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This Villain was Headlined on June, 2011. |
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“ | In his house at R'lyeh, dead Cthulhu waits dreaming. | „ |
~ H. P. Lovecraft, the most famous quotation about Cthulhu. |
Cthulhu is a major antagonist and the titular character in the Cthulhu Mythos by the late famed horror author H. P. Lovecraft, first appearing as the titular main antagonist of the 1928 story The Call of Cthulhu.
He is one of the Great Old Ones, an old race of deities that are comparable to cosmic beings and archdemons in other works of fantasy. Cthulhu is infamously known for his grotesque appearance and gigantic size, as well as his ability to drive any human that gazes upon his form to insanity.
While he is not the most powerful of Lovecraft's creations (dwarfed by Outer Gods like Yog-Sothoth, Nyarlathotep, and Azathoth), he is easily the most famous, and his name has become associated with evil and Lovecraftian horror ever since the creature was first brought to public attention in the 1920s.
Contents
- 1 Biography
- 1.1 Background
- 1.2 He Waits Dreaming…
- 2 Appearance
- 3 Following
- 3.1 R'lyeh
- 4 Powers and Abilities
- 5 Cthulhu's Family Tree
- 6 Quotes
- 7 Other Media
- 7.1 Cthulhu has appeared in pop culture many times:
- 7.2 Beings and concepts inspired by Cthulhu:
- 8 Trivia
- 9 External Links
- 10 Navigation
Biography[]
Background[]
Cthulhu was born on the planet Vhoorl, located in the 23rd nebula. He traveled to the star Zoth where he spawned his offspring. Along with his children and the Star Spawn of Cthulhu, Cthulhu travelled to Saturn and then to Earth. They landed on a continent in the Pacific Ocean and built the city R'lyeh. Cthulhu received resistance from the Elder Things who also lived on the planet. They waged war for the planet Earth until a truce was made. Cthulhu then went into a deep hibernation within R'lyeh. Humanity then evolved on Earth and Cthulhu communicated with several through dreams, resulting in the Cult of Cthulhu. Disaster then struck R'lyeh, sinking it into the ocean. R'lyeh has risen from the ocean for brief amounts of time. However, it is fated that R'lyeh will rise from the ocean permanently and Cthulhu will retake the world.
He Waits Dreaming…[]
In most of the stories, Cthulhu lays dormant deep under the ocean within the sunken city of R'lyeh, but can still influence the world via many telepathic powers and, of course, his many cults and otherworldly minions. It is said that once Cthulhu is fully awakened, he shall rise from the depths and end the world; thankfully for humanity, Cthulhu has yet to do so. However, he came close in the 1920s when a group of sailors came across his sunken city of R'lyeh, which had been brought to the surface by the alignment of the stars.
They opened up one of the strange buildings, only for Cthulhu to exit it and attack them. The creature only halted its attack when the sailors used their ship to cut him in half. As they sailed away, they could see Cthulhu reforming into a whole being again. The world would have ended then but for the fact that R'lyeh suddenly sunk as the stars moved out of position. The resulting powerful current not only dragged Cthulhu into the building he had been trapped in, but also closed the door behind him, thus trapping him yet again.
Appearance[]
The Great Old Ones are cosmic entities that are too abstract to be accurately described by human perception. And as a Great Old One, Cthulhu's true form also remains indescribable and indefinitely controversial. In canon, all of his most popular and remotely consistent appearances have been merely what little his witnesses have been able to comprehend before going insane at the sight of something beyond human comprehension. Most known descriptions of him stem from statuettes found in the possession of cult members; they are usually around a foot high and depict Cthulhu in a crouching position.
In fiction and popular media, Cthulhu's appearance can change from story to story, but he is most often portrayed as a monster of vaguely humanoid shape with a squid-like face and wings. He is also considered terrifyingly large and apocalyptic, being the size of a mountain (or bigger in some accounts).
Following[]
Cthulhu is said to have a worldwide doomsday cult centered in Arabia, with followers stretching everywhere in the entire world. The supposedly immortal leaders of Cthulhu's cult are said to reside in the mountains of China. This cult is nihilistic in nature and seeks to awaken the Old Ones and bring about an apocalyptic age of darkness in which, according to some stories, men would be reduced to shouting and killing each other in fits of madness. Cthulhu is also worshiped by the horrific Deep Ones and the Mi-go, other alien beings in Lovecraft's world.
Cthulhu also has numerous "star-spawn" (Xothians) at his disposal; these creatures seem to share his general appearance but are much smaller and less powerful, though the nature of the "star-spawn" and their relationship with Cthulhu is widely unknown.
R'lyeh[]
“ | The nightmare corpse-city of R'lyeh […] was built in measureless eons behind history by the vast, loathsome shapes that seeped down from the dark stars. There lay great Cthulhu and his hordes, hidden in green slimy vaults […] until the end. | „ |
~ H. P. Lovecraft, "The Call of Cthulhu". |
R'lyeh (pronounced /ˈɹu.li.a/ or /ɹɪl.ˈai.ɛ/) is a nightmarish supernatural city featured in the Cthulhu Mythos by author H. P. Lovecraft, which makes its first appearance in the 1928 short story "The Call of Cthulhu". R'lyeh is also referred to in Lovecraft's "The Mound" as "Relex". R'lyeh is a sunken city located deep under the Pacific Ocean and is where the godlike being Cthulhu of the immortal Great Old Ones is buried. R'lyeh's bizarre architecture is characterized by its non-Euclidean geometry.
When R'lyeh rises in Lovecraft's short story "The Call of Cthulhu", the only portion of the city that emerges is a single “hideous monolith-crowned citadel” in which Cthulhu is entombed. The human onlookers are awed by the sheer immensity of the city and by the frightening suggestion of the gargantuan statues and bas-reliefs.
The city is a panorama of “vast angles and stone surfaces […] too great to belong to anything right and proper for this earth, and impious with horrible images and disturbing hieroglyphs”. The geometry of R'lyeh is “abnormal, non-Euclidean, and loathsomely redolent of spheres and dimensions apart from ours.”
In Lovecraft's stories, R'lyeh is sometimes referred to in the ritualistic phrase, “Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn,” which roughly translates to, “In his house at R'lyeh, dead Cthulhu waits dreaming.”
Lovecraft said that R'lyeh is located at 47°9'S 126°43'W in the southern Pacific Ocean. However, August Derleth placed R'lyeh at 49°51'S 128°34'W in his own writings. Both locations are close to the Pacific oceanic pole of inaccessibility (48°52.6'S 123°23.6'W), the point in the ocean farthest from any land. Derleth's coordinates place the city approximately 5,100 nautical miles (5,900 statute miles or 9,500 kilometers), or about 10 day's journey for a fast ship, from the real island of Pohnpei (Ponape). Ponape also plays a part in the Cthulhu Mythos as the place where the “Ponape Scripture”, a text describing Cthulhu, was found.
Charles Stross' 2000 novella A Colder War implicitly locates R'lyeh in the Baltic Sea, describing Cthulhu as being “scraped from a nest in the drowned wreckage of a city on the Baltic floor.” In Nick Mamatas' 2004 novel Move Under Ground, it is located off the coast of California.
Powers and Abilities[]
While not as powerful as many other Great Old Ones and being dwarfed in scale by the Outer Gods that he serves, Cthulhu is still a very powerful entity. Being near godlike to humans, Cthulhu is immortal and has great strength and can endure great amounts of damage and can only be killed by a near-omnipotent power. Using his wings, he is capable of true flight. He possesses vast intelligence and awareness, as he knows all that is occurring in the universe at once and he has great psychic abilities as he can communicate telepathically.
Arguably, Cthulhu's most notable trait is the fact that he, alongside the rest of his kin, cannot be comprehended by humans; when a human so much as looks at Cthulhu, they will almost certainly be driven mad by his visage. Cthulhu was also able to create a city out of nowhere.
Cthulhu's Family Tree[]
- Azathoth (great-great-grandfather)
- Yog-Sothoth (grandfather)
- Shub-Niggurath (grandmother)
- Nug (parent)
- Kthanid (brother)
- Cthaeghya (half-sister)
- Hnarqu (brother)
- Hastur (half-brother)
- Idh-yaa (mate)
- Ghatanothoa (offspring)
- Ythogtha (offspring)
- Zoth-Ommog (offspring)
- Cthylla (offspring)
- T'ith (offspring)
- Shaurash-ho (descendant)
Quotes[]
“ | Bunch together a group of people deliberately chosen for strong religious feelings, and you have a practical guarantee of dark morbidities expressed in crime, perversion, and insanity. | „ |
~ H. P. Lovecraft. |
“ | Children will always be afraid of the dark, and men with minds sensitive to hereditary impulse will always tremble at the thought of the hidden and fathomless worlds of strange life which may pulsate in the gulfs beyond the stars, or press hideously upon our own globe in unholy dimensions which only the dead and the moonstruck can glimpse. | „ |
~ H. P. Lovecraft. |
“ | The Thing cannot be described—there is no language for such abysms of shrieking and immemorial lunacy, such eldritch contradictions of all matter, force, and cosmic order. A mountain walked or stumbled. If I say that my somewhat extravagant imagination yielded simultaneous pictures of an octopus, a dragon, and a human caricature, I shall not be unfaithful to the spirit of the thing. A pulpy, tentacled head surmounted a grotesque and scaly body with rudimentary wings; but it was the general outline of the whole which made it most shockingly frightful. | „ |
~ H. P. Lovecraft, The Call of Cthulhu. |
“ | When the stars were right, They could plunge from world to world through the sky; but when the stars were wrong, They could not live. | „ |
~ H. P. Lovecraft, The Call of Cthulhu. |
“ | Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn. (In his house at R'lyeh dead Cthulhu waits dreaming.) | „ |
~ H. P. Lovecraft, The Call of Cthulhu. |
“ | That is not dead which can eternal lie, And with strange aeons even death may die. | „ |
~ H. P. Lovecraft, Necronomicon. |
Other Media[]
Cthulhu has appeared in pop culture many times:[]
- In the online videogame AdventureQuest World, popularly known as AQ, Cthulhu is a major boss called a Chaos Beast, seemingly working for Chaos Lord Iadoa, under the name Kathool, while actually having ulterior motives, and wants the player to defeat him and Iadoa, so he can achieve his goals.
- In the Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy episode "Prank Call of Cthulhu", Cthulhu is literally called on a telephone by Billy, and uses him to start sending prank calls to people that turn them into squid monsters. He is seen playing miniature golf.
- He appeared in the Real Ghostbusters episode "The Collect Call of Cathulhu" as "Cathulhu".
- Leela goes on a date with it at the start of Futurama comics #58 story Dummy up which ends in him fighting with Bender and deleting his sense of humor.
- In the video game Castlevania: Symphony of the Night, Cthulhu is the name of a minor enemy with a strong fire breath attack and he is seen at the bottom of the Marble Gallery and again in various parts of the Inverted Castle. However, due to localization misplacing, this enemy is originally "Devil" in the Japanese release of the game while the enemy "Malachi" is the representation of the actual Cthulhu. Due to both monsters being minor henchmen for Dracula, technically Cthulhu does not qualify as a Castlevania villain.
- One of the heavy metal band Metallica's popular songs in their album Ride the Lightning was a song called "The Call of Ktulu", obviously referencing the beast. The named is intentionally misspelled due to the belief that if anyone says Cthulhu's name verbally, he will come closer to you.
- Another song by Metallica that is inspired by Cthulhu is "The Thing That Should Not Be" from their album Master of Puppets.
- Cthulhu shows up in Aoi House.
- Two characters in the 2012 horror film The Cabin in the Woods pays a homage on Cthulhu: The Ancient Ones, which are direct homage to him, especially being ancient deities and another one of the monsters bears a striking resemblance to him, as seen in the behind the scenes.
- Cthulhu appears in the Rick and Morty opening credits when Rick, Morty, and Summer fly away from it holding a baby Cthulhu.
- Cthulhu was the main protagonist in the indie RPG Cthulhu Saves The World, where he must do a great deed to get his godly powers once again.
- Cthulhu has made repeated appearances in The Nostalgia Critic's reviews.
- Cthulhu is known multiple times in the Video Game Terraria known as the Eye of Cthulhu, The Brain of Cthulhu, and the Moonlord looks like Cthulhu.
- When Bart Simpson rides his skateboard across Springfield, Cthulhu picks him up on its tentacles in the opening scene for the episode Treehouse of Horror XXIV. It then makes a background cameo at Krustyland in Halloween of Horror. It is also the main antagonist from the story Cthulhu? Gesundheit! which is featured in a comic book The Simpsons Treehouse of Horror #19. Cthulhu also made a brief appearance as a seasonal Halloween boss in The Simpsons: Tapped Out.
- In the South Park "Coon and Friends" three part episode, Eric Cartman manages to tame Cthulhu after he escapes from his universe, he then uses him to do his bidding, first banishing his friends to the Netherworld, then killing people he doesn't like including Jewish people, hippies, and Justin Bieber among others, he is eventually defeated by Bradley Biggle as Mint Berry Crunch who was initially thought to be the most useless member of their superhero team, who then banishes him back to his dimension.
- In Magicka DLC called The Stars Are Left, Cthulhu appears as the final boss. Though his portrayal in the game depicted him to be smaller than his original counterpart whom depicted begin larger, otherwise having equal size with mountains but remain larger than the protagonists (this Cthulhu portrayed with height around 10 meters tall). He can summon minions includes Deep Ones and Dagon in battle, summoning squid-like tentacles as means to attack in distance, conjures deadly Pink Ball of Death which are slow but highly devastating and destructive, and is able to suck in everything in front of him with his mouth.
- In the tale titled "Eldritch Application" set in the SCP Foundation universe, after Z̤͂â̢ḷ͊g̹̓ȯ̘ attempted to become an SCP in order to become more popular before being rebuffed due to not qualifying Cthulhu came next to presumably also become an SCP. Cthulhu was also referenced in SCP-1926-R, the presumed city of R'lyeh in which Cthulhu was slumbering. He eventually became an official SCP, being given the designation of SCP-4315-2 #7.
- Cthulhu appears as a playable character in the MMO Smite. He is currently the only playable character for the Great Old Ones pantheon, and he was revealed on May 26th, 2020.
- Cthulhu appears in the 2021 survival horror game The Shore as the second Great Old One awakened by Andrew under the Dark Shadow's orders, after Father Dagon. Cthulhu calls Andrew a fool for believing the Dark Shadow before departing to exterminate humanity, leaving Andrew alive to witness the destruction of the world as punishment.
- In the Doctor Who novel White Darkness the Doctor battles a cult worshipping a Great Old One and briefly catches a glimpse of that creature, which is confirmed to have been Cthulhu in the later novel All-Consuming Fire.
- Cthulhu appears in the adult animated anthology series Love, Death & Robots as the main antagonist of the episode "In Vaulted Halls Entombed".
- Cthulhu has appeared in some videogames of the Megami Tensei franchise, as a Dark-Law aligned demon of the Vile race, and having a slightly different appearance compared to the original Cthulhu from the Cthulhu Mythos. He resides in the Tower Of Will, which exists in the Kadath Mandala. The compendium description of him in Shin Megami Tensei: Liberation Dx2 is directly based on the original story of the character.
- In The Book of Bill, Bill Cipher mentions Cthulhu, saying that Cthulhu would look ridiculous if he tried to wear a bowtie.
Beings and concepts inspired by Cthulhu:[]
- The Drowned God worshipped by the Ironborn in Game of Thrones.
- C'thun in World of Warcraft was inspired and based on Cthulhu.
- SCP-2662, an eldritch being that acts like a teenager, who is not yet ready to settle down with a cult.
- Sadu-Hem, one of the Ogdru Hem in the Hellboy-comics.
- The Behemoth who appears as the final villains in 2004 movie Hellboy.
- The Illithids from the Dungeons & Dragons roleplaying fantasy game.
Trivia[]
- Cthulhu is the most famous of all of Lovecraft's creations, so much so that the entire mythos is named after him.
- H. P. Lovecraft based Cthulhu off of his fear of water.
- Cthulhu photo used by the Villains wiki, was created by Jeff Himmelman.
External Links[]
- Cthulhu on the H.P. Lovecraft Wiki
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