Clive Barker's Weirdest Monster

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  • Опубліковано 7 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 556

  • @catherinecao4810
    @catherinecao4810 2 роки тому +549

    The first scene with Mick and Judd was really heartbreaking for me.
    I’ve known many couples that aren’t abusive or dysfunctional, just apathetic and ill-matched. They’re constantly at the verge of collapse or at the verge of taking a turn for the worst, and the tension rises with every moment of silence. There are small moments of happiness that keep them together, but there’s the underlying understanding that it won’t last forever, and the tension will inevitably seep back in.

    • @NightmareRevised
      @NightmareRevised Рік тому +31

      I was in a relationship like this and it definitely lasted longer than it should’ve. The moment stuck with me as well.

    • @catherinecao4810
      @catherinecao4810 Рік тому +21

      @@NightmareRevised I’m sorry. I hope you’re doing a lot better now

    • @ghostfacedude93
      @ghostfacedude93 Рік тому +19

      I appreciated the vividness of the characters, even though we know that they are doomed, we still feel the need to finish the story, if not for ourselves, but for these two fictional humans who were victims of a real human's imagination.

    • @PancakeTheKat
      @PancakeTheKat 5 місяців тому +1

      I’m terrified this is how my relationship is. It’s my first, so I have no clue what to do, but I have a feeling it might be like that, or it could just be that the honeymoon phase ended. How can I know?

    • @SingingSealRiana
      @SingingSealRiana 3 місяці тому +3

      I would call that dysfunctional, not abusiv, no maliciousness, but yoxic since both starve togeather, never quite feeling connected, never quite getting what they need while knowing they are never enough ...

  • @mdccxcii6340
    @mdccxcii6340 2 роки тому +902

    I've heard of a tight knit community but this is a whole new level! Jokes aside I really loved this video.

    • @nwut
      @nwut 2 роки тому +11

      holy shit

    • @TheDarkchum1
      @TheDarkchum1 Рік тому +7

      😂

    • @ToastBoastOfficial
      @ToastBoastOfficial Рік тому +8

      I’ve heard of a tight knit community but this is a whole new level! Jokes aside I really loved stealing this comment.

    • @tomtripp5417
      @tomtripp5417 Рік тому

      ‘The jumper granny knitted’
      Too lazy to find the full joke but I’m sure there’s one there

  • @pablo.aranda95
    @pablo.aranda95 2 роки тому +711

    Barker is always so unique. I love how his most interesting works do not limit themselves to being about horror, but using horror to talk about really human emotions like love, desire or purpose. Thank you so much for this video.

    • @prapanthebachelorette6803
      @prapanthebachelorette6803 2 роки тому +5

      Indeed

    • @whiterosesalchemist
      @whiterosesalchemist 11 місяців тому +1

      I have always loved Imajica. It has always sparked a feeling in me that I cannot name or explain. Like a mourning for something I never lost, and then the joy and satisfaction of regaining it.

    • @shemasmcguire3999
      @shemasmcguire3999 11 місяців тому +1

      Mr B. Gone is one of my favorites mainly because I can relate

  • @vladimirkoultyguine4229
    @vladimirkoultyguine4229 2 роки тому +304

    Actually, there IS a tradition involving such human engineering in Catalonia, they call it "castell", which means "castle": groups of some 100-500 people organizing themselves in "towers" several meters high. I believe this could be the source of Clive Barker´s visual inspiration; but indeed, the image he creates surpasses all inspiration, giving it quite an uncanny twist. To speak about the meaning of it all, I´d like to point out some items that might contribute to the whole picture. First, it's the totalitarism and its romantic aura (being part of something great and mighty). Second, we still could view the giants without the "political" conception, then it would be something like the death/life impulses dychotomy in psychoanalysis. Third, the most shocking moment, for me, is when Mike, who previously had begged Judd the cynic to turn away from the horror, becomes the one attracted to it. This is quite horrific and unsettling.

    • @dylaneverett4586
      @dylaneverett4586 Рік тому +6

      Yesss!! I’m from Catalonia and I’ve seen the Castelles in person (particularly in the annual festa major in Vilafranca del Penedès, near Barcelona). It’s truly awesome! My favourite part is that the person at the top of the tower is always a kid, and they can be 10 people tall! There’s also a similar tradition somewhere in India where people climb into towers to retrieve a hanging yoghurt.

    • @Oriol-oo7jl
      @Oriol-oo7jl 5 місяців тому +1

      Awesome, man.
      I 'm from Catalonia, and i was going to write about that. But you described it perfectly
      What's remarcable about those human structures is the coordination, comunal effort and colective strenght towards a simple goal. It really feels like it's just one entity. Or this ants colonies that build bridges and stuff.
      Also, what matches Clive Barker's story is that there are contests between different towns/cities to see which one is best. But without the death and blood. Just tons of swept jajaja
      Adeu! (bye)

  • @djaceofpentacles
    @djaceofpentacles 2 роки тому +246

    Before watching video...
    I'm assuming by thumbnail that this is
    "In the Hills, the cities" one of the most just PURE ORIGINAL ideas I've come across in any genre.

  • @unimportantlyanonymous.3978
    @unimportantlyanonymous.3978 2 роки тому +529

    I absolutely love these audiobook-type of videos. It introduced me to a whole lot of new books that I for sure will get! Thank you Tale Foundry, we love you and your amazing super cool robo-narrator.

  • @laneallen7118
    @laneallen7118 2 роки тому +313

    Oh I would absolutely adore it if you covered Clive Barker‘s Abarat . It’s in desperate need of attention and it’s basically Harry Potter mixed with Star Wars! It’s fully illustrated by him in beautiful oil painting! It’s surreal and captivating! No one knows anything of it.

    • @jadefox33445
      @jadefox33445 2 роки тому +2

      Abarat is one of my favorites! Baker's illustrations are captivating

    • @hallaloth3112
      @hallaloth3112 2 роки тому +2

      I read it once a LONG time ago. . . I remember nothing about it, and wouldn't have remembered it if I hadn't seen the name.

    • @nwut
      @nwut 2 роки тому +1

      sounds interesting

    • @wisterialaroux3507
      @wisterialaroux3507 2 роки тому +2

      So much this! One of my favourite series by him and it’s so magical and beautiful and it does not get the recognition it deserves. My English teacher recommended it to me in public school almost 20 years ago and it’s still one of my favourite books to this day.

    • @kimkillillasfuq8212
      @kimkillillasfuq8212 2 роки тому +4

      It was going to get an adaptation at one point but as I understand Mr. Barker gave Disney the finger

  • @gyrozeppeli7869
    @gyrozeppeli7869 Рік тому +104

    I am croatian and I can confirm this is what we do for fun in the summer.

  • @Punkzinehorror
    @Punkzinehorror 2 роки тому +41

    This is one of the rare stories that I read when I was a teenager and still remember clearly to this day. It had a huge effect on what actually scares me in horror and defined the feeling I always try to evoke in my own writing.

  • @Nizati
    @Nizati 2 роки тому +51

    Two villages be like:
    It's Kaiju time?
    ITS KAIJU TIME!!!!!

  • @olympiadeverre
    @olympiadeverre 2 роки тому +107

    Everyone REALLY outdid themselves with this one, it turned out so beautifully!!

  • @laneallen7118
    @laneallen7118 2 роки тому +76

    I can absolutely not believe that I am watching a video about this crazy ass visual novel from Clive Barker… An absolutely mind boggled right now! I bought this story on my nook something close to 12 years ago while I was still in high school and was on a huge Clive Barker phase. I just read through all of Orson Scott cards Enders series And really needed something to pacify my hunger. I scour in through the catalog of Barnes & Noble‘s nook repertoire and bought just this single story because of the compelling illustration on the front of it. Absolutely tragic. About as eldritch as possible. And it’s somehow even more startling that now I am watching a video of it and that at least 10,000 people Are going to also know about it through you.

  • @FatalKitsune
    @FatalKitsune 2 роки тому +304

    This feels like something I could also see Junji Ito writing.

    • @limeangelo6019
      @limeangelo6019 2 роки тому +14

      I was thinking this the entire time i was watching this

    • @alonassoolin2968
      @alonassoolin2968 2 роки тому +31

      It reminds me of the Junji ito story in which more and more people were stitched to each other and societys while the people a lower part of a giant is composed of represent people in a lower class and the ones that an upper part of the giant is composed of represent people in an upper class

    • @themostdiabolicalhater5986
      @themostdiabolicalhater5986 2 роки тому

      @@alonassoolin2968 I have to ask, what about this channel interests you? Because you clearly aren’t a writer, unless your native language also doesn’t have punctuation

    • @Слышьты-ф4ю
      @Слышьты-ф4ю Рік тому +21

      ​@@themostdiabolicalhater5986just why tf do you need to ask it? When formulated like this, your statement sounds like something pointless and impolite

    • @hollyrylah5969
      @hollyrylah5969 Рік тому

      Frrrrr I was waiting to find this comment

  • @shadowgacha9055
    @shadowgacha9055 2 роки тому +166

    The question in my mind right now :
    What happens to the people in the feet part of the body?

    • @lilyhoch269
      @lilyhoch269 2 роки тому +37

      Imagine being on the interior of it

    • @shadowgacha9055
      @shadowgacha9055 2 роки тому +38

      @@lilyhoch269 not worse than thousands of people pushing me to the ground... Not talking about all the stuffs on earth

    • @TheTaleFoundry
      @TheTaleFoundry  2 роки тому +248

      We left a lot of details out to keep the story palatable to the majority of viewers, but here's the excerpt:
      "Mick saw the leg raised; saw the faces of the people in the shin and ankle and foot - they were as big as he was now - all huge men chosen to take the full weight of this great creation. Many were dead. The bottom of the foot, he could see, was a jigsaw of crushed and bloody bodies, pressed to death under the weight of their fellow citizens."

    • @shadowgacha9055
      @shadowgacha9055 2 роки тому +40

      @@TheTaleFoundry I knew there was something up... But thanks for the answer

    • @astick5249
      @astick5249 2 роки тому +30

      @@TheTaleFoundry Oh well i definitely do not want to take that job

  • @samwill7259
    @samwill7259 2 роки тому +73

    It's like the world's worst combiner mecha.
    And now I'm thinking about Clive Barker doing Evangelion and I have seen the face of madness

  • @darthchalupa2485
    @darthchalupa2485 2 роки тому +88

    Y'all have really stepped your game up over the last year. Don't get me wrong your older videos are great but ever since you went to a weekly schedule the quality has only gone up! Keep up the great work!

  • @SakuraAsranArt
    @SakuraAsranArt 2 роки тому +604

    That story was more like an SCP than a Clive Barker story, but if it were an SCP there would probably just be a mass of flesh held together by the power of body horror rather than ropes and collective will.

    • @ckl9390
      @ckl9390 2 роки тому +72

      The city could just keep wandering the hills for years collecting new citizens to replace those who expire. That could be a horror that the Foundation needs to intervene on.

    • @personman8734
      @personman8734 2 роки тому +50

      I’d honestly love a story about some old god who’s presence compels those around to form it a body to wield. As it reaches more people this primordial god creates a horror from the maddened followers who know nothing but their role in the great ones machine of flesh.

    • @EksaStelmere
      @EksaStelmere 2 роки тому +19

      Isn't SCP, in the end, just a Clive Barker knockoff? xD

    • @TomSketchit
      @TomSketchit 2 роки тому +17

      Not SCP, but I learned about this story due to an homage to it featured in the horror podcast series "The Magnus Archives." It's an episode from the last season, though, one that wouldn't make sense out of context.
      Spoilers for those who care.
      It basically describes a similar scenario, except with a much, much bigger colossus of human bodies, describing both the perspective of people on the ground unable to comprehend the inescapable force that they're fleeing from, so large that they can't even tell the shape of it, as well as the perspective of people trapped within it, making up its body but not in control of it, wanting so badly to escape only to remember that they're so high up that to do so would be to do, forcing back into a writhing mass of human bodies, not even ropes to hold them up in this version.

    • @nathancook6522
      @nathancook6522 2 роки тому +1

      It would probably be mount everest.

  • @mrphobia6198
    @mrphobia6198 2 роки тому +123

    This sounds more like a sad story instead of a horror story.

  • @G.F.SF55
    @G.F.SF55 2 роки тому +42

    Ah yes, cold autumn, a freshly bought coco and a Tale foundry video, this evening is going to be amazing

  • @ShaggyDustbin
    @ShaggyDustbin 2 роки тому +180

    I love Clive Barker’s work; so glad to see a new vid about his stories ❤

    • @SergioLeonardoCornejo
      @SergioLeonardoCornejo 2 роки тому +4

      He's a very talented writer.

    • @sullygroot924
      @sullygroot924 2 роки тому +2

      Honestly, a better writer then Stephen King.

    • @ShaggyDustbin
      @ShaggyDustbin 2 роки тому +1

      @@sullygroot924 that’s a pretty hot take but I agree 🥰

    • @seppuku-
      @seppuku- 9 місяців тому +2

      @@sullygroot924 Eh It’s debatable. I think they both have their strengths, on top of that they both actually have a mutual respect for each other. Kings character work is often in a tier of his own, while Clive is really good at raising questions about morals or society and has a better general prose in some aspects. I love both writers either way.

    • @sullygroot924
      @sullygroot924 9 місяців тому +1

      @seppuku- I also love both, but I'd rather read clive barker as I've gotten older. I think Stephen King has the same issue as Lovecraft, he can write a good story but his characters and endings are a bit lacking. I still love kings short stories either way.

  • @Eros_is_calling
    @Eros_is_calling Рік тому +10

    Your voice has no right to be so comforting

  • @DrStrangefate
    @DrStrangefate 2 роки тому +12

    In the Hills, the Cities is probably one of my favorite Barker tales. Its the first I read from Books of Blood and it made me a lifelong fan of his work.

  • @TheTaleFoundry
    @TheTaleFoundry  2 роки тому +66

    WORLDSMITHS ➤ nebula.tv/videos/talefoundry-worldsmiths-the-blood-artist
    Go see our video on Clive Barker himself! There's a lot to this author, and a lot you may be assuming about him that just... isn't the case. It's actually part of our series Worldsmiths, which I totally recommend you go give a watch!

    • @TheAgainster
      @TheAgainster 2 роки тому

      of course they aren't compatible. they're two men.
      why would you read aloud this lghd TV smut.

    • @dawnmccarthy1
      @dawnmccarthy1 2 роки тому

      Wondered if it's inspired by the music video "DyE - Fantasy"?

    • @moipnj3317
      @moipnj3317 2 роки тому

      I wonder if the author was inspired by the town of Centuripe in italy that looks like a giant that felt down to the ground...
      rigolotes.fr/img/normal/20210219/BJZY/20210219.jpg

  • @sbkMulletMan
    @sbkMulletMan 2 роки тому +37

    This is my favorite entry in Books of Blood! I took ONE look at the thumbnail and recognized it immediately, and couldn't wait to get home to watch the video!
    I love all of Books of Blood (yes, even Yattering and Jack; it made me laugh), but THIS one is just a mind-freak! It really does give you this "...Whoah!" sensation as you try to imagine the scope and scale of everything, so I highly recommend picking up the full anthology collection. But be warned: it is also much more gruesome in its details! Though that may also be a selling point. It's Books of Blood, not Books of Butterflies.
    That also makes the book interesting because it's sort of a time capsule of Clive Barker's life. The updated introduction of the book mentions that he's changed, as his later books are less about horror and more about fantasy, or "the fantastique". But man, was he good at horror! This was the book that started it all for Barker.

    • @kharijordan6426
      @kharijordan6426 2 роки тому +1

      Oh that's cool. Books of blood. I'll look it up.

    • @neddles33
      @neddles33 2 роки тому

      I really liked the Yattering and Jack, it was a great palate cleanser

  • @DemonicEngineer
    @DemonicEngineer 2 роки тому +34

    Legion in Castlevania.
    Nito in Dark Souls.
    Rotten in Dark Souls 2.
    The One Reborn in Bloodborne.

    • @mr_indie_fan
      @mr_indie_fan 2 роки тому +7

      There is one in super meat boy as well

    • @moch.farisdzulfiqar6123
      @moch.farisdzulfiqar6123 2 роки тому +4

      Thaddius in World of Warcraft
      Army of One in Junji Ito

    • @gerardwolf8507
      @gerardwolf8507 2 роки тому +5

      Granfaloon in Castlevania

    • @Getwright-
      @Getwright- 2 роки тому +4

      Another one: mega baby from Invader Zim (and yes it is made out of babies)

    • @UsiSpiral
      @UsiSpiral 2 роки тому +4

      The conformity by john hornor jacobs

  • @Antasma1
    @Antasma1 2 роки тому +35

    I mainly see the parallel between the couple and the 2 cities

  • @astick5249
    @astick5249 2 роки тому +21

    Best sport ever, have your entire city become one giant monster for pretty much no reason and fight your neighbour.

  • @McofCOD
    @McofCOD 2 роки тому +16

    Loving the Clive Barker content. One of my favourite storytellers, and severely under appreciated.

  • @RafaelCarvalho2310
    @RafaelCarvalho2310 Рік тому +13

    I wish I could go back and relive the moment I first read this story. The sheer creativity and imagery it evokes, I was in awe and had to catch my breath after reading it, I remember I took a train right after finishing this story and I was just numb for the entire 45-minute ride, could hardly find my way to work afterwards. Absolutely brilliant writing here, and the channel does it justice. 👏

  • @foxdavani4091
    @foxdavani4091 Рік тому +2

    A lot of times when I’m out shooting photos, this specific UA-cam channel is playing on my phone as I shoot. There’s something so inspirational about this channel. I love this channel.

  • @SatyreIkon
    @SatyreIkon 2 роки тому +16

    Oh wow, this is one of my absolute favourite Clive Barker stories!

  • @St.Constantine
    @St.Constantine 2 роки тому +19

    Clicked so fast. Your video about Imajica made me finally dive into clive's work and I'm so in love ❤️ thank you

  • @sullygroot924
    @sullygroot924 2 роки тому +4

    This is one of his best stories in the books of blood. I love this story so much, he writes such good characters. Thank you for covering this master class in writing.

  • @Hailtheall
    @Hailtheall 10 місяців тому +3

    The first time I read the story I was terrified by it, utterly inhuman, the best Clive Barker’s story ever written

    • @seppuku-
      @seppuku- 9 місяців тому +1

      Yeah it’s definitely a top of the line Short Story, I mean it’s like 30 pages but it’s so dense with material and substance it doesn’t feel like it. It seems and feels to me like an ancient allegory aligning (of the two cities) with the new/modern mess of troubled relationships.

  • @BlightVonDrake
    @BlightVonDrake 2 роки тому +20

    Jud exemplifies something I don't understand about some characters in horror. That willingness to cling so hard onto a preconceived notion of "reality" or "believability," which only leads to their fragile mind shattering harder if the story goes in that direction. Like... Bruh. You saw the million gallons of blood flooding the street, you saw the hundreds of thousands of bodies, freshly dead, all at seemingly the same time, strapped together, and sprawled out in a humanoid shape. I'd think "believability" is no longer on the table. Maybe I'm missing something in the symbolism and his characterization, and should probably read it before making a statement on it.

    • @jaymeVos
      @jaymeVos Рік тому +8

      Nah, I get what you mean.
      This is an issue for me with most horror, the characters that see some unbelievably messed up stuff and yet refuse to allow their minds to adapt and change when given the chance.
      I know I would have been questioning things the moment that first weird thing occurred.
      Yeah, a flood ov blood?
      I would probably be curious, to be honest, but the second I see thousands ov dead people, all forming the image ov a humanoid...
      I'm fvcking gone 😂
      But I even highly doubt I would have stayed after the river ov blood flows from a forest!
      That's not a normal natural event 😅
      But I get it. Story.

    • @opuntiaechios9683
      @opuntiaechios9683 День тому +1

      Look at how many people are confronted with mountains of evidence and still think the earth is flat. It's a normal human reaction to reject something that doesn't line up with your beliefs about the world.

    • @BlightVonDrake
      @BlightVonDrake День тому

      @@opuntiaechios9683 That's fair. I still don't personally understand the mindset, but I see the logic that makes the mindset. Humans are indeed a strange creature.

  • @livinglifeinanrv5473
    @livinglifeinanrv5473 Рік тому +3

    This is my favorite short story of Clive Barker

  • @admech590
    @admech590 2 роки тому +29

    "Brace yourself for one of the strangest horrors ever written"
    Oh...he's going to talk about the Lix.
    "I present to you in the hills, the cities"
    Oh thank god.

    • @breadisarting4044
      @breadisarting4044 2 роки тому +8

      What's that? I tried googling it and found little!

    • @Sorrowdusk
      @Sorrowdusk 2 роки тому +13

      ​@@breadisarting4044 Summoned by sorcerers, these snake-like demons come in all sizes. Ravenous for flesh, they consume their victim from the inside out, entering in through the eyes and mouth. These creatures can be found in Clive Barker's famous horror-fantasy novel "Everville". They also appear in The Great and Secret Show where they are made from highly evolved semen. 😧

    • @breadisarting4044
      @breadisarting4044 2 роки тому

      @@Sorrowdusk Thank you!

  • @QueenBoadicea
    @QueenBoadicea 2 роки тому +42

    Oooooh, I've read this story. I've read a lot of Clive Barker's delirious horror fiction. (In one of his novels, he wrote that he noticed his friends refused to leave their children alone in the room with him any longer. I wonder what made them so nervous...) All that aside, I keep hoping someone will make a movie out of his novel "The Thief of Always". Some people compare it to "Coraline" but I think Barker's novel could stand on its own. Gaiman's children became ghosts; Clive's become fish people. There's room for both interpretations.

    • @AndreaAdams-c6s
      @AndreaAdams-c6s 29 днів тому

      I'd like to see The Damnation Game brought to film.

  • @tristramcox4615
    @tristramcox4615 Рік тому +5

    If you can get hold of it, Tapping the Vein (the graphic novels based upon the Books of Blood) visualises this in all its disturbing glory

  • @justkiddin84
    @justkiddin84 3 місяці тому +1

    Can we just stop and recognize Barker’s incredible talent? I had not read this, and I hung on the whole story.♥️

  • @bdizzle2144
    @bdizzle2144 2 роки тому +4

    Dude. I love this story. Books of blood 1-3 is an amazing story collection.

  • @Magicghost23
    @Magicghost23 2 роки тому +11

    Teamwork makes the nightmare work.

  • @ian_b
    @ian_b 2 роки тому +2

    One of my favourite short stories of all time. It's always stuck with me since I read it. It's such a brilliant idea.

  • @shoesncheese
    @shoesncheese 2 роки тому +6

    I really like the fact that there is no clear answer in this story. It's been a while since I've read it, but I remember being struck by the beauty in both types of dissolution. Clive Barker made sure to show the beauty in both of them or at least write about them in a way befitting something beautiful (or miraculous).
    And that's the thing, Clive Barker can write profane. He knows how. He can write in ways that inspire disgust or in ways that inspire awe, the kind of awe the biblical angels were said to inspire. Terrible beauty.

  • @Kamarovsky_KCM
    @Kamarovsky_KCM 2 роки тому +7

    That's just a regular October in Yugoslavia.

  • @LostArchivist
    @LostArchivist 2 роки тому +16

    Very interesting sociological subtext here. Though I believe one must look past the imagery and display to see where the mistake both roads made that doomed them. We must look to the past to walk safe into the future even as we must build anew.

  • @kaijinu
    @kaijinu 2 роки тому +2

    This is one of Clive Barker's best and most interesting short piece. The concept of it all is just as majestic as it is terrifying.

  • @toppersundquist
    @toppersundquist 2 роки тому +5

    I read this story a few months ago, and this is one of the only ones that stuck out in the whole anthology.

  • @robertsantana3261
    @robertsantana3261 Рік тому +6

    It’s the greatest short story ever written,imo. Of any genre! Imagine Ridley Scott or Villaneuve making the film!

  • @VoxMora
    @VoxMora Рік тому +1

    Surrendering autonomy for a literal monster sounds like hell.

  • @nyxie2877
    @nyxie2877 2 роки тому +5

    I think the thing that got the most reaction out of me in this video was the fact that it was two men on a honeymoon

  • @uncledubpowermetal
    @uncledubpowermetal 2 роки тому +18

    Now you could argue that either influenced the other but this short story has total Junji Ito vibes lol not just the cosmic element but even in its structure, very very good

    • @retrohanska4441
      @retrohanska4441 2 роки тому

      Or both drew inspiration from same predecessors.

    • @uncledubpowermetal
      @uncledubpowermetal 2 роки тому

      @@retrohanska4441 conjecture, as is my statement.

  • @DC-FGC
    @DC-FGC 5 місяців тому +1

    This is fascinating, but it leaves me with so many questions. There were apparently non-participants in the towns who gathered to watch, and I would assume someone that close to death would be one of the exempt. There's also supposedly going to be a battle, which I'd assume would result in casualties. Plus there's the thing where the surviving town sheds dead people as they die from exhaustion. But for some reason, it only took a single dead person for the other town to come completely undone and for everyone within it to also die, as if the death was contagious. Fascinating. Haunting. But it seems to have internal inconsistencies.

  • @alexvallejoluci2459
    @alexvallejoluci2459 2 роки тому +7

    Deep down, aren’t we all made out of bodies?

  • @chrisbrink9873
    @chrisbrink9873 2 роки тому +2

    I truly loved this story. It was one of those that really comes out of left field and leaves you with an, odd enduring splinter in your brain.

  • @aceclipse
    @aceclipse 2 роки тому +4

    In the Hills the cities...
    read this story when I was in 6th grade...still gives me shivers... horror master piece better than Hellraiser

  • @hestiathena4917
    @hestiathena4917 2 роки тому +21

    I found this excellent tale far more melancholic than horrifying. Sure, the details are super-gory, but at the story's heart is a more existential sorrow, examining the underlying fragility, perhaps even the absurdity, of individuality, as demonstrated by the birth of the city-being and the eventual fates of Judd and Mick.
    Judd loses his individuality the same way the vast majority of us will: by dying, decomposing into basic elements for use elsewhere in the universe. We think of ourselves as individuals, as a single unit, but we are made of billions upon billions of individual cells, which are in turn made up of a billion times more molecules, made up of a billion times more atoms, and so on down to the basic energy fluctuations of space-time which create the building blocks of matter. The matter flows through time and space, building upon itself until, for a brief second in the cosmological timeline, it becomes aware of itself, and starts thinking of itself as an individual. The moment passes, and it becomes a multitude of smaller pieces again, rushing off into new forms.
    Meanwhile, Mick loses his individuality by joining something greater than himself, if just as confused and ephemeral as anything else in the universe with self-awareness. I have lately been toying with the idea of how what we call "divine" may be something that emerges from the connections and actions of humans, similar to how individual human consciousness is believed to emerge from the connections and communications between our neurons. Anyone who has been part of a highly passionate group may know the odd feeling of somehow losing yourself in the group, becoming almost one with it, if only briefly. Somehow, possibly due to the shock of seeing the only other entity like it die, both as a being and as human components, this particular city-creature reached a certain critical mass to not only become a unified entity, but aware of itself and its fragility. Now, like any other creature, and much like ourselves, it has a drive to continue its existence however it can, however brief, lonesome and confusing it may be.
    A brilliant story, and I'm glad to know an author with better writing chops than I currently have was able to explore these themes!
    (A semi-related side note for any of you who have seen the bizarre 2009 film "9," I was fully expecting the central conflict to be resolved in a manner similar to Mick's fate... and was _royally_ pissed when it outright refused to!)

  • @darkworrior1259
    @darkworrior1259 2 роки тому +5

    People compacting like that reminds me a bit of of what the infected of Shaggy Dreadlocks Proposal of SCP-001 "When day breaks"

  • @patrickcorcoran889
    @patrickcorcoran889 2 роки тому +1

    I can still remember this story and 'that' imagery/sequence, so powerful!

  • @amosanon3274
    @amosanon3274 2 роки тому

    Omg I've loved this story forever! I'm so glad more people are learning about it! I still think about it whenever I am in a small town! Thank you so much for this!

  • @Thelongestshrimp
    @Thelongestshrimp Рік тому +2

    I haven't even gotten to the cideo and already heard "enormous geographic genetalia". this is gonna be a good episode.

  • @SergioLeonardoCornejo
    @SergioLeonardoCornejo 2 роки тому +6

    Creatures like these, amalgamations of other things, always fascinate me.

  • @starskyluri435
    @starskyluri435 2 роки тому +3

    Sometimes your videos kind of make me think about life, like on how your story kind of makes sense about what I'm questioning about the world...

  • @Akabalthy
    @Akabalthy Рік тому +3

    if it wasnt for the pain and death and fear and all that bad stuff, this would seem fun ngl

  • @Axieal-Limitless
    @Axieal-Limitless 2 роки тому +4

    the 2 towns reflect the 2 men as one town falls apart as well as jud, the other man runs off after the 1st man's death

  • @cooldude2722
    @cooldude2722 2 роки тому +4

    Oh.
    I was expecting the bodies to be _dead._

  • @amatanata
    @amatanata 2 роки тому +2

    FROM MY CHILDHOODDD I love this author. The thief of always was my favorite!

  • @rpNerd
    @rpNerd 2 роки тому

    I knew exactly what you were gonna talk about by the thumbnail and I am so pleased. I threw my book reading this story and it is one of my favourites!

  • @cruddddddddddddddd
    @cruddddddddddddddd Рік тому

    Good stuff - I remember the first time I read this. Wasn't even sure what was going on at first, but when I understood, I was blown away. This channel feels like it was made just for me, some days.

  • @oo8962
    @oo8962 Рік тому +1

    I still don't know how those people that act as the creature's feet isn't dead with all the weight of thousands of people above them.

  • @MetheusBatanir
    @MetheusBatanir 2 роки тому +5

    "we are like brick of the house"
    the story is "what if every cell in your body could be independent"

  • @smartmonster5695
    @smartmonster5695 2 роки тому +3

    Having your voice in my ear makes me question things about myself

  • @traveling_idiot
    @traveling_idiot 2 роки тому +7

    Ah yes, the one reborn true origin story

  • @markcastellanet9672
    @markcastellanet9672 Рік тому +1

    I loved this story from the books of blood.
    The yattering and Jack is also pretty good.

  • @riandititidianri3069
    @riandititidianri3069 2 роки тому

    You are so good at narrating stories! Would love to see more!

  • @IndigoWhiskey
    @IndigoWhiskey 2 роки тому +2

    i reckon you can find so many angles at the human experience in this one because it is replicating the same effect a scale up. "like so many cells" puts the perspective in place nicely

  • @andrewmiller8410
    @andrewmiller8410 2 роки тому +1

    this story is awesome. I have never heard of this before. thanks!

  • @Curious-d6d
    @Curious-d6d Рік тому

    Great video. I absolutely love Clive Barker. Thank you.

  • @KITT.007
    @KITT.007 8 місяців тому +1

    So this is a horror version of transformers, but instead of iron and machinery, it's made out of humans.
    - A terrifying mix. Truly..in other words, unique, to the horror books I've read and listened to.

  • @ratchetdnb9554
    @ratchetdnb9554 6 місяців тому +1

    Seems like a great bonding activity for Team building

    • @myrezz8833
      @myrezz8833 3 місяці тому

      Gonna bring this up at the next staff meeting

  • @nodwolf
    @nodwolf 2 роки тому

    OMG YES YES!!! This is my favorite story by him! I'm so glad I'm not alone with knowing it exists!

  • @jonoehler5205
    @jonoehler5205 2 роки тому +16

    That concept of a giant monster made out of human bodies was actually a Clark Ashton Smith idea

    • @astronomicafilms
      @astronomicafilms 2 роки тому +4

      Was actually going to post this, but you beat me to it. I like Barker a lot, but I LOVE Smith - and he did this weirder.

    • @tylercoon1791
      @tylercoon1791 2 роки тому +11

      The idea still goes back way farther. There’s an old Japanese myth that the bodies of dead soldiers who weren’t buried would coalesce into the Gashadokuro, a giant skeleton

    • @Neoprenesiren
      @Neoprenesiren Рік тому

      @@tylercoon1791 keyword coalesce they weren't distinct like cells they were all formed into a single mass.

  • @Hoppingslugsstuff
    @Hoppingslugsstuff 6 місяців тому +1

    What a unique mix, gay, gruesome, unnerving, unfathomable, and most importantly, tragic

  • @TheJoestewart
    @TheJoestewart Рік тому

    I love this story. I read it 15 years ago and still think about it. The books of blood had some great short stories

  • @beeroe8278
    @beeroe8278 2 роки тому

    Your channel is always so fascinating. I love Clive Barker's range, he's such an amazing creator and your visuals and your voice and way of presenting are so engaging. I'll look into Nebula and Curiosity Stream right away!

  • @DarkJaxter
    @DarkJaxter 2 роки тому +3

    You should do "The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas" sometime!

  • @jeannedeaux540
    @jeannedeaux540 23 дні тому

    I had totally forgotten about that story until I found this video. Now I remember how weird it was.

  • @squeethemog213
    @squeethemog213 2 роки тому +1

    What a fascinating tale. Thank you for such an interesting video today guys. 😄

  • @kharijordan6426
    @kharijordan6426 2 роки тому +9

    A lot of this would be confusing without narration even if the story is just going along with these people's reasoning.
    The last giant is the embodiment of yolo.
    Thirsting for death but not doing anything to laboring to achieve it.
    Just walking along starving itself till death.
    It could just disassemble and live as Life as a proper City .. making more babies to then also run that city but no...mass suicide through starvation.
    It's almost like once everyone became a city they wanted nothing else to do with life.
    I guess that makes sense... no one said the fight between the two giants wasn't a death match.

  • @edgarhernandez722
    @edgarhernandez722 2 роки тому

    I want to say I remember reading this story in a comic book anthology. This was one of my favorite from this fascinating comic book. It was illustrated so beautifully!

  • @neddles33
    @neddles33 2 роки тому

    my favourite horror short story, thank you for talking about it

  • @ch1pnd413
    @ch1pnd413 2 роки тому

    This video is a gift. ❤ Fascinating story!

  • @beatrizlopezsales6867
    @beatrizlopezsales6867 2 роки тому +1

    Oh god, I love this story, and how sad it made me feel in the end.

  • @hernehaugen6878
    @hernehaugen6878 2 роки тому

    "Destruction is the end result of everything, so why not choose the destruction that pleases you most".

  • @solalabell9674
    @solalabell9674 2 роки тому +4

    I love tat mick goes form she to he not when ‘he loses everything even his sex’ upon joining the isn’t but after hearing of it when the officiator dies

  • @Schweigetherapie
    @Schweigetherapie 2 роки тому +2

    I listened to that story a long while ago, but it never quite left me because it was so... weird.

  • @tengisbayarshikan6187
    @tengisbayarshikan6187 Рік тому

    I think my old English teacher will absolutely love this channel.

  • @tiss0006
    @tiss0006 2 роки тому +1

    I love Clive Barker! Thanks for the video!

  • @iqbalfarhan2504
    @iqbalfarhan2504 2 роки тому +3

    Now that i think about it, our bodies are basically the the same thing. No? We are made of trillions of cells and microorganisms working in unison for our daily lives.

  • @DirectorVibeChecker
    @DirectorVibeChecker 2 роки тому +1

    As a person who into scp this probably tamest thing i heard lol