Who is bagul demon




















Each story involves a different way that he lures or tricks these children away from the physical world and traps them in his own nether world and he consumes their souls over time.

Any worship of this deity would include a blood sacrifice or the wholesale eating of a child. Such an explanation raises the question - is Bughuul a real Babylonian pagan deity?

I believe that a certain number of us are conduits for positive and negative energies, and naturally things will follow us wherever we go. This may contradict the bible, and I'm a Christian day in and out. But, even in the bible, it states that demons and the devil roam among us. That's why I believe we're able to see them. Maybe not the devil exactly, but if a negative energy is strong enough, I do believe it will manifest itself.

I have no doubt in mind that after watching that the creators of this film go their inspiration from another or possible a number of entities that were once idolized in religions.

You are wrong. I always see hands in a window,see a head in my back yard. So that is why I think your wrong. S it looks exactly like bagul. I am from India and in my language Marathi, the term for a demon who takes away children is Bagul Bua.

I found it very strange that so many cultures through the world have almost the same name for the same concept. I know what you've been thru.

I have lived in houses full of "negative"energy. I call it elemental. But it doesnt harm us except pushes away some luck from our home. It does to a certain extent protect the house, while next doors have been burglarized or robbed, ours always made people cold feet to step in. Anyhow, i believe everything that happens must happen with the creator approval and there's a lesson to people experience it. I have been hoping I would find out why I am plagued with bad luck.

I often wonder if it is spritual. Amber Gabriel I love horror movies as well. Some of them, like the slasher flicks I can giggle at…When it comes to movies like The Devil Inside, i get pretty unnerved. Casey Crawley same with me n the movies, believe me or not i actually live in a haunted house, my dream job is to become a movie writer, director, and a producer, so i can one day tell the tale of the house i grew up in.

Due to the lack of mouth, Bagul's voice is never heard, thus preventing greater insight into his personality. However, his centuries of family murders and child abductions all point to him being a sadistic and bloodthirsty deity who would force children to kill their families in particularly gruesome fashions for fun.

Nonetheless, Bagul is only appeased and "properly worshipped" once he kidnaps his child accomplices into his netherworld and slowly consumes their souls. Despite his carnally degenerate nature, he's also an authoritarian, as seen by his quick executions of child accomplices who fail to kill their families.

He is also shown to adapt to the times as shown by how he influences his child accomplices to make snuff films of their murders.

Through these snuff films, Bagul often momentarily appears in scenes to taunt the viewer. Besides that, he, along with the decaying ghosts of his child accomplices, would haunt the viewer and their family. This would cause the viewer and their family to move to another house, which allows Bagul to start a new family massacre.

Bagul also had a strained relationship with his brother Moloch. Due to Bagul copying Moloch's practice of child sacrifice and Moloch shutting Bagul's mouth forever, it can be assumed the two hate each other. This rivalry is emphasised in how Bagul subverts Moloch's traditional practice of the parent ritually torturing and murdering their children by having the child do the deed instead. In modern times, Baguul began manipulating children into using Super 8 footage to record themselves murdering their families, so he could use each of these films as his portal into the real world.

After murdering their families, Bagul would kidnap his child accomplice from the real world and take them to his netherworld. There, Bagul would slowly consume their souls and use them to haunt the next family he wishes to kill.

Each family that was murdered had previously lived in the former family's house. Once they moved, Bagul would manipulate their children into killing them. Our new favourite true crime writer decides to team up with a lovable police deputy who does some digging around the murders. He discovers these murders took place from the s up to present day, and occurred across the entire US. But what connected these murders - aside from that creepy figure in the background of the clips and the symbols - is that a child from each family went missing after the murder.

But you can call him the Eater of Children , a nickname that caught on when they discovered he likes to consume the souls of children. Throughout this process of unveiling the truth of Bughuul, the paranormal activity begins.

The steady climb in the supernatural peaks however when he hears the projector running in the attic. He checks out the situation, and realises all of the missing kids are enjoying a movie night - think less Netflix, more bloodthirsty Pagan god - when Bughuul rocks up via an unnecessary jumpscare.

Oswalt then makes the executive decision to burn the film and projector, and then swap this murder house for his previous residency.

Originally posted by consorttolordbughuul. Shortly after this bulb lights up, our lovable deputy also gets on the blower, and lets him know that each family that was murdered did the exact same thing:. They realised their new home was haunted by some presence, shacked up at a new location where there were no Super 8 movies included in the rent, and then were killed by their child.

Yep - our favourite true crime writer has only gone and set off the exact chain of events he attempted to investigate. He wakes up moments before being slaughtered with an axe. The film ends with the child being carried away by Bughuul and teleported into the film with him. Bughuul, however crashes into it, reviving the boring clips that dragged The Blair Witch Project into horror movie infamy and sent the Paranormal Activity viewers to sleep.

Sinister plays with the horror genre in a whole new way, using silent, grainy Super 8 movies to leave the viewers convinced they might awaken a long dead spirit by listening to their favourite murder mystery podcast.

But the visual horror - whether of the gory deaths we witness or of Bughuul himself - confines the movie to the streaming platform you chose that evening. Originally posted by purgemovie-blog. Whilst the finer details of Bughuul is not mapped out in theology, the fundamental building block of the body horror in this movie - that of sacrifice in horrific ways - has been practiced throughout history and devoted to 3 specific Pagan gods that the writers drew inspiration from.

This Canaanite god was associated with many things, including agriculture and fertility, and sacrifice and fire, all of which are firmly represented in the movie.

Baghuul has the lookbook of a modern horror monster, from the Slender Man inspired suit to the smokey eye only a 13 year old could pull off. Moloch, on the other hand, is often depicted as a Bronze statue of a humanoid bull sitting down.

The statue would be heated with fire, and victims thrown in as a form of fiery sacrifice. In fact, in both the s and later in , it was discovered via excavations of the ancient Carthaginian civilisations that both young people and animals were often the most popular victims, forging a link between the youth we saw on our TV screens, and the ashes left in the urns that were found.

In fact, Buffy stuck to the same premise, claiming Moloch was unleashed when an ancient text was scanned into a library system. Originally posted by sridevi. Our next contender for coulda-been-Bughuul is Baal , a demon which has actually featured in a few other horror flicks of his own, so far.

The Rite featured this ancient god who focused his attention on fertility, just like Moloch. And, just like Moloch, archaeological evidence of sacrifices was discovered, but in a region of Egypt from which he was worshipped.

Amongst the sacrificed infants found was a collection of animals and prostitutes. Even the ancient texts detailing their powers and premise suggests a sibling-like link: Baal Hammon was worshipped by the Carthage people as a supreme god, just like the former entity, and instead of bearing the body of a bull, he appears as a ram.

Legend has it Baal was considered more powerful than his father, suggesting children overpowering their own family is a vital premise of this god. Our final contender for Baghuul-but-without-the-eyeliner is Tlaloc.

And, once again, this entity is just like the previous gods, but belongs on the other side of the globe. This Aztec god is the god of rain, water and fertility, and despite his rather more peaceful and popular worship today, historically things have been a little, uh, sacrificey.

The remains of war captives have been found near his statues, but this only hints towards his association with death; it is said that he was essentially the destination in the afterlife for those that died from a variety of ailments. This suggests that Baghuul not only enjoys a hobby of snacking on innocent children, but also takes pleasure from the sacrifices of the other family members, and appears at their time of death.

Unfortunately, according to historic worship, Tlaloc prefers his sacrifices a little more niche than just dead parents. Typically he likes his sacrifices to have their hearts extracted from the corpses, and collected in a bowl by the temple.

We already know that three Pagan gods are enough to have you avoiding your 5 year old nephew at the next family dinner. But unfortunately, Moloch, Baal, and Tlaloc are far from the only deities that will make you left eye twitch when you see so much as a polaroid camera for fear Bughuul might have taken a vintage selfie. Self-sacrifice and sexual restraint sounds like values we should all practice, but when a Hindu goddess tells you to do it - and she has no head - you might be more reluctant to listen to her wise words.

The legend claims that a group of Hindu gods and demons churned the ocean in order to extract an elixir of immortality. Chinnamasta took a sip, swallowed the entire share for the demons, and chopped her own head off to prevent them from reclaiming it. An alternative version tells a different story: Chinnasmasta and her crew were bathing too long and realised they were hungry.

So, she satiated their hunger by decapitating her own head and allowing her attendants to drink the blood spurting from her neck. And so, her image is immortalised by three fountains of blood coming out of her neck, and her attendants gulping back the liquid. As well as being one of the most famous gods to date, this Greek deity is also one of the oldest. And whilst he he is the god of nice, wholesome things like cosy forests and flocks of cute animals, he would be deemed a sex offender today.

Pan would try and have sex with anything - yes, anything - that moved.



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