#and the changeling itself
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
modern-day changeling tales
#gravity falls#stanford pines#stanley pines#ford pines#stan pines#comic#my art#hey what if you were replaced by a changeling that didn't bother to act like you at all#that had a *very distinct* physical difference from you#and the only people who would care enough to notice#were a man who destroyed his own brain because of you#and the changeling itself#would that be fucked up or what?
7K notes
·
View notes
Text




my depression is incessant but my memes are effervescent and the remains of my soul are rotting and putrescent (ღ˘⌣˘ღ) ♫・:.。. .。.:・
Patho classic HD + text posts, part 4 [part 1/part 2/part 3/part 5] [Patho 2 version, part 1/part 2/part 3/part 4/part 5/part 6]
#pathologic#мор. утопия#pathologic classic hd#pathologic text meme#daniil dankovsky#eva yan#artemy burakh#lara ravel#yulia lyuricheva#aglaya lilich#ospina#aspity#katerina saburova#clara the changeling#my little scrunkly <3#даниил данковский#артемий бурах#лара равель#юлия люричева#аглая лилич#клара сабурова#катерина сабурова#ева ян#оспина#probably forgetting to tag someone but... lazy#i am unwell#i am seriously considering playing patho 1 with the original translation just for funsies#and i feel like that one might just meme itself#i am often seized by the fatal american need to have a pretty good time
468 notes
·
View notes
Text
fun fact about timelines! there is, in fact, a vampire timeline (222). very few changels have ancestry tracing back to it, and vampire genetics are almost as rare as human ones from 46. most notable traits found in changels stem from the elven timeline (45) and the hybrid timeline (3152).
#random thoughts#of course vampires are real. and they're all taught to write in cursive. like changeling children.#actually i don't know why i say changeling children. that's like saying children children.#waugh. (':#there are other timelines like the lycanthrope and object-headed ones (47 and 114 respectively).#but then there is also. timeline 2. the endless office of eyes.#and the timeline made purely from superreality colors. the only entity that lives there is a lonely entity of light. (i named it octavia#in honor of my mind. timeline number is 88888.)#how many timelines are there ? well. every time you think about the concept another one forms.#but only the first ten thousand are worth visiting.#no offense to fictional octavia and its colors.#also!! fun fact!! while octavia lives inside of the colors it is also very much the colors itself.#the very first timeline (0) is stuck in a timeloop and is considered an illegal location. it is a remote garden in the sky.#like the garden of eden in christian mythology. except the longer you stay the more it eats you. if you start to experience visual snow#LEAVE.
6 notes
·
View notes
Text
An order of events:
My changeling character makes a deal for information with a dryad for information, the cost of which is that the dryad feels my emotions for a day instead of me. (Bad deal for the dryad, my changeling Went Through It in the next 24 hours, that dryad felt some shit)
While under the effects of that lack of emotion, my changeling makes a bad deal with another goblin she probably wouldn't have while emoting as she normally does. The cost of that deal was that I would give him an update about the child of one of the PC's fetches (doppelgangers created to take a changeling's place in their life after the changeling is abducted). This is interesting, cause by all rights it's impossible for a fetch to have a child. While researching in the process of trying to learn enough for that update, my changeling learns something she'd have to share which would endanger that child if it got out- that the blood of a fetch's child is a potent weapon.
My changeling makes a third deal with a third being, far away from the other two, the cost of which is she has to give them "an interesting piece of information she learned recently". She gave up the fact that "a fetch's child's blood is a potent weapon", disconnected from the fact that such a child exists, and now can't share that particular tidbit with the goblin from the second deal.
Never gonna come back to bite me baby, keep wheeling and dealing 😎
#original post#ttrpg tag#deal unrelated to any of these three:#this spidergoblin fucker was selling a map we need#the map itself was a very fair price- a book no one has read. i wrote a few pages in a blank notebook with my eyes closed. easy#but the map was so so so flimsy#and he sold protective cases at an exorbitant price#BUT FUCK YOU SPIDERGOBLIN#so instead of that bullshit i copied the map onto a piece of paper. easy#but he made the ink turn to a million spiders and crawl away next time i tried to look at the map so i couldn't use it#but my changeling has artistic skill; an eidedic memory; and a magical ability to repare items#THIS IS A WAR OF ATTRITION AND HE WILL NOT WIN
8 notes
·
View notes
Text
Dis-cember Day 30: Enemies
Prompt list under read more
#tumblr shat itself so ur getting this 22 minutes late#discord#my art#mlp#discord mlp#discord my little pony#mlp fanart#mlp fim#mlp discord#my little pony discord#changeling#mlp changeling#changeling mlp#discember
28 notes
·
View notes
Text
it’s kind of interesting to find points where these characters are kind of tangled up in each other. does anyone else remember that episode of jimmy neutron where sheen and them had to manually detangle jimmy and cindy for plot reasons i don’t recall and like, pick through their traits and skills one by one to redistribute them. that’s what it feels like i’m doing pulling augustus and the changeling out of my head. anyway today i decided that augustus fantasizes about being a service dog a lot and probably fits into the broader furry fandom more than the changeling does.
#N posts stuff#like thinking about it. i think she’s fond of the more tactile/cutesy fursuit details and terminology#like big Huggable tails and paws referred to as ‘bappers’ and such#i think i said previously that changeling couldn’t afford a fursuit but i don’t think it’d be particularly interested in having one actually#¯\_(ツ)_/¯ it has its ears and tail and Refers to itself as a wolf but doesn’t necessarily have any complicated Fantasies about any of it#but it doesn’t have or want an ‘owner’ whatever it is it’s its own#but Augustus likes the idea of a service dog but specially Being a service dog bc the dog is the thing that isn’t supposed to be#touched or talked or looked at and doesn’t go anywhere by itself and only has to focus on its specific job while it’s out and about#as opposed to the handler who has the dog so that they can do other things. augustus just wants to come along and not worry abt it for once#and back on the furry level i think she’d enjoy a fursuit more than changeling would on basically every level#bc they’re often cutesy and cartoonish which she’d like more tjan changeling#and also i imagine warm and contained which she’d like a Lot but changeling would feel smothered and overloaded#and also would kind of give her that ‘you can look at me but you can’t touch me And you can’t see ME actually at all technically#and also she’d be fluffy and soft :3#sorry if you’ve been hoping i’ll move out of this project and back to a recognizable fandom i fear it may not be happening anytime soon#ANYWAY now im gonna draw augustus in a service dog jacket like mine. but more detailed bc she actually does have a handler :33c#i like you too
2 notes
·
View notes
Text
A list of every word I've added to my personal dictionary in Google Docs
120ft
alliophe
allobrite
arcanozoology
armdrus
aroa
ataulfo
avaxin
bijugatus
bio2200
cademon
caraille
catsichord
cehn
chenet
chenette
chenit
chric
chrisanthamum
ciliren
ciliryn
cliffclaw
coemb
con save
condi
culinologist
cyrdune
dentrement
denzar
diablerizing
dnd
draconians
dreamfolk
duoren
dwarvan
edwald
eireo
ekamalit
elrynn
enralei
enterobacterales
enterocolitica
eppendorf
erowan's
erowan’s
eshwyr
feyfrost
feythful
fireswelt
floofing
gemcutters
genesys
ghouled
gloomside
grey
grung
haures
hazelholde
hecata
hedgespinning
iamato
idae
iren
ispen
jeannemary
jella
keiann
lignieri
loyah
lyctor
malaccense
mangifera
markas
melicoccus
melondew
meteion
mezcalitas
mistlefoe
mobie
momo” shiki
momordica
nata
newkolt
nimasi
nirnasha
non-competitive
nonagesimus
oaen
officinale
oloven
oneiropomp
orianan
owlfolk
padaecol
palearctica
parvathii
passersbys
pkgs
pondfall
priamhark
primaflys
prismaflies
prismafly
prismaflys
productscoeffcients
pseudomonadota
psuedomonadota
puppeted
raikthen
rapsol
raytham
reactantscoefficients
rmarigold
rolcis
rosescar
ruvaen
sapindaceae
simulac
simulacran
skyence
spilloff
stoneberries
syzygium
tawah
tetrachromancy
thanergy
timey
tjimaa
trichromancy
twinklefall
tyrial
unsoakable
ursoquito
vaulderie
vere
virhexen
wallingcroft
werebedbug
wildevalley
wyvils
xillow
yersiniaceae
yotu
#most of these are character names or place names for various rpgs#vtm#the locked tomb#changeling the lost#can you tell i write and dm#honestly a trip down memory lane#some of these words are from the first campaign i ever ran#also peep the very real science words i have to use for my lab reports but google hates science and gives them red squiggles#also also some of those words are just cultural so google can go fuck itself
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
❛ If you mean to harm me, I must warn you whatever you’re hiding, it won’t be enough. ❜
@constable
Wow, that quick? Lyta snorts, backing up a little. Is he a telepath? He must be, if he's that wary of her already. How could he tell, otherwise? "I'm not gonna harm you," she says, raising her hands in mock surrender, before carefully reaching out to see just who, and what, he is.
#constable#odo#truth speaks for itself - lyta alexander#you can decide what if anything she sees when she reaches out#i tend to err more on the side of Changelings being very hard to read but i know you're a telepathic!Changelings truther (affectionate)
12 notes
·
View notes
Text
Ancient Tidings - Page 31
Flux has no time for all these cryptic messages.
#flux chord#art#mlp#fim#changeling#comic#mlp fim#ancient tidings#nusk#nieks#The Mimic reveals itself!#story#ancienttidings
18 notes
·
View notes
Text
some spooky art for the spooky season, feat. my changeling bard, Cas! 👻
#changeling#bard#dnd#dnd art#dnd character#i hesitate to tag curse of strahd cause the art itself isnt related but know that thats the game theyre in#asheepdraws#this was part of some expression practice i did!#cas
9 notes
·
View notes
Text
A good concept for the sort of body distortion I picture with Imposter Costa is Mr. Bloom from DC Comics:

That sort of stretched-out, sharp silhouette. Limbs way, way too long and a body strangely twisted.
#the changeling can distort itself in other ways of course- growing tooth-lined mouths or spines or splitting its own head open if it pleased#- the closer Jon gets to Costa the harder it becomes for Costa to ‘keep its shape quite right’. so by the time there’s a final confrontation#- Costa is as tall and warped at the top panel. it can get bigger.#i need to make a bestiary post or something I’ve come up with lore now#but yeah! spooky man. thing.
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
i finished the girl who fell beneath the sea it was pretty good
#i finished it a lot quicker than i thought i would!#i liked the characters a lot but honestly the plot as a whole felt kinda..messy#like there were a LOT of interesting bits of lore introduced#that either never really came up again#or were introduced out of nowhere just for one scene u know#but the writing itself was good and again i rlly liked the characters#i mean mina was. okay#she's not the best ya protag i've ever read but she's definitely not the worst either#but honestly if i were discussing this book with a friend#i would suggest just reading six crimson cranes and then the dragon's promise instead#VERYY similar plot and setting and vibes but imo six crimson cranes was wayyy better#i need to try and finish big machine before monday but honestly idk if thats gonna happen#i still have like 200 pages left and i'm. not loving it#it's kinda boring which is disappointing#cause i read the changeling last year and really liked it but this book is just not doing it for me so far#i have a copy of lone woman sitting in my car that i'm gonna read eventually i hope that one's better :')#anyways#now that i'm reading again i need an outlet to talk abt the books i've read#so#📚.#(<- book talk tag)#snow.txt
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
per last night i have also had a revelatory vision that when changeling was very small it used to stand shock still in the middle of a room and just scream inconsolably, which bewildered the hell out of its mother because it clearly wasn’t an Upset screaming but also it Would Not stop, and eventually it was just chalked up to “inexplicable bizarre autism behavior; maybe she’ll grow out of it” and the whole time changeling was playing ‘being burnt alive at the stake’ joan of arc style
#oc: the changeling#aside#in the elementary school collecting saint cards like pokemon#changeling didn’t speak until it was like 5 or 6 so it could not explain itself#lovvveee giving a character a special interest bc if you get lucky it also adds dimension to their other interests#like i think that changeling specifically enjoys possession movies and other ones with really heavy religious themes#and also leans towards old country music bc you can find a lot of those artists that are Weird about religion
1 note
·
View note
Text
Changeling: Had you been alive, Peter, you'd have converted. But you're dead already.
Peter Stamatin: ... Really? Why? I think I'm quite alive...
Changeling: Is this life though? You seek death yourself!
Peter Stamatin: Why? Death... I'm terrified of death. Of true death... this here is just a game for now. It's not real yet, is it?
Changeling: There's nothing terrifying about death... Not for you at this point, anyway... The void of oblivion is what's terrible... Convert.
Peter Stamatin: You speak too simply and too fast... But you scare me nonetheless... No, I'd prefer a painful death... The vivid death of a martyr burned at the stake... I couldn't bear oblivion... I won't accept it.
Changeling: Convert. Here, I'm turning around and leaving. I'm the angel of your death. Make your choice while you still have time. You've summoned me, and here I am -- here to comfort you.
Peter Stamatin: Wait... I'm going...
Changeling: Go. My sister, the paraclete, will be waiting for you there... Outside.
ah. okay........

#replaying Clara's aka changeling's route and idk but this dialogue kills me every time#the sister is the plague itself btw. local 14 year old telling an alcoholic architect to kill himself#my post#pathologic
0 notes
Text
I need you guys to remind me when it's morning that I want to make a post for pinned post that actually. Does stuff. Like explain my sideblogs and ongoing projects.
Also entirely relevant in the meantime any house md fans plz send me ideas for things to write for the werewolf wilson au (currently named the www.au in my brain for ease of access) because I got a great name for a fic and I want to make it a oneshot collection because I don't have those as a skill yet and what better way to polish a skill than with a fandom I'm dubiously and cautiously entering at 45 minutes after my bedtime on a weekend
#Fyi I do have ideas already#Like. Wilson stuck in dog form bc of an early day moon attempts to help with a diagnosis#Or goes to be a happy dog playing with cancer patient kids who deserve a gentle giant dog who sits down and lets them knot his fur to hell#I have “cameron learns shes a changeling by contracting pixie cold” concept#And similarly a “chase has an identity crisis and begins to eat fossils in distress” one#where chase is too busy panicking about being magic now to kill that one patient in that one episode#Also. At least three case fic ideas#Including one where a lycanthrope contracts lupus because for some reason I find that irony vaguely funny#(however the fic itself is rather sad and ends w the patient being given enough meds to last one last full moon with her pack before dying#And then of course we get the “this is actually a story for the sake of our characters more than for the patient” bit#Where house corners wilson to ask if he's sure he's ok with only having house as pack when that girl had so many people for her#And wilson goes “if I could choose any one person to yell at me when I chew my own slippers it'd be you”#Its all soft and shit idfk)#However the point of all this is that I have a great name for the fic wherein I will collect all these oneshots#(the idea is calling it “who let the dogs out” btw)#((main concern rn is whether or not I'd tag theodog as a separate character from wilson or not bc they're the same person technically))#(((ehh. Problem for tomorrow ig)))
0 notes
Text
“Nosferatu” (2024) and the Female Gothic Genre, Paganism and the Occult
The Gothic novel genre is deeply connected with female authors like Ann Radcliffe, Mary Shelley, Brontë sisters, Mary Robinson, and Charlotte Dacre, because it allowed them to explore themes that were “off limits” to women at the time (19th century) especially sexuality and women’s place in a patriarchal society. Hence the “Gothic female” genre was created, as a way for female authors and readers to digest their mixed feelings about these topics. This is the world Robert Eggers transports his audience in “Nosferatu” (2024).
This film checks every box of the Gothic genre: claustrophobic atmosphere, environment of fear, the threat of the supernatural, ruined buildings (usually from the Medieval ages), dreamlike states, nocturnal landscapes, demonic possession, blend of “high culture” and “low culture” (folklore), superstitious rituals, melancolia, melodrama, decay, fate, the macabre, the intrusion of the past into the present, stories of persecution, imprisonment and murder as metaphors for social conflict.
Indeed, the audience can’t analyze this story through contemporary lenses or bias, because it’s suppose to be an immersive experience into the Gothic genre and the Victorian era. The terms “gothic” and “romantic” exist in their historical context; “gothic” as in the literature genre (gothic novel), and “romantic” as in the 19th century artist movement (Romanticism).
No, this is not a story about grooming nor abuse... it can be, but not in the way many are interpreting it. Folks also need to let go of previous adaptations and their meanings, because this is Robert Eggers take on this story. And, it’s everything a remake (or retelling) should be, because its not a rehash, it’s a new interpretation of a old story, “Dracula”.
Robert Eggers tells us that the themes of sex and death are at the core of his story, it’s a “demon lover story”, and it’s Count Orlok and Ellen psychosexual connection that makes his adaptation different from the rest.
Ellen is our female gothic protagonist, and, like similar characters of the genre, she’s a persecuted heroine fleeing some a villainous outside force, personified by Count Orlok, the archetypal Death. Metaphorically, she’s a young woman haunted by her own mortality, by Death itself. She also has a sense of Doom looming over her, the heavy hand of Fate; can we outrun our destiny? “Providence!” Herr Knock screams throughout the film; as in a supernatural force, commonly God, guiding humanity destiny.
Ellen is no typical young woman, though. As she tells Von Franz, she had occult powers since childhood, being able to perceive glimpses of the future and suffering premonitions (knowing the contents of her Christmas gifts and when her mother would die). Her father called her “his little changeling girl”, as in the European folklore of human children kidnapped by supernatural creatures (fairies, demons, etc.) and a substitute being left in their place. Herr Knock also compares Ellen with a “sylph”, when he informs Thomas he’s to travel to Transylvania. “Sylphs” are air spirits from 16th century Germanic folklore and alchemy, a sort of nymph connected to air element in hermetic literature; throughout the centuries they have been culturally associated with fairies, too. We have two characters in the story connecting Ellen with a fairy-like creature. Interestingly enough we, the audience, see her floating in the opening scene.
“You are not for the living. You are not for human kind”, Orlok tells her, and calls her “enchantress”. Von Franz also said Ellen could have been a priestess of Isis had she been born in pagan times. Isis is one of the major Egyptian deities, considered the goddess of magic and healing. She was also connected with the Dead and funeral rites, since she was the sister-wife of Osiris, ruler of the Underworld. Pagan priestesses also entered trancelike states as Ellen “hysterical seizures” or “epilepsies” when communicating with the spiritual world, which is what Von Franz, the occult and alchemist student, recognizes in her. Ellen is a supernatural force, too.
Eggers Orlok was a sorcerer in life, a practitioner of Black Magic. He was one of the Solomonari, wizards from Romanian folklore, believed to be students of the Devil, who learned to ride dragons, and control beasts and the weather. In Eastern European tradition, the Solomonari were believed to be recruited among common folk and disguise themselves as beggars, Orlok is a Romanian nobleman who sought to achieve immortality, to conquer Death. As the abbess tells Thomas, the Devil preserved Orlok’s soul that his corpse may walk again in blasphemy, as a vampire feeding off the blood of the living and spreading plague.
However: who was it who awoke Orlok in “Nosferatu”? The Devil or Ellen?
At the prologue, we see Ellen crying and begging for companionship. She prays for a guardian angel, a spirit of comfort, a spirit of any celestial sphere, anything, to hear her call and come to her. She’s summoning some occult force and inviting it into her life. Orlok answers her call. And why is she doing this? She feels lonely, isolated and misunderstood by those around her. As she tells Von Franz, she’s no longer her father’s “little girl” and he recoils from her touch, because she’s no longer a child. As she grows older and enters womanhood, she starts to feel ostracized and put aside by 19th century society who has rigid gender expectations of her.
According to Orlok, it was Ellen who awoke him: “O’er centuries, a loathsome beast I lay within the darkest pit… ‘til you did wake me, enchantress, and stirred me from my grave. You are my affliction.” Which Ellen later confirms to Thomas: “I have brought this evil upon us” because she sought companionship and tenderness. This is a belief Von Franz also shares: it’s Ellen who “wills it”, and she’s the one who unleashed this plague upon the world.
This is very fitting with the Gothic female novel, where the supernatural connects with female societal status of this time period, generally women’s discontent with patriarchal society, difficult and unsatisfying maternal position (in “Nosferatu” we see this with Anne’s character, where she equals being pregnant with being drained of her life force) and their role within society (fear of entrapment in the domestic sphere, their bodies, marriage, childbirth, etc.).
Eggers’ Orlok is a combination of several Romanian folklore creatures, associated with vampirism: strigoi, moroi (these two are the “classic” vampires) and zburător (a ghost-like creature, usually handsome, and only visible to young women, attacks at night, usually newly-wed ladies and does “indecent” things with them). The influence of this legend in Ellen and Orlok story is evident.
Ellen tries to summon a spiritual companion in her teenage years, most likely when she reached puberty and her sexuality was starting to awake. A demon who’s a personification of appetite, devourance, sex and death is the one who answers her calling. They end up in a sexual spiritual connection, as Ellen experiences her sexual awakening with him, as shown in the prologue and later confirmed how Orlok took her as his lover. She also reveals to Thomas it was “sweet” and she “had never known such bliss” at first, until it turned into torture (seizures and nightmares), when her father found her laying unclothed and called her a sinner and it’s implied she might have been institutionalized, as she tells Von Franz. This episode might be a metaphor for masturbation and the historical shame associated with it. Hence her connection with Orlok being her “melancholy” (depression) and her “shame”, symbolic for the sexual urges 19th century society forced women to repress.
Count Orlok is the archetypal Death; which culminates with the “Death and the Maiden” motif at the end. This was a very popular Art History archetype around the so-called “Plague years” (14th to 16th century) in Europe, and it’s often connected with other motifs like “Danse Macabre” and “Memento Mori”. It has several meanings depending on the author intent, usually a reminder of our mortality, but also a meditation on sex and death, as in the French “la petite mort” (“little death”), the post-orgasm sensation, sexual release potentially causing temporary loss of consciousness (fainting) or dizziness. In the Medieval Ages, physicians believed orgasms could lead to death because they drained the “life force” from the body. This was when the term “petite mort” was created, and this belief persisted into the Renaissance and beyond. In “Nosferatu” this probably translates in the sexual pleasure that Orlok imprints on his victims as he drains their life force.
Ellen’s “hysterical seizures” miraculously stop once she meets and marries Thomas Hutter, our tragic romantic hero. This can also be a nod to Gothic Bildungsroman (“coming of age”) genre; where the female protagonists grow from adolescence to adulthood in the face of the impossibility of the supernatural, and come to the conclusion there’s a rational explanation. In Ellen’s case, it’s medical, as she’s diagnosed as a melancholic somnambulist hysteric (in another words, a depressive hyper-sexual sleepwalker).
At the beginning of the story, Ellen and Thomas are newly-weds fresh out of their honeymoon, which means sex (historically necessary to consummate marriages). With Thomas, Ellen is “free of her shame”, as she says so herself. Because, her sexuality is safely contained within marriage, as it’s socially acceptable. But Thomas dismisses her concerns about his well-being, and doesn’t believe her until he experiences the supernatural first-hand, having an homoerotic encounter with Orlok himself, which also causes him great shame. This is probably a Easter egg for Bram Stoker possible closet homosexuality and “Dracula” being a metaphor for that.
Thomas’ main concern, throughout the story, is to fit into the patriarchal ideal of his genre, as a provider for his wife, and he aspires to be like his long-time friend, Friedrich Harding, the “perfect patriarch” with the perfect religious and dutiful wife, Anna, and their precious children. The Hardings are the perfect Victorian family; they are everything society expects them to be. Friedrich even chastises Ellen for her nature, and it’s clear he resents her for what she represents: “otherness” and “deviance” to societal norms.
However, soon enough, Ellen’s seizures return, symbolizing Thomas cannot sexually satisfy her. She’s “too ardent” as Harding calls her. “More! More!” She begs Thomas when they have sex to scorn Orlok. Not only her sexuality is too strong, but Thomas also shares with Friedrich his desire to wait to have children with Ellen because he wants to gain financial stability first. This in a time period when contraceptives weren’t widely spread, meaning abstinence.
Symbolically, Ellen’s seizures can also be connected with her fear of childbirth. Her “epilepsies” return while she’s staying in the Harding household, where they are children and Anna is pregnant. Children is what is expected of Ellen next, after all. But it’s sexual pleasure that Ellen seeks, and this causes her great shame and torment, because 19th century women weren’t suppose to known “such things”. ��Sin! Sin! Sin!” as Ellen’s father screamed at her when he found her naked.
Fear of entrapment represented as Ellen tries to rip off her corset and “free herself”: this happens during one of her Orlok induced seizures.
As Robert Eggers tells us, Orlok both disgusts and attracts Ellen, she loves and hates him at the same time. He’s repulsive, rotten, animalistic and lustful, both literally and metaphorically. His character design is meant to invoke contradictory feelings in the audience: overall he’s foul and monstrous, but he appears almost handsome in some shots. This is intentional. Not only he’s a personification of Death, but of Ellen’s repressed sexuality by 19th century society. He represents the monstrous and dangerous female sexuality the Victorian era sought to contain. He’s the transgression and taboo theme in this Gothic story, as well: necrophilia. Which is probably Eggers “gotcha” moment to “vampire lovers” everywhere, as he forces his audience to confront their own bias.
Ellen herself is a medicalized character, as we see her being institutionalized, drugged, bound to her bed, forced to wear a corset to bed, and used as a scientific experiment by physicians. She’s not in control of her own body, and has little agency over it, overall. We see her being contained, literally and metaphorically, too. This is probably meant to symbolize women as a whole in 19th century Western European societies. The “disability of being female” is one major theme in Gothic female novels, after all.
And if Ellen unleashed Orlok unto the world and he’s connected with her what does this mean for this story? The obvious interpretation of the ending it’s Ellen sacrificing herself to save Wisburg from Nosferatu’s curse, like every other adaptation. But this appears to be somewhat disconnected from the overall themes of this particular retelling. Here, it’s Ellen who unleashed the curse, and only her can put an end to it.
We see Ellen summoning Orlok in two occasions: at the beginning and at the end of this tale. At first, she did it unconsciously, she dabbled with the occult and wasn’t aware of what she was inviting into her life. However, does this indicate Ellen has some degree of control over him? Orlok himself says she’s “his affliction”, and they are bound to one another. She’s not only a seer, she’s compared with a priestess of a Goddess associated with funeral rites and with the ability of resurrection and looking after the Dead (Isis). We can almost interpret her as a necromancer.
Here, we can have a different interpretation of Orlok unleashing a plague upon the society who ostracizes Ellen for her nature. Symbolically, he’s her reckoning, her vengeance upon society norms and expectations of gender. He’s the “plague carrier” and brings a “blood plague” transmitted by rats (symbolic of the Black Plague; the medieval ages terrorizing the modern world of science and rationality) upon Wisburg, and the “good Christians” who contain and shame “Pagan” Ellen.
Orlok’s most notorious victims are the Hardings, the perfect patriarchal Christian family model Ellen can never fit into; the patriarch Friedrich, the pregnant Anna and the two children. This also fits the Gothic female genre of the supernatural menace as a metaphor for women’s status in 19th century society. Ellen doesn’t want to be married to a patriarch like Friedrich, she doesn’t express any desire to become pregnant nor have children of her own. Consequently, we see Orlok killing all of these archetypes in the narrative.
Interestingly enough he spares Thomas and saves him for last when he should be his first victim once he arrives at Wisburg, because he’s the husband. However, Thomas is a character Ellen loves and cherishes, as he somewhat accepts her nature and represents her chance at a “normal life”. He’s also determined to save her from Death/Orlok, but is unable to. Symbolically, Ellen chooses death over conforming to gender norms and expectations.
However, we can’t forget Ellen’s supernatural nature, nor her connection with Orlok. She weds Death at the end, she’s no longer terrified of him, and she fulfills their covenant, and her dream premonition of marrying Death: “standing before me, all in black… was… Death. But I was so happy, so very happy. We exchanged vows, we embraced, and when we turned round, everyone was dead. Father… and… everyone. The stench of their bodies was horrible. And - But I never been so happy as that moment… as I held hands with Death.”
A “covenant” is a pact, both a religious and a occultist practice. This is a “blood covenant”, as their flesh becomes one and he drinks from her. “Blood is the life” is a quotation from the Bible, where “blood covenants” are also mentioned, because a “blood covenant” has the power to either destroy or redeem. For instance, Christ’s sacrifice redeemed humanity according to Christians. “Redemption” as Von Franz says, because only Ellen, like Christ, can redeem the habitants of Wisburg. He uses the expression “with Jove’s holy light” before dawn redemption will come to them: “Jove” is Jupiter, the “King of the skies”, and its energy neutralizes Saturn’s, connected with “melancholy” (depression).
However, that’s not what’s happening here, because Orlok is a servant of the Devil, and a literally un-dead “warlock”. So, what is Ellen pledging herself to here, exactly? Her covenant with Orlok has nothing to do with God or Jupiter, for these are forces of good, when Orlok is a force of evil and darkness.
Ellen also fulfills her role as “priestess of Isis” at the end, as she guides the un-dead Orlok to his physical death; like Isis, she resurrected him, and is now taking him into the Underworld with her. Because, like Orlok also told her, she’s “not for the living”, that’s her fate, the destiny she accepts at the end; she’s meant for Death, as Isis for Osiris.
“Our covenant is fulfilled. Your oath re-pledged.” Orlok tells her. But what was Ellen’s oath? We have to look into the prologue scene “You shall be one with me ever-eternally. Do you swear it?” And in the ending “As our spirits are one, so shall be our flesh. You are mine.” They fulfill their pact both in the physical and the spiritual worlds, and both make the ultimate blood sacrifice, by physically dying for “self-renunciation” is essential for blood covenants.
And a deity is always summoned to bless such a pact… but who was blessing this one? Ellen and Orlok indeed, died in the physical world, but are joined in the spiritual world forever, as decreed by their covenant, so where did their spirits go?
They are also surrounded by lilacs, their signature flower throughout the narrative, which symbolizes first love, yes, but also renewal and rebirth. Orlok conquered Death and immortality once before, because the Devil kept his soul. Now that Ellen is joined with him in spirit, what does this mean for her, and for them both?
#nosferatu 2024#Ellen Hutter 2024#friedrich harding#anna harding#Thomas Hutter 2024#Count Orlok 2024#von franz#lily rose depp#bill skargard#bill skarsgård#nicholas hoult#emma corrin#aaron taylor johnson#willem dafoe#ellen x orlok#orlok x ellen#robert eggers
702 notes
·
View notes