Cthulhu Mythos: Difference between revisions

no edit summary
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 26:
Due to the [[Shared Universe]]'s informal nature there have arisen several rather divisive conceptions of the Mythos, generally categorized as the Lovecraft purists' version; the version including the broad post-1930s expansions by later writers like August Derleth (who is a controversy unto himself) and Ramsey Campbell; and then there's the rigidly codified and de-mystified [[Tabletop RPG]] adaptations which crunch down [[Mind Screwdriver]]-style to produce orderly game rules from an inherently disorderly canon. Information from the latter has tended to proliferate across the Internet disproportionately, resulting in simple Google searches producing a majority of pages derived from the game and its various campaigns, which are not always labeled as such.
 
[[H.P. Lovecraft|HP Lovecraft]] has his own trope listing, so tropes here should be for tropes that are not specific to his work, or have been greatly expanded from his work. See also [[Cosmic Horror Story]] (for works which deal with Lovecraft's ''themes'' [and, optionally, make use of the Mythos) and [[Lovecraft Lite]] for works that take Lovecraft and Mythos less seriously.
 
See also the [[Call of Cthulhu (tabletop game)|Call of Cthulhu RPG]]
Line 76:
** [[Pokethulhu]], crossing the mythos and Pokemon.
** [[Hello Cthulhu]]
** ''[[Haiyore! Nyaruko-san|Nyarko San]]'', a romantic-comedy which features Nyarlathotep as a [[Moe]], hyperactive schoolgirl.
* [[Alien Geometries]]: One of the most notable examples being on the island of R'lyeh, in "The Call of Cthulhu".
* [[Aliens Are Bastards]]: Just about everything not of this Earth is evil and/or horrifying. About the only exception are Elder Thing and the Great Race of Yith, who still do freaky things like body-swapping with humans so they can visit Earth, and politely mind-wiping the unfortunate human when they switch back.
Line 99:
* [[Covers Always Lie]]: Lovecraft anthologies (such as the ''Del Ray'' ones) tend to have weird, surreal imagery that often doesn't have anything to do with anything in the stories. Though, it does communicate the atmosphere of the books well enough.
* [[Cult|Cults]]: The Mythos is filled with Old One worshipers with [[Religion of Evil|horrible rituals]]. They range from the ''Arkham Witch Coven'', various madmen like the Whateleys, ''The Brotherhood of the Yellow Sign'', and the English ''Temphill Cult'' to name a few.
* [[Cultural Cross-Reference]]: Mythos references have been made in Japan - some subtle (''[[Big O]]'', ''[[Digimon]]'') and others outright (''[[Haiyore! Nyaruko-san|Haiyore! Nyarko-san]]'').
* [[Dark Fantasy]]: Really Dark.
* [[Death by Adaptation]]: {{spoiler|Inspector Legrasse}} in the 2005 silent film adaptation of ''[[Lovecraft on Film|The Call of Cthulhu (tabletop game)]]. {{spoiler|In the literature, he not only lives, but also stars in a series of short stories.}}''
Line 129:
* [[Masquerade]]: One of the defining aspects of the Mythos, living in ignorance of the true horrors of reality.
* [[Medium Awareness]]: Lovecraft encouraged the authors he corresponded with to use elements of his mythos in their stories, even if those stories were not part of the mythos itself. This emergence of common elements in seemingly unrelated works of literature created the impression that the mythos was actually real, thus leading to the fan theories that Lovecraft actually had encounters with eldritch entities. This culminated in a peculiar case when an infamous [[Moral Guardian]] by the name of Patricia Pulling included in a questionnaire submitted to police as a means of investigating people for possible occult affiliations, a question regarding whether or not the suspect had heard of and read the Necronomicon. This question, among various other things, led to her discrediting as a credible expert in the area of occult crime.
* [[Moe Anthropomorphism]]: You can find most, if not all, of the mythos beings depicted as human girl. Cthylla is notable that, being called Cthulhu's daughter, it's much easier to search for her moe art than squid-like form. ''[[NyarkoHaiyore! SanNyaruko-san]]'' takes this to [[Up to Eleven|the next level]], with Nyarlathotep, Cthugha, and Atlach-Nacha as cute [[Moe]] girls.
* [[Mushroom Man]]: The Fungi from Yuggoth.
* [[Names to Run Away From Really Fast]]: Pretty much all of them, unsurprisingly.
Line 184:
* [[Weaksauce Weakness]]:
** The Cthonians ''dissolve in water.'' Justified: Considering the Cthonians are able to survive intense heat and pressures, can borrow underground, and have telepathic powers capable of controlling people's minds, the fact that Earth is mostly water may be the only reason why they haven't wiped humanity out.
:*** Not a particularly exploitable weakness for the bigger ones though. Shudde-M'ell (the chief Chthonian) is described as ''a mile long'', so immersing him in water would be ... pretty challenging.
** Water isn't good for the Great Old Ones according to ''The Call of Cthulhu'', either - it blocks their telepathic powers completely, trapping them to their lairs both physically and mentally, until R'lyeh rises again.
** The Haunter in the Dark, one of Nyarlathotep's many forms, is extremely weak against light. Granted, it comes from a dimension where no visible light exists (and where it would presumably be invincible), and it can't be killed, only banished back to that dimension, but still, it's an [[Eldritch Abomination]] that can kept at bay with ''a flashlight''! But you'd better hope [[Ten-Second Flashlight|your batteries last]] until you find something else... the Haunter can wait, it only needs to catch you once.
*** In [[Robert Bloch]]'s story "The Shadow From the Steeple" (considered [[Fanon Discontinuity|out of canon by some]]) [[It Got Worse|it gets better]]: after a ''serious'' blunder by a university professor attempting to contain it, {{spoiler|it [[Grand Theft Me|takes over his body]], therefore becoming almost unaffected by light, changes the man's field of expertise to theoretical physics, then joins the Manhattan project so we'll succeed in creating a weapon that could actually annihilate us. It's also an avatar of the god Nyarlathotep, [[Names to Run Away From Really Fast|The Crawling Chaos]].}}
** ''Call of Cthulhu'' itself offers one. You may be surprizedsurprised that, despite being an ancient and unspeakably powerful entity able to drive to insanity with nary a glance, Cthulhu is just as vulnerable as anything else to being rammed with large objects.
* [[Weird Tales]]: Many of Lovecraft and pals wrote for the magazine.
* [[When the Planets Align]]: The Great Old Ones will return when ''The Stars Are Right''.
Line 200:
 
{{reflist}}
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Cosmic Horror Tropes]]
[[Category:Trope Overdosed]]
Line 205 ⟶ 206:
[[Category:Horror Literature]]
[[Category:Science Fiction Literature]]
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]