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3 Twisted Russian Folktales To Fuel Your NightmaresThe Russians have given us a lot—such as vodka, bears and snow—but they also have some super creepy folktales. While we Westerners tell fairytales to young children that are full of whimsy and far-away lands, the Easterners' take on these stories is a little more, shall we say, horrifying. In the United States, these tales, or Skazkas, would be told to fellow adults, not kids, because of their pant-wetting nature. Here are three Skakzas that may be unsuitable for children: The Death of Koschei the Deathless We're off to a good start with a contradictory title, but that's how they rope you in, isn't it? "The Death of Koschei the Deathless" is about the titular Koschei, a villain who cannot be killed by conventional means. His soul is kept inside a needle, which is inside an egg inside a duck, which is inside a hare, which is inside a locked iron chest, which is buried under an oak tree on the island of Buryan in the middle of the ocean. So, it's pretty secure, then. The hero of the tale is Ivan Tsarevitch, who leaves home after his parents die and his sisters get married. He comes across a warrior woman called Marya Morevna whom he marries and they go off to live in a castle. Marya announces that she is to go off to war but, while she's away, Ivan isn't to open the door of their dungeon. Big mistake, because Ivan obviously opens it as soon as she's out the door. In the dungeon, he finds an emaciated Koschei, all chained up and nasty. Koschei asks the gullible Ivan for a drink of water, which he agrees to and fetches him 12 buckets, which he promptly drinks. The water brings back the villain's powers, so he vanishes into thin air, presumably leaving Ivan utterly pissing himself in terror. Ivan discovers that Koschei has kidnapped Marya, even though she's an awesome warrior woman, and chases him down. Because Ivan is clearly a little weakling, unlike his wife, Koschei kills him, stuffs his carcass in a barrel and chucks him into the sea. (Again, this one's not really for kids.) Fortunately Ivan is resurrected by his sisters' husbands who happen to be bad-ass wizards who can also transform into birds of prey. They tell him that he needs to get a magical horse from Baba Yaga, a witchy woman who tests him. He passes the tests, finds Koschei, kills him and burns his body. (Again, not really one for the kiddies.) It begs the question of how he managed to kill the immortal with physical weapons, but who am I to judge dead Russian storytellers? The Enchanted Tsarevich We've all seen Disney's "Beauty and the Beast," the timeless tale of a beautiful book nerd who gets into bestiality and does a duet with a French candle. Ok, so it's been a while, but I promise you that the Russian version is even more disturbing. First off, the Russians decided against featuring a furry snaggle-toothed beast and instead thought that a three-headed winged snake would be more appropriate. The story goes that a merchant was caught by the hideous creature when he was picking flowers. The snake tells the merchant that, for his crime of trespassing, he must give the snake to the first person who greets him when he returns home. When he gets back, his daughter rushes out and greets him, unaware of the scaly fate that slithers before her. She then must go to live in an empty castle with the snake beast. Each night the snake moves his snakey bed closer to the girl until one night they are resting in the same bed. This, my friends, is so goddamn creepy I'm screaming while I type this. In the morning, the girl is allowed to go home and see her dad, but the snake tells her that she must be back that night or he'll kill himself. Need to work on your threats there, snakeybobs. However, the girl stays out too long and, for some reason, rushes back home to find the snake laying on the ground dying. She kisses one of its heads and it miraculously turns into a handsome prince. He manages to heal and they live happily every after. Aww. The Armless Maiden
Ok, this is a gruesome one. In fact, I'm sure "The Armless Maiden" will soon be a Eli Roth flick. Ready for this? This story is about an orphaned brother and sister who moved into their own place. The brother opened up shop and got married to a woman who makes Norman Bates look like Mr. Bean. One day, the brother told the sister that she could keep the house, but his wife went batshit insane and started breaking their furniture and blamed the sister for the damage. The brother was cool about it and probably said something like, "Chill, babe, we can always buy more." His wife framed his sister again by massacring his favourite horse, but the brother said that the dogs could chow down on the festering nag head. Finally, things went completely off the rails when the wife gave birth, took the baby and lopped off its head, blaming the sister. Now the brother was all kinds of pissed, so he drove his sister in a cart into a bramble and told her to disentangle herself. When she tried he cut off both of her arms and ran off. Keeping down your breakfast? The sister managed to escape to a merchant town where she fell in love with a merchant's son. After two years, he went on a journey, but told his parents to shoot him a letter when his child was born. His wife eventually gave birth to a boy with gold up to his elbows, stars on his sides, a moon on his forehead and the sun near his heart. The grandparents wrote to their son as promised, but the insane sister-in-law invited the messenger around and replaced the letter with one that said that his wife had given birth to a half wolf, half bear. Actually, that sounds pretty bad-ass, but the merchant's son didn't much care for it. He sent a letter back saying that the kid shouldn't be harmed until he gets back, but the sister-in-law intercepted the letter again and changed it to read that the wife should be driven away. So the grandparents gave their daughter the kid and sent her packing. She left and tried to drink from a well, but the baby fell in, probably with a comedy whistle as it fell. Of course, she had no arms to fetch her baby, but a random old man told her to reach in anyway, probably because he was a prick trying to get his rocks off. Surprisingly, when she tried her arms were restored and she picked her baby out of the water. She then went on to the house where her brother, husband and insane in-law were staying. The sister-in-law answered the door and was like, "Shit!" and told the guys that it was just a beggar lady. But the dudes wanted to invite her in to spin some beggar lady yarns because there was no Nintendo back then. When they discovered who it really was and that she was carrying the star-spangled baby, her brother tied his wife to a mare. It returned with only her braid. ...and they all lived happily ever after. CommentsComments are closed.
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