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 The Hook Man

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Mrs_Dean Winchester
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Αριθμός μηνυμάτων : 8
Ημερομηνία εγγραφής : 03/09/2011

The Hook Man Empty
ΔημοσίευσηΘέμα: The Hook Man   The Hook Man I_icon_minitimeΣαβ Σεπ 03, 2011 5:51 pm

A teenage boy drove his date to a dark and deserted Lovers' Lane for a make-out session. After turning on the radio for mood music, he leaned over and began kissing the girl.

A short while later, the music suddenly stopped and an announcer's voice came on, warning in an urgent tone that a convicted murderer had just escaped from the state insane asylum — which happened to be located not far from Lovers' Lane — and that anyone who noticed a strange man lurking about with a hook in place of his right hand should immediately report his whereabouts to the police.

The girl became frightened and asked to be taken home. The boy, feeling bold, locked all the doors instead and, assuring his date they would be safe, attempted to kiss her again. She became frantic and pushed him away, insisting that they leave. Relenting, the boy peevishly jerked the car into gear and spun its wheels as he pulled out of the parking space.

When they arrived at the girl's house she got out of the car, and, reaching to close the door, began to scream uncontrollably. The boy ran to her side to see what was wrong and there, dangling from the door handle, was a bloody hook.



Analysis: Folks have been telling the "hook man" story since the 1950s, and indeed the implicit moral message — "Sex is naughty, and bad boys and girls will be punished!" — seems more appropriate to that simpler, more naive era. Just as this moral has come to be parodied in horror films (where formerly it was delivered with morbid solemnity), its "bygone" relevance has taken the teeth out of the cautionary tale over time.

Noting the improbable "tidiness" of the plot, Jan Harold Brunvand has observed that "most tellers narrate the story nowadays more as a scary story than a believed legend." Small wonder. Given its exploitation by Hollywood in popular genre films like "Candyman" and "I Know What You Did Last Summer," most people under the age of 30 probably assume the story was invented by screenwriters.

Folklorists of a Freudian bent find meaningful sexual overtones in the imagery of the tale. The boy, who wants to get his "hooks" into the girl, is not only frustrated by her unwillingness but afraid of his own lustful impulses — a fear heightened by the stern "voice of conscience" emitting from the radio — and has to "pull out fast" before a deadly sin is committed. The tearing off of the madman's hook symbolizes castration. Proponents of this type of psychological interpretation find the sexual apprehensions of both boys and girls represented in the legend.

One of the earliest appearances of "The Hook" in print was in a "Dear Abby" column dated November 8, 1960:

DEAR ABBY: If you are interested in teenagers, you will print this story. I don't know whether it's true or not, but it doesn't matter because it served its purpose for me:

A fellow and his date pulled into their favorite "lovers' lane" to listen to the radio and do a little necking. The music was interrupted by an announcer who said there was an escaped convict in the area who had served time for rape and robbery. He was described as having a hook instead of a right hand. The couple became frightened and drove away. When the boy took his girl home, he went around to open the car door for her. Then he saw — a hook on the door handle! I don't think I will ever park to make out as long as I live. I hope this does the same for other kids.

Not all urban legends in this vein have a happy ending, I should point out. See "The Boyfriend's Death" for an example of a similar cautionary tale that pulls no punches.


Και αυτο ειναι για το ιδιο θεμα αλλα απο αλλο σαιτ...


ORIGIN OF THE LEGEND

“Every urban legend has a source. A place where it all began.” Both the Hook Man and The Boyfriend’s death possibly spawned from actual true crimes! It was not uncommon for a guy and a girl to go to Lover’s Lane to make out. But, what you maybe didn’t know was that some of these teenagers were caught off guard and murdered by an unknown killer. The residue of news stories about those events would likely remain around for a while, mutating into cautionary tales with the addition of bloody hooks and scraping sounds on the roof of the car.

THE HOOK

The Hook is an urban legend that began widely circulating in the 1950s. There are many variations, but the basic story is the same. It begins when a teenage boy takes his unsuspecting date to Lover’s Lane for a make-out session. While there, they hear a report of a murderer who has escaped from a nearby insane asylum; the newscaster says everyone should be on the lookout for this crazy man, who has a hook in place of his right hand. The girl becomes frightened- especially when the couple hears a strange scratching sound coming from outside the car- but her date insists everything is fine and tries to continue making out. The girl resists, and eventually the boy relents and drives her home. When they arrive back at the girl’s house, the girl exits the car and begins screaming hysterically. When her date exits the car as well, he sees a bloody detached hook embedded in the roof of the car- and realizes that the Hook Man would have scratched through the interior of the car had they stayed at Lover’s Lane any longer.

THE BOYFRIEND’S DEATH

The Boyfriend’s Death is another Urban Legend, often connected to that of The Hook. This was the Hook Man legend that the episode was based on. A teenage guy and his date go to Lover’s Lane and park their car under a tree. They begin to make out, until they hear a noise coming from outside the car! The boy tells the girl that he is going to go check it out and orders her to stay in the car just in case. The girl complies, while in the car the she begins to hear scraping sounds on the roof of the car! Sometimes the girl stays inside the car, while other versions of the legend say that she exits the vehicle wanting to see what was causing the noise. Upon looking back, the girl sees such a grotesque image that her hair turns white with horror! In the American version of the legend the girl witnesses her boyfriend, murdered, hanging from a limb on the tree above and his feet hitting against the car. In the European version of the same legend, the girl sees the murderer himself, holding the boyfriend's decapitated head in one hand and tapping on the roof of the car with his fist or bloody axe! The earliest documented instance of this urban legend was collected in 1964 from a freshman at the University of Kansas.

‘AREN’T YOU GLAD YOU DIDN’T TURN ON THE LIGHTS?’

This urban legend, contrary to the episode, has no connection to the hook man once so ever. The means in which it is used, however, does closely correlate to the story of the episode. The legend basically states that a female college student returns to her dorm room late one evening and discovers that her roommate has been murdered. Depending on which version of the urban legend you hear: sometimes she comes back to the dorm room to pick up a sweater, sometimes to pick up her books, or just to check up on things. While in another variation, the female college student is not the first to arrive at the dorm room and instead she returns to find the police already surveying the crime scene. In another variation of the legend the female college student comes home late, she finds all the lights are out and assumes her roommate is already asleep; the next morning, when she wakes up, the girl is horrified to discover that her roommate has been viciously slaughtered- and written above her body, in her own blood, are the words “Aren’t you glad you didn’t turn on the lights?”

AVENGING ANGELS

An angel is an ethereal creature who assists and serves God or the gods of many religious traditions. In the Christian bible, angels are portrayed as powerful and dreadful, endowed with wisdom, correct in their judgment, holy, but not infallible. When their duties are punitive, they are known as avenging angels and are mentioned in verses such as II Sam xxiv, 15, in which an angel annihilates thousands on God’s command. These avenging angels are used by God to punish men for their sins.

THE INVISIBLE MAN

“One freaked out witness who didn’t see anything? Doesn’t mean it’s the Invisible Man.”

ROCK SALT/ ROCK SALT GUN

A rock salt gun is a nonlethal weapon. Rock salt ammunition is often used by police to control crowds or riots. Spirit hunters also use Rock Salt Guns as a defense against ghosts and other supernatural spirits. The fired salt alone will not destroy the spirit, but does act as a deterrent, forcing the spirit to dissipate briefly.

OZONE

Ghosts, spirits, and other supernatural beings often leave behind evidence of their presence. One type of evidence is ozone, which is a poisonous unstable gaseous form of oxygen, formed from diatomic oxygen by electric discharge or exposure to ultraviolet radiation. Ozone can be detected by its smell. The stronger the smell, the stronger the spirit’s presence. Ability to smell ozone differs from person to person, but most people can smell it at about .015 ppmv. Ozone is also the primary cause in the scent that precedes a rainstorm.
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Mrs_Dean Winchester
Newcomer



Αριθμός μηνυμάτων : 8
Ημερομηνία εγγραφής : 03/09/2011

The Hook Man Empty
ΔημοσίευσηΘέμα: Απ: The Hook Man   The Hook Man I_icon_minitimeΣαβ Σεπ 03, 2011 5:56 pm

Variomouna n kanw thn metafrash... Razz Opoios den katalavainei kapoio shmeio mporei n mou pei gia na to metafrasw...
Yparxei kai sxetiko epeisodio stn seira supernatural opoios 8elei mporei n t dei...h opoioi t xoun dei ena exw na pw einai teleiooo...
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