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Moloch in literature and popular culture

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see also Moloch (disambiguation)

The Canaanite god Moloch was the recipient of child sacrifice according to the account of the Hebrew Bible as well as Greco-Roman historiography on the god of Carthage. Moloch is depicted in John Milton's Paradise Lost as one of the greatest warriors of the rebel angels, vengeful and militant.

In the 19th century, "Moloch" came to be used allegorically, of any idol or cause requiring excessive sacrifice.[1] Bertrand Russell in 1903 used Moloch to describe oppressive religion, and Winston Churchill in his 1948 history The Gathering Storm used Moloch as a metaphor for Adolf Hitler's cult of personality .

Historical fiction

Gustave Flaubert's Salammbô (1862), a semi-historical novel about Carthage depicts the practice of child sacrifice to Moloch.

In Giovanni Pastrone's silent epic film Cabiria (1913), substantially based on Flaubert, the heroine is saved from being sacrificed to the idol Molech.[2]

Allegorical

In Allen Ginsberg's 1955 poem Howl, Moloch is used as a metaphor for the American city, thus aligning McCarthy-era America with the demon. The word is repeated many times throughout Part II of the poem, and begins (as an exclamation of "Moloch!") in all but the first and last five stanzas of the section.

Moloch (Молох) is a 1999 Russian biographical drama film directed by Alexander Sokurov. It portrays Adolf Hitler as a humanized figure, living life in an unassuming manner during an abrupt journey to the Bavarian Alps.

Eponymy

Books

Comics and anime

  • Alan Moore's Watchmen features a retired underworld crime boss who once adopted the name Moloch the Mystic (real name Edgar William Jacobi) and wore the robes of a magician.
  • Moloch von Zinzer is a supporting character in the webcomic Girl Genius.[3]
  • The cartoonist Paul Mavrides depicts a serious/comical Moloch in Anarchy Comics #1, in a piece entitled "Some Straight Talk about ANARCHY".[4]
  • In Marvel Comics, Moloch was the antagonist of Marvel Fanfare #52, in which a cult of "hill-people" attempt to sacrifice the Black Knight to him.
  • Also from Marvel, Molek was the name of an Arabic Spirit of Vengeance in Jason Aaron's run on Ghost Rider.
  • In Yondemasu yo, Azazel-san, Moloch is the demon of violence, and is implied to be the strongest Demon summoned; however, in all of his incarnations, he is exorcized or killed before he can display any of his power. His appearance is that of a bull plushy.
  • In "The Chapel of Moloch", Hellboy travels to Tavira, Portugal in order to investigate an ancient medieval chapel dedicated to Moloch. In the Hellboy comics, Moloch is also presented as a bull-headed creature.

Film and TV

  • In Fritz Lang's silent film Metropolis (1927), Moloch is a vision of a demonic machine. His face overlays machinery, and the hero, Freder, has a vision of workers being dragged by chains into the fires inside Moloch's mouth.
  • "Moloch", an episode of the BBC television series Blake's 7 (1980).
  • Moloch is a character in Stargate SG-1. In this portrayal he demands all female children be burnt alive at birth.
  • Moloch the Corrupter is the name of a character in the Buffy the Vampire Slayer episode "I, Robot... You, Jane" (1997).
  • Moloch is characterized as a "war machine" in the television series Spellbinder: Land of the Dragon Lord (1997).
  • Moloch (depicted as a horned demon) is the primary antagonist in the first 2 seasons of the 2013 TV series Sleepy Hollow.
  • Moloch is a central character in the 2013 film Lord of Tears.
  • In the 2008 film AM1200, the financial firm Sam Larson and Harry Jones work for is called Molech/Milcom.
  • In the 2005 musical movie "Reefer Madness (2005 film)", Moloch is portrayed by Alan Cumming in the orgy scene. During this scene, the name Moloch is chanted just prior to the character being shown on screen.

Video games

Music

Bands

Songs & lyrics

See also

Moloch horridus is the scientific name of a kind of horned lizard also known as a Thorny Devil

References

  1. ^ Lives of Victorian political figures: Volume 2 Christine Kinealy, Michael De Nie, Carla King - 2007 "370, L 5: Moloch: in popular mythology, an idol who devours his followers' children, "
  2. ^ Architecture for the Screen: A Critical Study of Set Design - Page 115 Juan Antonio Ramírez - 2004 "The "Temple of Moloch," as recreated for Cabiria (1913), an influential Italian "super" production of the period. The horrific portal to the temple, a gigantic mouth with shark-like fangs, clearly establishes the voracious character of a merciless, pre-Christian god requiring endless human sacrifice."
  3. ^ http://www.girlgeniusonline.com/comic.php?date=20120817
  4. ^ http://libcom.org/files/Anarchy-Comics-1.pdf