Saturday 31 October 2015

My Shamhain: Tarot Cards, Pumpkin Cupcakes, Occult Rock And A Flopsy Bunny...

Before the Halloween night movie marathon I like to spend the afternoon with cooking and playing with cards...

I never carve pumpkin because I haven't got the patience, I just have a tin pumpkin head
But instead of carving I like to cook something from pumpkin. I made pumpkin cupcakes years ago... [recipe here] I never was like other children whom you cannot confuse with vegetables in sweeter form because they smell/taste the vegetable anyway so you lost... I don't mind mix the vegetables with sweet things. In my childhood one of my fave cake was red bean-cake... but you really can't taste the beans at all!
I read tarot twice a year, in May and in October, the two most witchy months in the year. I am not a believer, I love the art of tarot, although sometimes my cards give me the creep when they show my exact present... Like now...
I usually draw three cards from the entire Arcana. The first represents the actual emotional moment and the solution of a most burning question. [I don't know what is it now, maybe the card knows more then me... Haha] So the first card represents the present, the second represents the difficulties and the last one is the solution of the previous ones. Or this is the same with six cards, the first two show the present and so on...
I'm not an expert or something, I know everything from my treasure book "Jóslások könyve"/Book of Fortune Telling by József Vinkó and Gyula Hernádi. It's a very extensive collection about astrology, runes, cards, coins, alchemy, symbols, supertitions and others.
Before the 90's it was hard to find a genuine book about astrology or fortune telling things in Hungary [we had bigger problems countrywide to write such books], only nowadays there are many because it has been a trend... So this book is before today's trendyness, when a book writing accompanied with an authentic research work from old wisers' collections instead of today's occult books for emo - or what is it now - teens what just about the mysterious look, drugs, crappy rituals and darkness but not about ancient knowledge what can help your life or teach you how to understand/to know the people more... 
And how this book found me? I was in my teenhood when I found it in the school where my mom had been teaching. It was left at the stairway, so I want to bring in to the teachers' room to find its owner, but I couldn't help but read in it... It was new for me although I loved to watch the stars and read astrology before... so I thought I bring home for one evening to read out... it was almost 20 years ago and still on my shelf... So technically I stole it...
Many people laugh on tarot cards. Ok maybe in the XXI. century it looks like a silly children' game or a play for the bigoted pagan ones... but I don't think it's something big, eerie or strange thing. 
Who was the old witch in the stories? An old wise woman/man who knows people too well [even she/he never wanted that], lives far from humans because she/he just tired from them, but it was dangerous to know many things, especially to those with big positions whom not know the people at all and afraid that these unique ones might know what they don't... [Who could manipulate who?] So I see tarot cards as a tool for meditation on my/our life. Rethink words I/we regret to say, turn over my/our present to take better my/our future and so on... So maybe those ancient wise people made these cards to blind the common or biggy ones that they know everything about life without cards, so they just pretended that only the cards knows ones' secret. And a card doesn't dangerous and cannot be executed...

So I'm into spiritual/occult things at a certain limit as inspiration, style or black humour but I never cared about Satanism... [I never understood what's its point?] As for me both St Peter and Satan may go to the dance or wherever they want... and goats are everything but diabolical, especially the baby ones with those fluffy faces, eh? But if occult and beloved 60's/70's psychedelic rock meet will born good bands such as one of my Halloween music Coven and the newborn psy.-prog.-rock bands Purson and Jess and the Ancient Ones. Abstract sounds sometimes, but dancing is not just about 'I need a rythm to do it' but a feeling enough... [I mean without anything... ~Ehhe... Just be you and the music!]
Purson - "Contract"
 
Jess and the Ancient Ones - "The Devil [in G Minor]"

Although Coven was a real practicing Satanist band with real rituals on the stage and other things [at least they were true to themselves instead of the copycat Black Sabbath... I don't care but I just hate them...], but this part I really don't care of, their music is inspiring me as it is and the strong and unique front lady Jinx's voice such great! Enjoy their best, the "White Witch of Rose Hall"

I cannot be more mysterious...

...but then she butt in the picture!!!

~Argh You ruined everything EVERYTHING! *cry and miff at*

Happy Halloween! *sniff sniff* 

Wednesday 28 October 2015

Transylvanian Vampires And Carpathian Werewolves Part II

So I finished with vampires... jump to were-wolfies

If you ask me I feel myself closer to the werewolves instead of vampires, maybe because I can get angry more easily about something at full moon evenings than on simple days... Hahaha

The belief in the human-animal metamorphs is ancient. For example human-wolves are known from antiquity across middle ages, from Europe to North-Asia. [Asian cultures has were-leopard or were-cat while Far-East has were-fox as the man-eater female creature the 'húli jīng'/fox-spirit in China or 'Kitsune'/fox in Japan and the human liver eating creature the 'Kumiho'/nine-tailed fox in Korea... and Monty Python has were-rabbit! Haha Love that part...] According on German ethnographers this myth can be a remembering of the Indo-European, mask-wearing man companies from the middle ages [there were 'Werwolf' huntings in Germany to the 16. century, along with witch-huntings... soo much fun in the history...].

Around Hungary, they call it vlkodlak [in ancient Checz mythology], wilkolak [Polish mythology]. Other slavish words for werewolves are vukodlak, volkodlak, vurkolak, kudlak. Romanian people use the word priculici [came from slavish vîrcolac] where we have got one of our word for werewolves, prikulics. [1]

Sometimes when I read about folk creatures I am thinking about what inspired the people centuries ago to create such monsters. I think the first reason is always the same, that you can easily explain away someone's/or your crime... and don't forget that in those times when these monsters had been created most of the people were deeply religious, many of them were analphabetic or bigoted when superstitions can spread more faster. 
Or the 'werewolf' was an easier explanation to serious sexual deviancy or other strange mental/bodily disorders. Think about it, about only 100 years ago handicapped/disabled people still must played at the circus like monsters whom the audience laughed or feared, mentally disordered people had been unhumanly closed and experimented at many times... 
I have a personal story. About 5 years ago I worked for three months in a school for seriously disabled and handicapped children [The school named after Flóra Kozmutza, who was the first in the XX. century who helped the handicapped children in the 30's. She established the first special education department in Hungary as well.]. It was a temporary job for me but I learned many thing there, not just about tolerance [and most of the teachers' haven't got any!], but what I saw there it changed me... I learned not to complain ever again about my life. I am very lucky to have legs and arms and clear mind [well almost... Haha]. Anyway, so there was this poor little - both bodily and mentally disabled - boy Jocóka, who - and forgive me, I'm not mocking at all! - but he totally reminded me of some vintage horror movie wolfman. His face was very morbid like someone would made an eerie-hairy mask for him, his teeth were long and half of his mandible missed, but although he looked scary, he was very shy and looked miserable. I think I didn't wonder at all when I learned about his "parents" whom left him behind... The mother was the biological sister of the father whom never learned about useing a condom beside that 'do not touch a family member because it's not really normal'... Ok they were very analphabetic people but... and many children had the same fate or worse. Now I think I've got my answer how "humanoid monsters" were created in ancient times as well... but in the real life these children are anything but monsters, istead of their look they are much more humaine than the "healthy" ones... [at least they whom I had the luck to know] In that school I often asked myself 'Who is the abnormal here?' seeing the teachers stupid arguings and fightings over pity things instead to care about those children...

But back to the topic the most disillusioning thing for me when I learned about how mermaid legends were born... [Andersen would cry...]

Werewolfs and Hungarians

1. Cinema
  • Underworld series, but I skip writing about it again of course. 
  • The wolfman [1956] - with Béla Lugosi in a role of a background character, as - creatively named - Bela.
  • The Werewolf of Washington [1973] - A horror comedy where "a reporter is bitten by a werewolf in Hungary"
  • Zoltan, Hound of Dracula [1978] - with Michael Pataki as Dracula and the make up artist was also Hungarian.
  • Romasanta [2004] - with Elsa Pataky, who is a Spanish actress with Romanian an Hungarian ancestry

2. Folklore [1]

In our folklore instead of werewolf we just had something similar, farkaskoldus or csordásfarkas - literally means 'wolfbeggar' or 'herdwolf'.
We call it on different names by regions: csordásfarkas around Göcsej, farkaskoldus around Hont [now it belongs to Slovakia, but it was also a Hungarian territory historically], szakállas farkas/'bearded wolf' at Tisza region and North-East of the country, küldött farkas/'sended wolf' at Central Transdanubia region [where I live], around Szatmár and Hont, prikulics near the Romanian-Hungarian border area. 

Shape-shifter were any herdsmen whom can became a wolf. But mostly someone who was against his/her community. As always in history, if someone had own idea or opinion instead of the average thinkers and biggy religious people, he/she automatically was an outcast, a mad weirdo, a monster or just simply a witch... and those whom not endured reality well, those whom were bored with their lives or feared their positions and hated when someone said 'no' or 'I do not agree with you' to them started the pain-in-the-ass business called witch-hunt [and other hunts if they had some free times between two hangings, torturings, burnings and soo much exhausting paperworks]. If you ask me they hunted their own frickin' fears... and in small villages life was much more dangerous for a free thinker than in a bigger town. But not only free spirited people may have been werewolves/outcasts, but an unjust feudal lord, a thief, a charlatan or someone who was not from that nation at all... About those wolves whom were peculiarly bloodthirthy they belived that they are shape-shifted men.

The most common beliefs and superstitions were:
The ability of shape-shifting can appear in the earlier childhood, for example when the wise woman [the local maternity nurse or obstetrix] is incautious or ill-intentioned and she get through the baby under a birch-wood tyre three times, than the baby will be a csordásfarkas for 7 years, who able to shape-shifting anytime he wants. Someone just later become a shape-shifter. They can be half-man, half-wolves.
If someone wants to escape his/her own devilish form just need to get through again under a birch-wood tyre three or seven times but backwards or someone need to burn a cross on his/her back three times.

Other variations:
The csordásfarkas is shape-shifting with his wife or a woman gave birth to a wolf-baby. Unbaptized people can be werewolves too or a thief who commit a burglary with his wife. That man/woman who accidentally brake the tyre he/she just got through will stay a csordásfarkas till his/her death. 
The wise herdman's power is bigger than the bloodthirsty wolves. With his magical tool he takes away their powers. The wolves beg for mercy, then the herdman get them through the birch-wood tyre and they became human again.

In 1847, Mihály Tompa wrote a ballad ["Szakállas farkas"] about a wife whom husband is a werewolf at nights, so one day while he is sleeping she cut his troat. They never saw a werewolf again on that land, althought there is one, what is in chains but it is free only for one night in a year...
This is the first literatural adaptation of the szakállas farkas

Later in 1862, László Bak collected folk tales among village people at Kolozsvár and there was a tale about szakállas farkas, "Tóth János története"/The story of János Tóth".

Another spieces, the wolf-girls:
Mostly a herdman's daughter became wolves to bulglar food to the spinning revelry or they ask a witch to turn themselves into wolves then they can scare the boys [out of their trousers]. The witch get them through the tyre. The boys try to protect themselves against the wolf-girls. They shoot down the witch. Call a wise man who turn the girls back into human forms. If it not turn out well they stay wolves for the rest of their lives and they must to wander and starve till they die.

The high-powered leader of the ancient Hungarian religion, the táltos [shaman/sámán] could own the art of shape-shifting as well. The word sámán means, 'the man who has the knowlegde'. This legend had been believed in the XIX. century too in the Great Plain. They believed that there were special people whom could become a huge wild dog, a jackal or a lynx at full moon.

While they hunted the "witches" there were csordásfarkas/werewolf-lawsuits as well in the XVI and XVIII. century:
  • 1653 - an old villager just saw a herdsman at Szombathely, whom tore apart many sheeps with the helping of the Devil... [The X-Files: A Serious Senile Case]
  • 1724 - three witches assaulted animals in a form of wolves [and three life were at risk because of some idiots...]
  • XVIII. c. - a man who was a horse-herd, could shape-shifted into a küldött farkas. During the XVIII. century lawsuits they often asked the accused one whether he/she can becomes a wolf or not...
  • ...and I read among news, that a woman [with slithly alcoholic face among others] from the X. village [what I do not know where the hell is that?] wants a divorce because she is sure that his husband is a werewolf... Among news in 2015! No comment again.

3. Reality

We do have a real wolf-man, a trainer and wolf keeper, Zoltán Horkai. He trained many wolves to Hollywood movies too. He keeps and has been training them for 15 years at a farm, near Budapest. The number of his wolves about 100! But beside wolfies there are many bears, boars, deers and other animals. There is the HORKAI Állatkoordinációs Központ [HORKAI Animal Training Center] as well, where they are teaching and training animals based on natural motivation not like the circuses...
I just think we need more like him. Maybe you ask, why these animals not live in the Hungarian or Carpathian wilderness. My answer is that nowadays sadly many of the hunters not care about the limit at all and waste and there are poachers as always [not but that I agree with simple hunting as well... I hate hunters too...]. After Cecil, the lion too I think that slowly animals will be more safe in a zoo or in a private farm then in the wild or in a rezervated area where poachers can easily slip in anyway... and it's very sad. A well found and big private farm can be ok, but I hate zoos.

Back to Carpathian wolves, on papers - according on Romanian official hunter associations too - there are enough number of wolves. But it's sadly a purposely miscalculated data... there are much lesser wolf in the Carpathian Mountains than only 10-20 years ago because of man. 
Hungary didn't see a wolf since 100 years ago and we are next to Carpathian Mountains... About a couple of years ago there are some wolves again in our mountains and thankfully they are protected now. There is the same problem with bears... I wondered last time when they said in the news that from Slovakia a brown bear came across to Hungary and now you can see here and there in our northern mountains. It's about one bear, but what a big news! We saw a living bear outside a zoo in the woods in our country! ... Now this sounds terrible, huh? And I am not meaning this only on our country. What will be on Earth after 50-100 years later?
So while we often chase mythical creatures here and there, like Nessie, werewolves, yeti, big foot etc. we slowly lose the real living and unique creatures around us: animals. You want aliens? Look in the ocean! Thousands of the strangest but beautiful creatures... Yet! But the human is human, and the majority abuse and kill their own kind too without sense, so not much wonder we could expect...

About the mysterious Carpathian Mountains I can't find a better song than this

Next time: "something completely different"

Good Day!/Szép napot!


[1] "Hungarian Etymological Dictionary" and Hungarian Electronic Library

Tuesday 27 October 2015

Halloween For Loners

Among Hungarian traditional holidays there is no Halloween at all. This thing is very new for us, only 10 years old maybe. We have 'farsang', which is also accompany a costume party, but instead of celebrating the 'coming of winter/darkness' we celebrate the winter's end. But we Hungarians can enjoy anything, so there are Halloween parties as well nowadays but mostly in bigger towns and Budapest. In the countryside we just decorating, carve a pumpkin, the children drawing something in the nursery, adults watch something creepy and so on. I love both, the farsang as well as Halloween.

At Budapest there are some places or bars where they hold costume parties and anyone can go in. I like to dress up non-humanly - and I do not need an occasion for it - and I could enjoy a real Halloween party I think, with funny titled foods, creepy decors, dancing... I just can't feel myself relaxed among strangers and I'm definitely not a cutie-flirty persona neither... I imagine I would be in a costume as weird as hell so noone wants/dares to speak with me... or I would just bring a coffin with myself, put it in a corner, closed myself in it and make two holes so I could watch the scene... [I think I need a therapy or something before it will be too late...] But this is the countryside and my friends are sadly everywhere but Veszprém, so I will just celebrate at home with my flap-eared tubby fluffy thing called bunny again...

I like reading others' movie lists on IMDB. I've found many good movies in this way I never heard of before. So I thought I make my own Halloween lists, maybe someone has the same taste as mine or just find something new for the eerie evening. My taste can be interesting... I love the gory and total creepy Asian horrors, but hate todays western ones because those are too much for my nerves??? [~Yeah I don't understand myself neither...] I only prefer the - little bit artistical - vintage ones from the American horrors.

Simple Movie/Animation Top 10
Nightmare Before Christmas
Clue
The Addams Family [1993]
Frankenweenie [2012]
Dracula [1931]
Practical Magic
Agatha Christie's Poirot: Hallowe'en Party
Beetlejuice
Hocus Pocus
Murder by Death  

Horror Top 10 13 [~Oops.]
The Devil Rides Out
Hausu [classic J-Horror]
Eye of the Devil
Wishing Stairs [K-horror]
The Tomb of Ligeia
The Company Of Wolfs
The Masque of the Red Death
Yoga Hakwon [K-horror]
The Craft
Doll Master [K-horror]
Dr Terror's House of Horror
Suspiria
House on Haunted Hill [1959]

TV series/Anthologies Top 10 13 [~Oops I did it again.]
The Addams Family [1964]
Honto Ni Atta Kowai Hanasi [J-horror]
Hometown Legends [K-horror]
Tales of Terror
Twice Told Tales
Kwaidan [classic J-Horror from 1964]
Spirits of the Dead 
The X-Files [I didn't watch it in the 90's and I regret it totally, now I'm a fan... better late then never] 
R. L. Stine's The Haunting Hour [horror for kids, but I enjoy it]
Nihon no Kowai Yoru [J-horror]
Crooked House [2008]
The Munsters
Gumiho Wehjun [K-horror] [2004]

Book Top 10
Something Wicked This Way Comes by Ray Bradbury
Kwaidan - Ghost Stories and Strange Tales of Old Japan by Lafcadio Hearn 
anything from Saki
Ring by Koji Suzuki
Perfume by Patrick Suskind
Sleep Pale Sister by Joanne Harris
Woman In Black by Susan Hill
anything from H. P. Lovecraft
Blood and Chocolate by Annette Curtis Klause
Interview with the Vampire by Anne Rice

Good Day!/Szép napot!

Friday 23 October 2015

An Afternoon At Budapest

Yesterday I visited one of my childhood friend to chit-chat a little. It was good to see her and Budapest again. And there is no school yet so we had time to our favourite places...

After a walk at Váci street we go to eat some tastiness at the PadThai fastfood restaurant. It is under 'Október 6' street 4, near Deák Ferenc Square. The best is, that you can choose the ingredients, so you're dish will be more or less unique.
[Photo from www.netpincer.hu]

Love the decoration. Many cute veggie figures like this relaxing eggplant... Haha
yummy vegetable mix with tofu

The best walldecor was in the toilet... Relax: Happiness, Joy, Success! The holy trinity... You will definitely come out from this restaurant as a newborn man... Ahahahha


Two naughty guardian pumpkin-heads before a handmade confectionery

A busó figure in the window of an authentic Hungarian restaurant at St. Stephen's Basilic
busó is a Hungarian folk devil who "drive the winter away"

Next station was 'Marumoto', a very cute Japanese tea and handmade craftwork shop. It is under Hercegprímás street 9, next to the St. Stephen's Basilic
[Photo from welovebudapest.com]

Today we just tested the macarons. Score: 10:10


Good Day!/Szép napot!

First Order From Ebay

The sweater I ordered just arrived, so I'm happy that my first ordering turned out a success, not like my unlucky fellow-worker... He ordered a Samsung/G/S6 from a total stranger. He is waiting for that phone since summer... I hope he has the patience...

I'm into Buddhism [beside Neo-Paganism] so I loved this sweater the moment I saw it. It's from Minga London
Karma-Spectre

But the first thing was come to mind not a phrase from Buddha but an r&b song from 1999/2000... [when r&b and hip-hop were much more listenable than nowadays, less 'f♥', 'b', violence and so on...] I liked this band, whom totally vanished in time although they were not typical at all and their lyrics is good!
Good Day!/Szép napot!

Wednesday 21 October 2015

Transylvanian Vampires And Carpathian Werewolves Part I

It's almost Halloween so I thought I write something about the two most famous creatures. Why? Because they refer them to Hungary quite often. So I just collected some vampirish/werewolfs things which related to Hungarians at some point and other stuff.

As we know vampires originally came from Greek, Balkanian myths and poetics [Phlegon of Tralles, 2nd century AD], but blood-sucker/blood-drinker creatures/gods were in the Ancient Mesopotamian, Hebrew and Egyptian myths as well.
According on ethnography and cultural history this belief known more among Serbian, Romanian, Croatian, Ukrainian and Rusian folklore, but because of geographical proximity and historic events, the vampire belief interwove with the historical Hungary and within that, with Transylvania [below]. In modern Hungarian folklore vampires [vámpír] are unknown, although in the XVIII. century there were much more vampire-lawsuit in Hungary then in whole Europe...

Shortly about Transylvania and historical Hungary:
In a wider sense Romania came off from three regions, Wallachia, Moldavia  [around 1887] and the former Hungarian territory Transylvania [1920]. 
In 1003 Transylvania became a part of the Kingdom of Hungary. The leader was the Transylvanian voivode [1] who was the procurator-general of the king. After the Battle of Mohács in 1526, the Hungarian Kingdom came apart, and after this Transylvania was under Ottoman authority, but it worked as an independent state. In 1699 when Habsburgs [this time Hungary was already under the Habsburg Monarchy] signed peace with the ottomans and Transylvania had been  reannexation to Hungary, but this time it was reign by a governor whom had been appointed by Wien. After the WWI, according to the Treaty of Trianon, they annexed Transylvania from Hungary once and for all in 1920...

[1] voivode: It was a title by the ruler of a province among Bulgarian, Slavish aristocrats, later among Moldovan and Wallachian princes [male ruler or head of a principality] as well since the earlier Middle Ages. It is equivalent to English dukeness. A Transylvanian voivode/voyevoda [vajda in Hungarian] had special and wide regional power, he substituted the king.

Vampires and Hungarians

1. History

Vlad III's life can be confusing for someones whom doesn't really into the Eastern-European history. And Stoker's novel can be confusing as well at some parts.

Vlad III was the prince [2] of Wallachia since the winter of 1436-1437 and he was a voivoid in Transylvania as well. He was born in 1431 in the fortress of Segesvár/Sighișoara [Transylvanian-Hungarian territory in those times]. His real home was Wallachia, although he lived with his family in Transylvania, because the ottoman-friend bojars banished out his father from their homeland. 
Most of the Hungarian kings bestowed huge estates to Wallachian principal families in South-Transylvania. So we have nothing to do with him [thankfully], however his unlucky wife was Hungarian who was the cousin of our current king Matthias I... 

[2] Prince [fejedelem in H.] was the official ruler in some monarch states, but with less rights as a king.

About Stoker's novel:
Although not Stoker fabricated the vampires, Dracula is the most famous vampire novel of all times. But it all started with a big research work as many of the biggest novels. Stoker never was in Eastern-Europe, but he met with the Hungarian orientalist, Ármin Vámbéry, who told about Eastern-European folklore and history in 1890. He heard about Vlad III for the first time. 
His book not just based on fantasy but it is not clear that Stoker inspired only on Vlad III's life, because beside him, he influenced by Coleridge's poem "Christabel" and Silvero Palma's "I Vampiri" [opera] also. He researched about vampires and other things in the British Library and library of Whitby. The research lasted for 6 years!
He mixed many things by the artistic freedom. For example:
The count descented himself - at many times - as székely, which is an ethnic group in Transylvania. But in this novel szekelys had an alternate history

2. Cinema

First there is the biggest - and personal favourite - 'vamp vs. wolf' franchise "Underworld" trylogy. [~Yess trilogy for me, cause I think the fourth movie was a stupid mistake... No antique-modern city, few handmade masks, too much of boring CGI etc. and a lame plot... I also missed 'Eötvös utca' and 'actu sövtöE'.* -later]   

It's funny but the director and the characters never mentioned that the story takes place at Budapest, although some of the characters are Hungarians [f.e.: Viktor was a Hungarian warlord, Alexander Corvinus was a Hungarian nobleman and warlord] and almost the entire first movie was shot in Budapest as well. Probably because in 2003 many countries just didn't know/care who the hell we are or where we are on the world map at all. [f.e.: some Americans put us into Africa! No joke. Personal experience. And always mistook Bucharest with Budapest. ~Yeah it's totally the same, just one or two letters difference... ~Classic...] Beside these there are many Hungarians among the crew, not to mention Hungarian actress/model Zita Görög as Amelia! 
Shortly it could be just too awkward from them in those times to speak about that they inspired by an Eastern-European country what noone knows...
Now it's quite the opposit, they know us well and the whole Western Europe... ~Ehhe

Although the plot is based only on fantasy, we had  famous "Corvinuses" in our history whom names inspired the movie characters:
The Hunyadis was the most famous and influental family in Hungarian history like the Medicis to Italy. János Hunyadi, Hungarian feudal lord and famous "ottoman-beater" of his time was the governor and the most eminent warlord in the medieval Hungarian Kingdom. He was the father of one of our biggest king, Mátyás Hunyadi, who reigned from 1458 to 1490, but he was the king of Bohemia since 1469 and the duke of Austria as well. He was known by many names: Mathias I, King Mathias, Mathias the righteous, Mátyás Corvin, Matthias Corvinus... Mathias's only and illegitimate son's was János Corvin.
Korvin was a latin male firstname, deriving of Corvinus, what derived from the word 'corvus', which means raven/crow/holló. Corvinus/Hollós, as surname of the family is an allusion onto the Hunyadi family coat of arm and Mathias's nickname.

Lets see some movie scenes from Budapest

In the very beginning she jumped down from here! 
[She is a Goddess... What else?]

the tower of the Klotild Palace at Ferenciek Square
 
The first scenes were shot here at Eötvös street [in 6. district] 
[Photo from ittforgott.blog.hu]

They made a stupid mistake at the car chasing scene, when the cars running before the street sign of Eotvos street. We see a long car chasing, but it was shot only in one short part of the Eotvos street. So editors just inverted the reel so we can read 'actu sövtöE' at one point instead of 'Eötvös utca'... ~Wow They thought noone will notice it... But Hungarians have sharp eyes! Haha
Another thing I don't understand... According the movie the wolfie doctor [Michael Corvin] lives under the address "Laktos Joszef 39 ut.". It was actually wanted to be "Lakatos József utca"/or street. For bunny' sakes there were Hungarians among the crew, it would be just one tiny question: You write the street names this way or how? ...No comment. They just s♥ down the whole accuracy again, because they thought that noone cares at all... Only us, but that not was the point, we just gave the inpiration and the cheap filming location as always...

The subway fight scenes were shot at Ferenciek Square metro subway station and one of the stations of the Line 1, which were built from 1894 to 1896 [and now it's part of the Unesco World Heritage as well!].




Later they drove through on Gozsdu Courtyard/Gozsdu Udvar [which connects Király street 13 and Dob street 16.]

About 'Devils House' or Ördögház, where the Budapest vampire clan lives. It's a fictional building which takes place near Szentendre [next to Budapest]. The inside was shot in a library, but I don't know wheter it's a Hungarian library or not.

Other vampire movies with Hungarian connection
  • Dracula's Death/Drakula halála [1921] - The official first adaptation of the Stoker novel, however its plot is different at many parts. For example: Instead of Mina there is Mary, a penniless daughter of a dressmaker. His dad is in an insane asylum because he couldn't accept the death of his wife. Here Mary meet with Drakula, the mysterious piano teacher... There is no Van Helsing, but Doctor Tillner who save the girl at the end, where it looks like the girl just had a nightmare that she was abducted by Drakula into a dark castle... 
    The story sounds lame, but in the 20's this kind of plot was horror enough. The director was Károly Lajtay and in Drakula's role was Paul Askenas. Three years later a script writer Lajos Pánczél wrote a novel about the plot of the movie too. Sadly the movie lost along the WWII. Here is the cover of the book version from 1924

Love that black cat-moon dress, cute
 
  • Son of Dracula [1943] - there is a Hungarian Professor Lazlo who came to kill the son.
  • Bram Stoker's Dracula [1973 film] - "Before the portrait of a living warrior Dracula ... a warlord who lived in the area of Hungary known as Transylvania"
  • Van Helsing [2004] - the vampires hold a party at Budapest, although it takes place anywere but Budapest.
  • Styria or Angels of Darkness [2014] - film adaptation from the horror story, "Carmilla" by Sheridan Le Fanu. One of the cast member was Erika Marozsán, Hungarian actress. It takes place in a fictional old castle outside the Hungarian town of Styria [definitely fictional name... Haha].
  • Dracula Untold [2015] - they mention at the beggining that his wife is a Hungarian princess, Mirena... [totally not a Hungarian female name and Vlad Tepes's wife was Ilona] But it's a very lame movie - for me - although I know it wants to be the prequel of the Stoker novel and Coppola adaptation from 1993. That is why the girl is Mirena instead of Ilona, Mirena later will reincarnate or whatever as Mina... We know the rest. Underworld 3 is also strange but much better for a fantasy-medieval movie than this. Two hours from my life and the price of an expensive ticket... at least the popcorn was yummy...
  • and many movies about Elizabeth Báthory, but I left them out on purpose.
Béla Lugosi [I just love that man.]
He was born as Blaskó Béla Ferenc Dezső at Lugos/now Lugoj [near Timisuara/Temesvár, now it belongs to Romania].  
They say He took too seriously the role of Dracula, and this drove to his narcotic and alcoholic lifestyle and he was in sanatorium as well with mental problems. And that was the cause he wanted to buried himself in his cloak... Of course it sounds more mysteriously to the American newspapers and people than reality again:
Actually he was at the WWI and there he got serious injuries not to mention the injuries of the mind because of the war itself... [not everyone likes to play the hero]. After the war he emigrated because of political reasons. He had homesickness till his death... So he drank because it was Hollywood and he become famous instantly after "Dracula", and he drank and lived on morphine because with the age his injuries hurt worse.
And why he wanted to buried himself in that cloak? Maybe he just loved that gloomy character he played almost half of his lifetime, not to mention the strange Hungarian sense of humour. The only thing what keep us alive...

Did you know that...?
  • from 1917 to 1919 his stage-name was Olt Arisztid? [Thank God he rethought it... Hahaha]
  • when he got the role of Dracula he didn't speak English well he had a very strong Hungarian accent. Later - to commemorate him - they used the same styled black cloak and Hungarian accent in many other Dracula movies [Gary Oldman in "Dracula" and Leslie Nielsen in "Dracula: Dead and Loving It" also speak this way, and it was the 90's already!].
Hollywood has a - boring - star on their floor, we just have a bust, but much more memorable I think
You can see it at Vajdahunyad vára/Vajdahunyad Castle, in the Városliget/City Park of Budapest.

3. Gastronomy

"A vampire cannot live without blood. Its life depends on this substance, such as humans'." - László Garzó

It might be shocking to read but Hungarians do eat blood! Ok it's only piggy blood but be sure I never tried... 
We have a tradition at Winter. In the countryside, the village people kept/and some of them are still keeping pigs. About January or February they slauther the old and fat ones to make sausages, hurkas, bacons and other meat things and on this occation they just drink and work and eat. It could sounds fairly for most of the people but I just hate it... Not just because it's another loudly social occation, but if someone foreigner didn't live this live, cannot imagine what is it exactly...

It starts at 4:00 or 5:00 a.m. [or earlier] with this.: -Good Morning! Here is your first shot of pálinka! Yes yes drink, drink my golden friend! [an average pálinka=about 40-50%]
In the evening - if you hide well - you just drank about 10 shot glasses of pálinka on that day... if you are lucky! Because if a Hungarian said "Drink!" You will drink, or the pigsticker will stick on you be sure... all day long...
Somewhere around that time in the morning they start chasing? the pig[s], and ... and ... until it will be dead at last. If the people are nice the pig dies fast. If not, they joking around while they are chasing the poor animal... It sounds barbaric, and for me it is...
But I don't want to be a hypocrite. I do eat bacon and meat [but not pork] occasionally but if somebody would kill an animal before my eyes [especially on this way] my lunch on that day would be grass for sure... I know it sounds funny, the meat I eat doesn't grow in the garden, the chicken head not turns inside out just from itself, but we could use more humane methods to kill an animal [for food only] with the much less pain and this is my problem with this tradition and this is the - but not the only - problem with the modern times large-scale food production as well... More painless methods please!

So the bloody dish made from fresh pig blood, onion, salt, pepper, ground bay or marjoram or ground dill [optional] and a little paprika of course and then they bake it in a frying pan on a bit of pork fat. They say its taste like liver, but I just don't know really.

Although I love Hungarian traditions I hate this whole pig-slauthering Winter celebration party. [I like pálinka but on a normal human way...] I was around 19 when I last was on an occation like this. At 5 a.m. I woke up onto a terrible and long shreak... I didn't want to know the rest... [I actually know how - many ways they can - kill that poor pig but I don't want to write it down. We are nice people, but we need to reconsider some customs we have, like other countries with theirs, I think about it dolphin killing, whaling, shark finning etc...] But yeah hommade pork meat is much more safer than buying always the large-scale frozen-pack... so I don't know what would be the best solution... [evidently not eat pigs at all...]

In a documentary there was a Japanese man who lived in Hungary for a while, and the Hungarian reporter asked him what were the things he liked about Hungary and what were those he didn't. The polite Japanese man listed many things he liked about us except this pig-slauthering ceremony... He said he against dolphing killing and whailing as well and not just because he is a Buddhist. Why am I not surprised... It's not something for Buddhist eyes and stomach...

Finally about our - sometimes -  strange gastronomic taste wrote Ferenc Erdei a very neat comment in his book: "...and the paprikash sauce you've got had a very unusal texture and color... it's like a big gush of fresh but not yet congealed blood, it is red everywhere from the bottom to the top...

And if you are not sick of this pig-blood dish then try the other delicacy: the baked pig ears... ~Vááá *close to puke* At least those people not waste any part of the piggy. They use up the whole animal not like those shark finners... ~Ehhe

4. Folklore

Vampires are not common in Hungarian folklore at all, but we do have some similar creatures, like the lidérc. However it's rather a collecting name for any devilish creatures than a concrete monster. It is known at the whole Hungarian area although the legends can be dissimilar by regions.

Mostly it could be a csodacsirke/magical chicken, a shape-shifter which born by a black hen what hatched its eggs under its pits. Then if the owner of the magical chicken is man, then it became a female lover, and if the owner is a woman then it became a male lover at night. But insted of happy lovemaking, the creature just press the owner's breasts and suck his/her blood. For repayment, this creature makes its owner/lover rich, however the owner is always miserable and sick... We use this as a synonym onto some illness: lidércnyomás [literally means: lidérc/demonic-pressing], when someone has serious anhelation or stomach-complaints at nighttime. [3]

So it could be a magical chicken, but somewhere the lidérc is a tiny man or a devilish gnome and elsewhere a strange light phenomen.

In modern Hungarian folklor [from the XIX century perhaps] the similar creature to a vampire is the nora, which mostly known by the people from the area between rivers Sajó and Tisza. According on ethnographers 'nora' came from Slovakian folklore where this kind of creature is more common in the stories.
If a child died without babtism or a child was babtised two or three times, become nora. At night it presses the sleeper and suck his/her blood [rarely milk], then the nora spits out the blood into live coals and makes pogácsa from it. Whom it sucks, he/she will be more and more skinny...
You want an easy method of protection against this creature? Here it is:
Press your breasts with garlic, make the sign of the cross three times, rub them with onion, grease them with human feces, incense them with frankincense, hint them and the whole room with holy water, burn a blessed candle, hang a blessed rosary on the doorhandle, eat nothing for a while... and wonder why noone wants to go on a date with you!  

Next time: the other

Good Day!/Szép napot!

[3] "Hungarian Etymological Dictionary" and Hungarian Electronic Library