Rahim Tabet | November 27, 2014 |
Aneh Dan Misteri
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Bizare
Disney has worked hard in recent decades to the filming of a wide range of fairy tales. Who does not know her Snow White and Seven Dwarfs, Cinderella and Sleeping Beauty? All sweet stories about beautiful ladies, gallant knights and evil villains. Everything and everyone has their place, and enemies are ugly and in common, the heroes handsome, generous, and brave, and in the end it always ends well.
However, most fairy tales were not always like Disney she has presented to us. Not only is there a huge range of fairy tales that never managed to kick up cartoon. The fairy tales were filmed, are often changed enormously and "adjusted" to the modern audience. How dramatic the saccharine stories of today correspond with the horror stories of the past, you can read below.
Before we begin yet something about fairy tales in general. Overall it is a fairy story, usually transmitted orally, which includes magic or fantasy elements (such as elves, dwarves, enchanted apples and frog princes). Precisely because they were transmitted orally from ancient time, we can not say with certainty exactly where our tales come from. One of the first written form, however, comes from the Italian Renaissance. The Brothers Grimm from Germany hooked to this later on, and wrote bundles of fairy tales. Incidentally, were in the east and China fairytales much more popular, but sober Europe did long step from spoken to written fairy tales. By the time they appeared in print, the fairy tale was a children's story, but the first orally transmitted stories were slightly less child friendly. Death, torture and atrocities are common in the older stories, and although she has managed to avoid Disney nice, yet those stories get here now as the focus.
1. Cinderella
However, most fairy tales were not always like Disney she has presented to us. Not only is there a huge range of fairy tales that never managed to kick up cartoon. The fairy tales were filmed, are often changed enormously and "adjusted" to the modern audience. How dramatic the saccharine stories of today correspond with the horror stories of the past, you can read below.
Before we begin yet something about fairy tales in general. Overall it is a fairy story, usually transmitted orally, which includes magic or fantasy elements (such as elves, dwarves, enchanted apples and frog princes). Precisely because they were transmitted orally from ancient time, we can not say with certainty exactly where our tales come from. One of the first written form, however, comes from the Italian Renaissance. The Brothers Grimm from Germany hooked to this later on, and wrote bundles of fairy tales. Incidentally, were in the east and China fairytales much more popular, but sober Europe did long step from spoken to written fairy tales. By the time they appeared in print, the fairy tale was a children's story, but the first orally transmitted stories were slightly less child friendly. Death, torture and atrocities are common in the older stories, and although she has managed to avoid Disney nice, yet those stories get here now as the focus.
1. Cinderella
The Brothers Grimm wrote a version of Cinderella slightly stricter judged a two evil stepsisters of Cinderella. In their version hacked the two sisters pieces of their foot down to fit into the glass slipper. The prince came back here, oddly enough not to see through the wounds, but as a dove's eyes stepsisters uitpikte. That, apparently, was a sure sign of their malice. The sisters end their lives as two blind beggars while Cinderella herself is in abundance on the side of her Prince.
2. Sleeping Beauty
Another one of Perrault, Sleeping Beauty is the story of a beautiful young damsel brought by a curse in a coma, and there for 100 years and is in, a prince (coming on a white horse, presumably) her awake coast and then proposes marriage. The original story, however, is much more shocking. It is not so much a curse, but a prediction brings Sleeping Beauty in her coma. A flax needle shoots under her nails, and she is dead. So far, no dramatic difference. But then it is not so much a brave prince, but a married king comes along her castle, sneaks through a window, and operates love with the sleeping body and leave the place again. Nine months later, like Sleeping Beauty, still in deep sleep, two children, and the fairies who put children at her breast, because they need somewhere to live (a necessity which, incidentally, not Rosamond seems to apply). However, one of the two rug rats sucks on her finger, instead of her chest and sucks as flax needle, when Rosamond wakes.
And yet, yet this old story is a fairy tale with a happy end. The king, namely, is married to a 'bad' queen, and this lady is furious when she finds out about the affair (if it can be called an affair). She orders her cook to serve the two children as a meal to her husband, but the cook cooks instead two kids. The evil queen does not give up, and invites Rosamond out, with the idea to throw her into the fire. The king, however, comes just in time and save the day by throwing his hateful woman in the fire. Sleeping Beauty falls for her former rapist and he has a new woman needed, so they married and lived happily ever after!
3. Goldilocks
In this story Goldilocks visits a house of three bears, and when they see that the bears are not there, they are trying their chairs, they eat their porridge, and she sleeps in one of the three beds. The Bears return and be furious. Goldilocks flight out of the house and that's the end of the story.
In the original, however, Goldilocks comes not from intact. In one of the two versions of the original tale Goldilocks is not a sweet young girl but an old woman who manages to escape through the window but either break her neck, or for begging and stopped in prison arrested. A second version Goldilocks does describe as a young wench, but that version tear bears her.
The moral: do not go to visit bears that live in a house ..
4. Snow White
The classic Disney and a very sweet story which is not to be found in evil? Not quite true. The wicked queen requires the hunter the heart of Snow White as proof that he killed her, and instead, the hunter returns with the heart of a pig. In the original, however, is also the Queen out that he takes her liver and lungs, so that they can be served as dinner!
Another deviation from Disney, Snow White is not kissed, but shaken up in the coach of the hunter on his way to his own castle. We leave as an open question why the hunter a dood'-looking girl in his carriage transported to his home ...
And finally, a small detail that Disney forgot her cartoons: the evil queen is punished in the original story by letting her dance in red-hot iron shoes until she dies. Spicy stuff, for a young audience.
5. The girl without hands
A relatively unknown tale, and in its modern variant quite gruesome. A poor man gets an offer from the Devil: a lot of money in exchange for what stands behind his mill. The man, knowing that there is growing an apple tree behind his mill, agrees. But then he finds out that his daughter at that time was behind the mill, and the Devil wants her so bring your own. However, she is pure and innocent for the Devil, and therefore he will not take her. Enraged, the devil threatens to take the father if he does not receive at least the two hands of the daughter. The girl agrees meekly, and dad love mince her hands. Well that ends well ...
That's pretty gruesome, but the original versions are even worse. In a variant chops the girl her own arms off, to make themselves uglier, so her brother no longer tries to rape. Another version says that her father cuts off her hands because she does not consent to sleep with him. The moral of this story is hard to find ...
Tales of the past may not be the best reading for our young readers, but fortunately the genre is flexible. A fairy tale may tell, translated, altered and improved to your heart, and that's happened over the years. The moral message remains mostly exist, although this is not true of all fairy tales. What is in any case likely is that the genre fairytale happily will endure.
6. The Little Mermaid
Danish Hans Christian Andersen wrote this story in 1836, and in the known Disney version, the mermaid Ariel ends in the arms of her prince, as a full human being. She fell for his charms while she saved him from drowning and sacrifices her tongue on a Toverheks in exchange for a pair of legs instead of fins. She comes ashore and charms the prince, though not much he can explain, without tongue. At Disney's masterful way is it still all good, but Hans did not wanted.
In his story the prince, after being rescued, looking for a princess. He finds a suitable candidate and announce their marriage. Ariel is desperate because she is the hotel botel love with her prince, and now she has swapped her tongue against two legs she can not return to her family. Her sisters know counsel and advise Ariel to murder the prince with a magic knife (coincidentally also won the witch). Ariel could not get her prince murder of her heart, and instead she plunges into the foam of the sea. This is where Hans was about to end his story, but even he thought it might be a bit too harsh. Therefore he adapted it a little bit to, Ariel does not die in the foam, but a daughter of the air, must perform 300 years of good deeds and may with heart and soul to leave the heavens. The moral? You're better off as a fish?
Danish Hans Christian Andersen wrote this story in 1836, and in the known Disney version, the mermaid Ariel ends in the arms of her prince, as a full human being. She fell for his charms while she saved him from drowning and sacrifices her tongue on a Toverheks in exchange for a pair of legs instead of fins. She comes ashore and charms the prince, though not much he can explain, without tongue. At Disney's masterful way is it still all good, but Hans did not wanted.
In his story the prince, after being rescued, looking for a princess. He finds a suitable candidate and announce their marriage. Ariel is desperate because she is the hotel botel love with her prince, and now she has swapped her tongue against two legs she can not return to her family. Her sisters know counsel and advise Ariel to murder the prince with a magic knife (coincidentally also won the witch). Ariel could not get her prince murder of her heart, and instead she plunges into the foam of the sea. This is where Hans was about to end his story, but even he thought it might be a bit too harsh. Therefore he adapted it a little bit to, Ariel does not die in the foam, but a daughter of the air, must perform 300 years of good deeds and may with heart and soul to leave the heavens. The moral? You're better off as a fish?
7. The Pied Piper of Hamelin
One of the strands of the Brothers Grimm, the story of the Pied Piper of Hamelin is as follows: Hamelin is ravaged by a plague of rats and people are desperate. Suddenly there appears a man in shabby clothes and a whistle to his belt, and claims he can rid the city of its heavy burden. Of course promise the residents him large sums of money if he gets it done to remove all the rats from Hamelin. Easy to promise, they think, because such a thing is impossible. The Pied Piper takes his flute, start playing, and as if by magic, all the rats out of their hiding places and follow the flute from the city. The Pied Piper lures the creatures into the river, where they all drown. The townspeople are mad with joy and dancing in the street, but when the Piper returns to claim his money decreases their enthusiasm. They refuse to pay him, which the Pied Piper takes his revenge. He grabs his whistle a second time, whistling a different tune and the sluggish start to follow his steps all children. He leads them all out of town and now we are at the point where the original fairy tale for a new direction.
In the present version of the Pied Piper takes the children to a cave where he hid them until he gets the ransom Hamel Egyptians. That plan fails, and everyone is (reasonably) happy, well that ends well. But in the original story the Pied Piper takes a different route, and provoked the crowd youths like the rats to the river, where they undergo the same fate. All the children are drowning, second, because the poor kid was too lame to keep the mob. Well that ends well?
8. Rumpelstiltskin
The Brothers Grimm published this story, but an earlier version from 1705 is known to us, the French lady L'Héritier. Unlike the other fairy tales, however, the writer of this story tried in a second version to enhance the story. For those who do not know the fairy tale: a beautiful blond miller's daughter to spin hay gold wires, to save her own life. Her father had to brag about her walk and proclaimed that they could do anything, even spin gold from straw, and the king, probably in need of money, saw this is down. So he ordered the young lady to spin, and her woe betide him if there was no gold at the end of the night. She is distraught, but Rumpelstiltskin promises for her to spin some gold when she promises to give her first child to him. That promise was made quickly, and Rumpelstiltskin spins some beautiful golden threads. So beautiful is the thread that the king stepped on the girl falls in love and marries her. However, when the first child came, the young queen begins to doubt. Rumpelstiltskin is a reasonable one, and gives her a way out. If she can guess his name, she may keep her baby. She collects all the names in the kingdom, but it does not help, none of them is that of Repelsteel. Then, however, she hears an illustrious figure dancing around a campfire in the woods and singing "nobody knows, nobody knows, my name is Rumpelstiltskin." Now the queen knows it, and so they guessed correctly. Rumpelstiltskin is furious, and runs for good.
That, however, was too weak to end madamosielle L'Héritier. In a later version, she changed that last action Repelsteel, he did not run away, but stomps his right foot in the ground, grabbing his left leg and tearing itself apart. This, apparently, is the end of Rumpelstiltskin.
The Brothers Grimm published this story, but an earlier version from 1705 is known to us, the French lady L'Héritier. Unlike the other fairy tales, however, the writer of this story tried in a second version to enhance the story. For those who do not know the fairy tale: a beautiful blond miller's daughter to spin hay gold wires, to save her own life. Her father had to brag about her walk and proclaimed that they could do anything, even spin gold from straw, and the king, probably in need of money, saw this is down. So he ordered the young lady to spin, and her woe betide him if there was no gold at the end of the night. She is distraught, but Rumpelstiltskin promises for her to spin some gold when she promises to give her first child to him. That promise was made quickly, and Rumpelstiltskin spins some beautiful golden threads. So beautiful is the thread that the king stepped on the girl falls in love and marries her. However, when the first child came, the young queen begins to doubt. Rumpelstiltskin is a reasonable one, and gives her a way out. If she can guess his name, she may keep her baby. She collects all the names in the kingdom, but it does not help, none of them is that of Repelsteel. Then, however, she hears an illustrious figure dancing around a campfire in the woods and singing "nobody knows, nobody knows, my name is Rumpelstiltskin." Now the queen knows it, and so they guessed correctly. Rumpelstiltskin is furious, and runs for good.
That, however, was too weak to end madamosielle L'Héritier. In a later version, she changed that last action Repelsteel, he did not run away, but stomps his right foot in the ground, grabbing his left leg and tearing itself apart. This, apparently, is the end of Rumpelstiltskin.
9. Little Red Riding Hood
The Brothers Grimm also wrote this story in one of their bundles, but another fairy tale collector Charles Perrault wrote another version of Little Red Riding Hood, before the Brothers Grimm published their milder version. This older version is a touch spicier.
Perrault's version does not end, as we used to, with the heroic rescue of the lumberjack who cuts open the wolf to save Little Red Riding Hood and Grandma. Instead'm Little Red Riding Hood, a naive young lady on her way to her grandmother, misleads by the wolf, and finally eaten. Point out. Nothing no woodcutter who rescues the damsel in distress. The moral of Perrault's story is that you do not just have to take instructions from foreigners. Certainly not if the wolves ...
Incidentally, there is a version of Little Red Riding Hood in dealing, namely by Roald Dahl. In his Gruesome Rhymes he recounts how Little Red Riding Hood Wolf shoots and makes a beautiful fur coat from him. Emancipation?
The Brothers Grimm also wrote this story in one of their bundles, but another fairy tale collector Charles Perrault wrote another version of Little Red Riding Hood, before the Brothers Grimm published their milder version. This older version is a touch spicier.
Perrault's version does not end, as we used to, with the heroic rescue of the lumberjack who cuts open the wolf to save Little Red Riding Hood and Grandma. Instead'm Little Red Riding Hood, a naive young lady on her way to her grandmother, misleads by the wolf, and finally eaten. Point out. Nothing no woodcutter who rescues the damsel in distress. The moral of Perrault's story is that you do not just have to take instructions from foreigners. Certainly not if the wolves ...
Incidentally, there is a version of Little Red Riding Hood in dealing, namely by Roald Dahl. In his Gruesome Rhymes he recounts how Little Red Riding Hood Wolf shoots and makes a beautiful fur coat from him. Emancipation?
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Hansel and Gretel |
10. Hansel and Gretel
Instead of the well-known story of the witch in the candy house, the original Hansel and Gretel to do with no one less than the Devil himself. In this version, the Devil also has them fool him, and decides to put an end to the two rug rats. He puts a block down and saw she hopes to bleed to death on it. But the children are not catching a hole and pretend they do not understand the Devil. How to climb on that block?
The wife of the Devil, from impatience or helpfulness, decides to demonstrate how it should be done. She crawls on the block and at that time the children cut her throat and escape. Children of that time were probably different views of justice as now ...
Instead of the well-known story of the witch in the candy house, the original Hansel and Gretel to do with no one less than the Devil himself. In this version, the Devil also has them fool him, and decides to put an end to the two rug rats. He puts a block down and saw she hopes to bleed to death on it. But the children are not catching a hole and pretend they do not understand the Devil. How to climb on that block?
The wife of the Devil, from impatience or helpfulness, decides to demonstrate how it should be done. She crawls on the block and at that time the children cut her throat and escape. Children of that time were probably different views of justice as now ...
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