Cracow Monsters |LINK|
Parents need to know that Cracow Monsters is a Polish horror/suspense series focusing on the paranormal investigations of a group of college students and their professor. Adults smoke cigarettes, drink to excess, and do drugs -- the use of hallucinogenics is implied in a scene where students put paper tabs under their tongues. The protagonist, haunted by her mother's suicide, distracts herself with random sexual encounters and booze. Violent imagery runs the gamut from intentional car crashes to viscera-filled autopsies to murderous monsters. There's full-frontal female nudity, though usually in a non-sexual context. Profanity is frequent, including words like "hell", "bastard", "bulls--t", and "f--k". The series can be watched with the original Polish dialogue with English subtitles, or with an English-language dub.
Cracow Monsters
Where did Polish mythology creatures come from? The answer is simple: they were primarily to explain reality. In the early Middle Ages, many phenomena were beyond human comprehension. The easiest explanation was to believe in the existence of higher, supernatural powers. So not just single creatures, but a whole host of Polish monsters, Polish demons and Polish mythical creatures came into being. They usually personified negative phenomena that happened to people, from the lighter ones such as lack of sleep, through all diseases, to night-time suffocation and drownings.
Meet the top 20 most terrifying Polish monsters that will make you want to become a real Witcher, an extremely talented hired monster killer. At the end, we will explain what training you have to undergo in order to learn how to fight the products of our scary folklore...
They were depicted as deformed people with scales and with fingers covered with membranes. They basked at the banks near bridges and footbridges, and then suddenly pulled people into the water. Sometimes these Polish monsters, like the Sphinx, would ask their victims riddles on which their fate depended. However, these were rarely guessed.
Certainly one of the most terrible Slavic monsters. Before a plague arrived in a city, it would fly around at night in the form of a skinny woman, a skeleton or a bloody sheet. Sometimes, for convenience, she would mount a passer-by and sit on his or her shoulders, ordering this person to wander around villages and towns, waving a headscarf and bringing down mass death in terrible torment.
What is number one? Dragons, of course! These mythical creatures, appearing in legends and stories for centuries, now found their way into literature, films and games around the world. However, as you may know, these fire-breathing monsters, gifted with high intelligence, magic, knowledge of human speech, are not a Polish creation. So why are they at the top of the list of the most terrifying Polish folklore creatures? Because, as is the case with many common European monsters, Polish folklore includes several dragons that are genuinely ours.
The monsters and demons of Slavic mythology have always been a great source of inspiration for the Poles, just think of two Polish video game franchises: the Witcher series, or the also highly successful The Medium, set in a Polish SOT hole. Perhaps in the second or third episode, we begin to piece together who these monsters, demons, and gods from Slavic mythology are and what they want in this Polish city of classical beauty, full of medieval monuments. Incidentally, one of the monsters and scenes seems to have been taken from The Medium (when the monster in the game keeps chasing Marianne). The main character herself strongly resembles Marianne.
The main character, Alex, a medical student, meets a mysterious professor and his elite group of students working under the guise of scientific research, the group is doing something completely different, leaving Alex to confront the world of Slavic beliefs, ancient monsters, and bloodthirsty deities.
The main character, a medical student (Alex), meets a mysterious professor and his elite group of students. To his amazement, he discovers that, under the guise of scientific research, the group is doing something completely different. Alex becomes embroiled in a plot that confronts her with the world of Slavic beliefs, ancient monsters and bloodthirsty deities.
In the historic Polish city, a young woman with a troubled past, Alex (Barbara Liberek), meets a professor of forensic pathology and his elite students. She thinks she has just met a group of normal students and their favorite teacher but this group of hyper intelligent braniacs have a bit more mystery behind their group. Under the guise of their research at the university, the group is in fact using modern science and investigative means to hunt the paranormal. As their studies begin to take them into the ancient history of Europe the soon realize that the things that go bump in the night are still lurking and it's up to this elite group to fight the demons that hide in the shadows while trying to fight for their lives at the growing number of real life monsters that are now hunting them! There is no shortage of sexy scenes in this Netflix series with lead Barbara Liberek making her Nudecomer debut by showing all three B's! Also in with a Nudecomer debut is the ghoulish, yet still sexy Małgorzata Bela as well as some casual nudity from Magdalena Koleśnik as she creepily crawls out of the sewer totally nude, releasing her Cracow Monsters! 041b061a72