Fantasy and Giant Worms
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Fantasy and Giant Worms
So why is it that the fantasy genre is overridden with giant worms/serpents/dragons/etc.? I ask because I just saw "Dune" last night for the first time last night (good movie, save the repetition, btw), and I have noticed a lot of times, there are large... things about in fantasy novels/movies/etc. What, exactly, does this add to a fantasy?
~ver
~ver
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Agreed, something that you can't predict, that can be upon you in a minute and something that you can only feel get closer and never ever flee. That's why you have UG worms. That and it is ancient Germanic myth that such demonic creatures sleep in caves on hordes of gold. RE: Beowulf. That or under lakes with mommy.
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People like to stick giant penises in things. Probably compensating for something.
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I think it has mythological roots. Some ancient cultures actually elevated serpents and worms to divine status, particularly those of Neolithic Eastern Europe.
In Scandinavian mythology, the giant Ymer (who became the world itself when we was slain by Odin and his brothers) is also called Aurgelmer in some versions of the Scandinavian creation myth. And "gelmer" happens to mean "worm" in Icelandic!
Also, in the earliest myths, dragons were merely extraordinarily vicious and enormous snakes. (for example - Jörmungandr and Nidhug from aforementioned Scandinavian mythology, Python from Greco-Roman mythology and Livyathan/Leviathan from Judeo-Christian mythology)
Then some story-tellers added flame-breath, and others decided to make them winged snakes.... and as the nature of oral tradition led to monsters changing from story to story, mythological dragons wound up looking like they do today.
In Scandinavian mythology, the giant Ymer (who became the world itself when we was slain by Odin and his brothers) is also called Aurgelmer in some versions of the Scandinavian creation myth. And "gelmer" happens to mean "worm" in Icelandic!
Also, in the earliest myths, dragons were merely extraordinarily vicious and enormous snakes. (for example - Jörmungandr and Nidhug from aforementioned Scandinavian mythology, Python from Greco-Roman mythology and Livyathan/Leviathan from Judeo-Christian mythology)
Then some story-tellers added flame-breath, and others decided to make them winged snakes.... and as the nature of oral tradition led to monsters changing from story to story, mythological dragons wound up looking like they do today.
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In Dune they actually serve a purpose, so I don't mind them so much in that. Gratuitous giant creatures (i.e. just in as an obstacle) are the only ones that bother me.
BTW, ver, which Dune did you see? The old one, or the newer Sci-Fi Channel one?
BTW, ver, which Dune did you see? The old one, or the newer Sci-Fi Channel one?
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Yeah, whether they're worms or not. Giant worms, giant elephants, giant space hamsters...all of them just make you wonder why. Big things are less likely than small things, for reasons explained when Mike was talking about structural strength for spaceships. 60 foot insects just can't happen.Simon H.Johansen wrote:... whether they are worms or not?The Dark wrote:Gratuitous giant creatures (i.e. just in as an obstacle) are the only ones that bother me.
Although I must admit a strange pleasure in playing War of the Monsters. Perhaps because it's so tongue-in-cheek, it can't be taken seriously.
BattleTech for SilCoreStanley Hauerwas wrote:[W]hy is it that no one is angry at the inequality of income in this country? I mean, the inequality of income is unbelievable. Unbelievable. Why isn’t that ever an issue of politics? Because you don’t live in a democracy. You live in a plutocracy. Money rules.
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I have more tolerance of giant creatures than you, apparently. As long they aren't giant invertebrates and not ludicrously big, I'm fine with them. (In my mind, a horse-sized wolf is OK. A whale-sized gerbil isn't.)The Dark wrote:Yeah, whether they're worms or not. Giant worms, giant elephants, giant space hamsters...all of them just make you wonder why. Big things are less likely than small things, for reasons explained when Mike was talking about structural strength for spaceships. 60 foot insects just can't happen.Simon H.Johansen wrote:... whether they are worms or not?The Dark wrote:Gratuitous giant creatures (i.e. just in as an obstacle) are the only ones that bother me.
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It's because big things are much cooler than little things. Especially big things that go around blowing shit up.The Dark wrote:Yeah, whether they're worms or not. Giant worms, giant elephants, giant space hamsters...all of them just make you wonder why. Big things are less likely than small things, for reasons explained when Mike was talking about structural strength for spaceships. 60 foot insects just can't happen.Simon H.Johansen wrote:... whether they are worms or not?The Dark wrote:Gratuitous giant creatures (i.e. just in as an obstacle) are the only ones that bother me.
Although I must admit a strange pleasure in playing War of the Monsters. Perhaps because it's so tongue-in-cheek, it can't be taken seriously.
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Oh, a horse-sized wolf is OK. I can see them growing a little larger, particularly if gravity is lower. 60-foot mantises, or the whale-sized gerbils, OTOH, I don't like. Large is OK, giant is bad (and don't ask me to define those, because I don't have definitions ).Simon H.Johansen wrote:I have more tolerance of giant creatures than you, apparently. As long they aren't giant invertebrates and not ludicrously big, I'm fine with them. (In my mind, a horse-sized wolf is OK. A whale-sized gerbil isn't.)The Dark wrote: Yeah, whether they're worms or not. Giant worms, giant elephants, giant space hamsters...all of them just make you wonder why. Big things are less likely than small things, for reasons explained when Mike was talking about structural strength for spaceships. 60 foot insects just can't happen.
BattleTech for SilCoreStanley Hauerwas wrote:[W]hy is it that no one is angry at the inequality of income in this country? I mean, the inequality of income is unbelievable. Unbelievable. Why isn’t that ever an issue of politics? Because you don’t live in a democracy. You live in a plutocracy. Money rules.
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I think it was the Sci-Fi Channel one. And I agree on the Dune worms.. they had a purpose, so I don't mind them so much, but it seems to me that in every fanatsy there's a giant SOMETHING-or-other to stir things up..The Dark wrote:In Dune they actually serve a purpose, so I don't mind them so much in that. Gratuitous giant creatures (i.e. just in as an obstacle) are the only ones that bother me.
BTW, ver, which Dune did you see? The old one, or the newer Sci-Fi Channel one?
~ver
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But do anyone else than me believe that the mythological role of wyrms/snakes explains why giant worms are specifically popular?verilon wrote:I think it was the Sci-Fi Channel one. And I agree on the Dune worms.. they had a purpose, so I don't mind them so much, but it seems to me that in every fanatsy there's a giant SOMETHING-or-other to stir things up..The Dark wrote:In Dune they actually serve a purpose, so I don't mind them so much in that. Gratuitous giant creatures (i.e. just in as an obstacle) are the only ones that bother me.
BTW, ver, which Dune did you see? The old one, or the newer Sci-Fi Channel one?
~ver
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