the Faust legend it's an alias Mephistopheles used.

Many people mistakenly think the 1941 film The wolf Man started the notion of werewolves changing monthly but a lot of what the writer, Curt Siodmak, used came from old Germanic folklore and he just repurposed it- even though most traditional folkloric werewolves looked like actual wolves and could transform at will.

The Oldest known Werewolf Story

It's a full moon. It's the perfect night for a werewolf story. In this case this is the oldest known werewolf story. This is the myth of King Lycaon of Arcadia. Once Upon a time; in Arcadia there was a proud king known as Lycaon who was not very hospitable to guests. Hospitality is something taken very seriously by the Gods. One day a mysterious man showed up at Lycaon's palace and asked for food and shelter. Now, as is common in other pantheons like with the Nordic Odin, it was believed that you should always treat the weary traveler with respect and generosity, because he might be a God in disguise. Lycaon's servants believed this mysterious stranger to be Zeus, himself, the king of the Gods, but Lycaon was unconvinced and thought he was just a ragged beggar. It's even suggested that Lycaon didn't really care if it was Zeus, he had no intention of showing respect. As a cruel act of doubt (or just sadism) Lycaon had human flesh served at the feast set out for the stranger. In some versions of the myth, the flesh was from some of Lycaon's own murdered children. In any event, it turned out the stranger truly was Zeus and this foul act of presenting human meat at the feast offended him. Zeus was so disgusted by Lycaon's actions that he cursed him for all eternity. Lycaon was turned into a wolf. Only his eyes remained human. Lycaon was also blessed or cursed with immortality and over the centuries he learned how to take human form again but while in human form he had the eyes of a wolf just as he had human eyes while in his wolf form. He could never truly be of one world or the other. His home was no where. But Lycaon also learned how to spread what he was to others and he created a cult of what we today call werewolves. It is from King Lycaon that we get the terms Lycanthrope (meaning werewolf), Lycan, and Lycanthropy. Source: Werewolves by Dr. Robert Curran. And The Werewolf Handbook also by Dr. Robert Curran.

Happy Boxing Day / Feast of Saint Stephen.

It's also a full moon.

An interesting bit of trivia is an old werewolf superstition is that a child born on Christmas Day is likely to become a werewolf (or already is a werewolf).

A friendly reminder (I know online "friendly reminders" are usually preachy and not actually friendly) but this is a friendly reminder that the full moon actually lasts roughly three days so you are not quite safe from the Blue Moon Halloween werewolves just yet.  

There are hardly any female werewolves because they break all the classic rules of femininity. They force you to confront female violence, strength, size, grotesqueness and uncontrollability. Historically female shapeshifters always shift into something dangerous (snake) or sleek (cat) or dainty (bird) but female werewolves ignore the masculine gaze completely. They're distorted beasts that have no ulterior motive except to destroy. Nothing about them is nurturing or modest. They're the opposite of what a woman "should be." Their omission from pop culture is not an accident.

there’s a REASON why what few female werewolves there are in literature are written by women and marketed towards (mostly) women. 

A woman who has studied folklore here!  Hello!

Sorry to contradict this tangent but some of the oldest werewolf folklore ARE about women.   One of the most famous werewolf legends is about a man in France getting attacked by what he thinks is a normal wolf.  In the struggle he hacks off the wolf’s paw and the severed paw turns into a hand with a ring on it.  The ring looks exactly like his wife’s wedding band.  When he runs home he finds her there bandaging the bloody stump.   This is supposed to have happened in Auvergne France.   (Source: The Werewolf Book and The Werewolf Companion by Dr. Robert Curran. And Werewolves by Daniel Cohen.)  

In real werewolf folklore often the werewolf is a woman.  The cycles of the moon are often used as metaphors for periods and sexual awakening.  That’s why in most polytheistic cultures the moon is represented with a goddess. 

One of the best books of stories in this train of thought is The Bloody Chamber and other stories by Angela Carter (which became the film The Company of Wolves).   

I resent that this was shared over 24,007 times without anyone pointing this out.

Honestly, I strongly hate the so-called feminist Women of Otherworld books, the ones that inspired the Syfy show Bitten.  It had so much thinly disguised sexism passed off as feminist.  And I was told on the Internet Movie data base message board “It can’t be sexist. It’s by a female author.”  No, it’s sexist. Here are some examples from the first season.

1.  Most women are “too weak” to survive the werewolf transformation.  Our main character is portrayed all through the season as super extra special because she’s the only one they know of to survive the change.  That’s not feminist or empowered.  That’s an “exception that proves the rule” saying that most women are too weak to handle becoming a werewolf.

2.   There is a scene where the male werewolves are chowing down on a very large breakfast and the protagonist goes “You guys are so lucky you’re men.  Women can’t eat like this.”  Since when!??   You were living in Toronto.  They have All you can eat buffets.  No one takes notice of a woman eating six plates at those things.

3.    There’s a scene where a woman says to her “Where did you learn to fight like that?  There are only two reasons a woman learns to fight like that.  Either because she doesn’t want to be attacked or because she... Oh, I’m so sorry.”   This implies no women ever wants to learn how to fight for the hobby of it, or because they want the skill, or have an interest in martial arts.   No, it’s only because she’s survived an attack or is afraid of one.  And not once is this stance ever questioned or contradicted.   But it was said by women so that makes it “okay” and totally not sexist!

Actual strong female werewolf characters:  

Rosaleen in The Company of Wolves.  This story uses werewolfism as a metaphor for sexual awakening, sexuality, masculinity, and puberty and it all takes place in in the dreams of a sleeping girl having her first period.

Red in Once Upon a Time.  In the show Once Upon a Time Little Red Riding Hood is a bisexual werewolf who ultimately ends up with Dorothy from The Wizard of Oz.

Ginger Snaps

The villain in the movie Cursed. (I forget her name.)  The main antagonist of this horror movie was a female werewolf.

An American werewolf in Paris.  Not a favorite but one of the main characters is a girl werewolf.

The 1997 TV mini-series of The House of Frankenstein featured a female werewolf as one of the main characters.

Being Human (original UK version) had a very good female werewolf named Nina.  She was a nurse who accidentally got turned into a werewolf by the werewolf protagonist, George.  Despite this terrible mishap the two formed a relationship together.  She eventually ended up pregnant by him and the two briefly (before the writing went down hill) had an adorable wolf family. 

And an old childhood favorite of mine, the TV show (not movie) She-Wolf of London. This was a TV show from the early 90s.  The main character was Randy, an American woman who gets turned into a werewolf while living in London.  The first episode essentially recreates the plot of An American werewolf in London but with a woman werewolf.  Randy spends much of the series trying to find a cure for her condition and forming a relationship with her professor (and friend) who is the only one who knows about her curse.  Together they encounter and defeat other supernatural threats and gradually fall in love.  They marry but fast discover they cannot have sex together because of Randy’s condition.  She turns into a wolf while making love.  So her husband has to learn how to maintain their relationship without sex.   And it’s actually kind of sweet.  

Sponsored

You are using an unsupported browser and things might not work as intended. Please make sure you're using the latest version of Chrome, Firefox, Safari, or Edge.