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Slime (1953)

 Slime (1953)
type
TVTItem
 Slime (1953)
label
Slime (1953)
 Slime (1953)
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Slime1953
 Slime (1953)
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Slime is a short horror novelette written by Joseph Payne Brennan and originally published in the March 1953 issue of Weird Tales. It went on to inspire many Blob Monster stories and films like The Blob, Stephen King's The Raft, The Clone, Dean R. Koontz's Phantoms and many others.An undersea seismic disturbance sends something fetid, slimy and alive to the surface of the sea and into Wharton's Swamp, a coastal bog near the town of Clinton Center. Homeless man Henry Hossing, who goes into the swamp to drink the whiskey he bought with a $10 bill he found, vanishes. The next morning, Giles Gowse, a farmer who lives right next to Wharton's Swamp comes into town complaining that his cow Sarey has gone missing and his barn interior is all slimy and stinks like dead fish.Everyone laughs at him. Wharton's Swamp has a reputation, all right, but so does he, as being a bit on the kooky side. On his way home he passes his neighbor, fellow farmer Rupert Barnaby and his dog Jibbe. Despite Old Man Gowse's warnings, as the sun goes down, Barnaby, a rational man who considers the superstitions about the bog to be gobbledygook, wants to bag himself a raccoon, so he heads into the swamp with his rifle, accompanied by Jibbe. And then comes a slithering noise. He's about to wish he had been superstitious after all...It's been published in many anthology collections (most memorably in Nine Horrors and a Dream and The Shapes of Midnight with an introduction by Stephen King), and a very well-produced three-part audio version read by Edward E. French can be found in three parts (here, here and here) and was even once ripped off wholesale for the first half of Victor Norwood's novel Night of the Black Horror.Not to be confused with the 1988 novel of the same name by William Essex.
 Slime (1953)
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Dropped link to OurMonstersAreDifferent: Not a Feature - IGNORE
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Dropped link to WeirdTales: Not a Feature - ITEM
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 Slime (1953) / int_15b2cab3
type
Tempting Fate
 Slime (1953) / int_15b2cab3
comment
Tempting Fate: Barnaby, the slime's second human victim, has plenty of time to escape, but stands his ground rather than flee. Instead, he chooses to remain out of stubbornness and confidence in his hunting rifle.
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 Slime (1953) / int_18aff462
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Artistic License – Biology
 Slime (1953) / int_18aff462
comment
Artistic License – Biology: It's unlikely such an enormous water creature from the ocean's depths would be able to survive on land, let alone move with the swiftness that it does. However, Brennan does go out of his way to describe, in depth (no pun intended), that its great strength and resilience is not just due to its amorphous nature, but because it has evolved to survive at crushing depths in the abyss. The story also notes the monster taking time to "adjust" itself to its new environment when it first ends up on the surface, so the pressure difference isn't being totally ignored.
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 Slime (1953) / int_1de5c038
type
Too Happy to Live
 Slime (1953) / int_1de5c038
comment
Too Happy to Live: The monster's first human victim, Henry the homeless man, has a lousy life. Nobody seems to like him and the cops keep trying to run him out of town. He's just about stupefied with joy when he finds a $10 bill on the sidewalk, which allows him to not only purchase his first real meal in days, a full breakfast complete with dessert and several cups of coffee, but also buy some rye whiskey and go get happily drunk in Wharton's Swamp all day long with change to spare, drifting into a contented doze by the dwindling light of his campfire as night falls and probably feeling like the richest man in town. And then ends up dying a pretty grisly death. Even after his death, he becomes a convenient scapegoat to pin the murders of the missing Rupert Barnaby and Jason Bukmeist on. Shoot the Shaggy Dog, much, Mr. Brennan?
 Slime (1953) / int_1de5c038
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 Slime (1953) / int_20215dc6
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Primal Fear
 Slime (1953) / int_20215dc6
comment
Primal Fear: The slime's mere presence is enough to send its victims into "fight or flight" mode. When they don't just freeze up in sheer horror, anyway.
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 Slime (1953) / int_281de59f
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Extremely Short Timespan
 Slime (1953) / int_281de59f
comment
Extremely Short Timespan: The story takes place over just a single week.
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 Slime (1953) / int_2ae277ab
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Mauve Shirt
 Slime (1953) / int_2ae277ab
comment
Mauve Shirt: His seemingly equally doomed partner Fred Storr survives, but is Driven to Madness.
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 Slime (1953) / int_2c77fae3
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Darkness Equals Death
 Slime (1953) / int_2c77fae3
comment
Darkness Equals Death: The slime hunts at night because it hates light, and its black color makes it all but invisible. For all intents and purposes, witnesses to the attacks pretty much see their friends and loved ones "taken by the darkness," as though the dark itself were alive and hungry.
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 Slime (1953) / int_3c7ccb69
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No Body Left Behind
 Slime (1953) / int_3c7ccb69
comment
No Body Left Behind: Everyone the slime kills is completely absorbed.
 Slime (1953) / int_3c7ccb69
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 Slime (1953) / int_40d15d7a
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Spoiler Cover
 Slime (1953) / int_40d15d7a
comment
Spoiler Cover: The cover for The Shapes of Midnight spoils the scene where Luke and Fred are attacked and Fred's flashlight drives the monster away.
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 Slime (1953) / int_48309ad4
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Screaming Woman
 Slime (1953) / int_48309ad4
comment
Screaming Woman: Dolores Rell, when relating her story to Chief Underbeck. In fairness, she did just watch her boyfriend get eaten by a monster in the swamp.
 Slime (1953) / int_48309ad4
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 Slime (1953) / int_4e4e98fa
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Touch of the Monster
 Slime (1953) / int_4e4e98fa
comment
Touch of the Monster: The cover of the Weird Tales publication of the story, drawn by Virgil Finley, shows a woman being grabbed by the slime.
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 Slime (1953) / int_59907e4f
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Police Are Useless
 Slime (1953) / int_59907e4f
comment
Police Are Useless: Subverted. Underbeck and his men aren't so much incompetent as hopelessly outmatched, and do the best they can under the circumstances. Though, with that said, Underbeck's approach to apprehending who he initially thinks is the killer is pretty suspect (see The Lopsided Arm of the Law above).
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 Slime (1953) / int_687d991e
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Security Blanket
 Slime (1953) / int_687d991e
comment
Security Blanket: Officer Fred Storr's flashlight. After he barely survives the attack against him and his partner by driving the slime away with the flashlight, he refuses to relinquish the flashlight even after being found and rescued by his fellow cops.
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 Slime (1953) / int_72856b70
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Godzilla Threshold
 Slime (1953) / int_72856b70
comment
Godzilla Threshold: The attack against his men in the swamp which leaves Officer Matson dead and Officer Storr with a serious case of Heroic BSoD forces Chief Underbeck to realize that the podunk police force of Clinton Center is no match for whatever-it-is that's lurking in there, and so he opts to call in US Army reservists from Camp Evans.
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 Slime (1953) / int_7315fd38
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Covers Always Lie
 Slime (1953) / int_7315fd38
comment
Covers Always Lie: A couple of examples: The Weird Tales cover shows a woman being grabbed by the slime. The only woman attacked by the slime is Dolores Rell, and she survives. It's pretty obvious this was included as an attention-getter due to its salaciousness. The Spoiler Cover for The Shapes of Midnight, one of the story collections Slime appears in, shows Luke Matson and Fred Storr in sheriff's uniforms. In the actual story, Clinton Center's police force are not a county sheriff's department.
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 Slime (1953) / int_77315f4f
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You Have to Believe Me!
 Slime (1953) / int_77315f4f
comment
You Have to Believe Me!: Several characters, Old Man Gowse in particular.
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 Slime (1953) / int_77666408
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Combat Tentacles
 Slime (1953) / int_77666408
comment
Combat Tentacles: One of the creature's many ways of capturing its prey.
 Slime (1953) / int_77666408
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 Slime (1953) / int_7f390ebc
type
Developing Doomed Characters
 Slime (1953) / int_7f390ebc
comment
Developing Doomed Characters: Each individual victim of the slime gets a hasty Info Dump just so we know something about them before they bite it.
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 Slime (1953) / int_859bbabc
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The Cassandra
 Slime (1953) / int_859bbabc
comment
The Cassandra: Nobody believes the local kook, Giles Gowse... that is, until more people start disappearing, including one of the cops searching for the missing people, forcing Chief Underbeck to start taking Old Man Gowse's fears seriously. It's even Lampshaded by Underbeck, who grudgingly refers to Gowse as "Old Man Cassandra."
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 Slime (1953) / int_8774fb47
type
Eldritch Abomination
 Slime (1953) / int_8774fb47
comment
Eldritch Abomination: The slime creature is impossibly old, having existed in the dark abysses at the bottom of the sea since time began, unknown to mankind until random chance forces it to the surface and into Wharton's Swamp. It's basically the Ancient Enemy from Phantoms if it never got smart and only left its usual hunting grounds by accident. The one thing giving humanity a fighting chance against it (vs. the Ancient Enemy) is that it is just an animal reacting to external stimuli.
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 Slime (1953) / int_898ff050
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Villain Protagonist
 Slime (1953) / int_898ff050
comment
Villain Protagonist: A goodly portion of the story is told from the slime's point of view.
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 Slime (1953) / int_8e5f93b8
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The Lopsided Arm of the Law
 Slime (1953) / int_8e5f93b8
comment
The Lopsided Arm of the Law: After finding Henry's hat and whiskey bottle in the swamp, the police initially conclude that the missing homeless man killed Barnaby and Jason in a fit of drunken homicidal mania (!). Underbeck even goes so far as to order his men to shoot to kill (!!) after only one (!!!) warning if they see Henry. If Henry hadn't already been the slime's first victim, he definitely would've been gunned down by the cops.
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 Slime (1953) / int_8ed5c6e4
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Asshole Victim
 Slime (1953) / int_8ed5c6e4
comment
Asshole Victim: Rupert Barnaby, although he probably wasn't intended as such. He can come off as a jerk to modern readers by his mocking dismissal of Gowse and the fact he hits his hunting dog Jibbe when Jibbe gets scared.
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 Slime (1953) / int_8fcb5843
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The Hunter Becomes the Hunted
 Slime (1953) / int_8fcb5843
comment
The Hunter Becomes the Hunted: Farmer Barnaby is killed while out hunting for raccoons, and Officer Luke Matson becomes a victim as well while he and his partner are hunting for what they believe to be a human murderer. Towards the end, the slime itself has the tables turned against it by the Army.
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 Slime (1953) / int_90c018ac
type
Justified Trope
 Slime (1953) / int_90c018ac
comment
As soon as he senses the slime's presence near his camp, Henry pretty much freezes up. Justified insofar as he's intoxicated and not thinking clearly.
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 Slime (1953) / int_91d3ab1e
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Ominous Pipe Organ
 Slime (1953) / int_91d3ab1e
comment
Ominous Pipe Organ: Used in the audio book version on YouTube.
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 Slime (1953) / int_93168fb1
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It's Quiet… Too Quiet
 Slime (1953) / int_93168fb1
comment
It's Quiet… Too Quiet: The swamp, due to the monster eating all the animals in it.
 Slime (1953) / int_93168fb1
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 Slime (1953) / int_96251156
type
Deer in the Headlights
 Slime (1953) / int_96251156
comment
Deer in the Headlights: Three times: As soon as he senses the slime's presence near his camp, Henry pretty much freezes up. Justified insofar as he's intoxicated and not thinking clearly. Officer Fred Storr can only watch in frozen horror as his partner is swallowed by the slime. At the end, when the soldiers pursue the slime out of the swamp towards the beach, many of their companions guarding the water's edge are too stunned to even fire at the slime.
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 Slime (1953) / int_97e17ec4
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I Will Fight Some More Forever
 Slime (1953) / int_97e17ec4
comment
I Will Fight Some More Forever: Even after his first volley of shots fails to visibly injure or deter his attacker, Rupert Barnaby continues blasting away with his rifle.
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 Slime (1953) / int_99db72ee
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Immune to Bullets
 Slime (1953) / int_99db72ee
comment
Immune to Bullets: The slime, on account of being not entirely solid.
 Slime (1953) / int_99db72ee
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 Slime (1953) / int_9bee1a7f
type
Eldritch Location
 Slime (1953) / int_9bee1a7f
comment
Eldritch Location: The bottom of the ocean, as far as Brennan is concerned. Wharton's Swamp becomes one of these once the slime takes up residence there.
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 Slime (1953) / int_9c1f758a
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Kill It with Fire
 Slime (1953) / int_9c1f758a
comment
Kill It with Fire: Some of the soldiers called in as backup are armed with flamethrowers. One of these is used against the slime. As Brennan notes, "With good reason, the mantle of slime had hated light, for its ultimate source was fire." It burns up real good.
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 Slime (1953) / int_a2ba7393
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Day Hurts Dark-Adjusted Eyes
 Slime (1953) / int_a2ba7393
comment
Day Hurts Dark-Adjusted Eyes: Okay, so the slime, being a Blob Monster, has no eyes, but, all the same, used to living at the pitch black bottom of the sea, it is physically repelled by even the smallest amount of light.
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 Slime (1953) / int_a4be7043
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Da Chief
 Slime (1953) / int_a4be7043
comment
Da Chief: Miles Underbeck.
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 Slime (1953) / int_ac2094ca
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Red Shirt
 Slime (1953) / int_ac2094ca
comment
Red Shirt: Poor Officer Luke Matson. Mauve Shirt: His seemingly equally doomed partner Fred Storr survives, but is Driven to Madness.
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 Slime (1953) / int_b5049d76
type
Added Alliterative Appeal
 Slime (1953) / int_b5049d76
comment
Added Alliterative Appeal: The slime is frequently called a "hood of horror" or a "hooded horror" due to its preferred shape when hunting or attacking.
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 Slime (1953) / int_b64e1024
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Evil Smells Bad
 Slime (1953) / int_b64e1024
comment
Evil Smells Bad: The slime really stinks, and its appearance is usually preceded by its victims picking up its awful stink.
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 Slime (1953) / int_be009bbc
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Alliterative Name
 Slime (1953) / int_be009bbc
comment
Alliterative Name: Several. The slime's first human victim is named Henry Hossing, while the farmer whose cow it eats is Giles Gowse (although it isn't pronounced alliteratively), and the druggist is Jim Jelinson.
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 Slime (1953) / int_c04b1231
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Jump Scare
 Slime (1953) / int_c04b1231
comment
Jump Scare: Edward E. French's audio book version has a few very good ones through judicious use of sound effects and musical stings.
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 Slime (1953) / int_c5b47b36
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Offscreen Moment of Awesome
 Slime (1953) / int_c5b47b36
comment
Offscreen Moment of Awesome: The slime's third attack against humans is related secondhand to Underbeck by Sole Survivor Dolores and the driver who saved her.
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 Slime (1953) / int_ca87e3ec
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No Name Given
 Slime (1953) / int_ca87e3ec
comment
No Name Given: The driver who saves Dolores from the slime and the soldiers at the end, particularly the one wielding the flamethrower which ultimately kills the monster.
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 Slime (1953) / int_cde51255
type
Antagonist Title
 Slime (1953) / int_cde51255
comment
Antagonist Title: It's called "Slime," and the main threat to Clinton Center is, well, Exactly What It Says on the Tin.
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 Slime (1953) / int_d4d8d831
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Feuding Families
 Slime (1953) / int_d4d8d831
comment
Feuding Families: Neighbors Giles Gowse and Rupert Barnaby don't like each other very much and have a longstanding rivalry over an unspecified issue. Subverted somewhat in that both men are unmarried and live alone.
 Slime (1953) / int_d4d8d831
featureApplicability
-0.3
 Slime (1953) / int_d4d8d831
featureConfidence
1.0
 Slime (1953)
hasFeature
Slime (1953) / int_d4d8d831
 Slime (1953) / int_d67aae8f
type
It Was a Dark and Stormy Night
 Slime (1953) / int_d67aae8f
comment
It Was a Dark and Stormy Night: The story begins with a particularly nasty storm at sea, with huge waves that carry the slime over a mile inland and depositing it into the swamp.
 Slime (1953) / int_d67aae8f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Slime (1953) / int_d67aae8f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Slime (1953)
hasFeature
Slime (1953) / int_d67aae8f
 Slime (1953) / int_d6b5863
type
Driven to Madness
 Slime (1953) / int_d6b5863
comment
Driven to Madness: Dolores turns into a Screaming Woman after seeing her boyfriend eaten, while Officer Storr suffers a Heroic BSoD and is found just sitting down staring blankly after seeing his partner killed.
 Slime (1953) / int_d6b5863
featureApplicability
1.0
 Slime (1953) / int_d6b5863
featureConfidence
1.0
 Slime (1953)
hasFeature
Slime (1953) / int_d6b5863
 Slime (1953) / int_d9cf40fa
type
Screw This, I'm Outta Here
 Slime (1953) / int_d9cf40fa
comment
Screw This, I'm Outta Here: Attempted by the monster after it learns fear for the first time in its life, when it discovers that the humans' flashlights and searchlights are capable of burning its flesh. It tries to return to the sea, only for the soldiers to doggedly pursue it and burn it up with a flamethrower.
 Slime (1953) / int_d9cf40fa
featureApplicability
1.0
 Slime (1953) / int_d9cf40fa
featureConfidence
1.0
 Slime (1953)
hasFeature
Slime (1953) / int_d9cf40fa
 Slime (1953) / int_e1d1a88c
type
Disposable Vagrant
 Slime (1953) / int_e1d1a88c
comment
Disposable Vagrant: Poor Henry.
 Slime (1953) / int_e1d1a88c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Slime (1953) / int_e1d1a88c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Slime (1953)
hasFeature
Slime (1953) / int_e1d1a88c
 Slime (1953) / int_e83f211c
type
O.O.C. Is Serious Business
 Slime (1953) / int_e83f211c
comment
O.O.C. Is Serious Business: This is what finally clues Rupert Barnaby in to the fact there really is something amiss in Wharton's Swamp. Jibbe, normally a fearless hunting dog, becomes afraid and runs off. It honestly shocks Barnaby.
 Slime (1953) / int_e83f211c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Slime (1953) / int_e83f211c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Slime (1953)
hasFeature
Slime (1953) / int_e83f211c
 Slime (1953) / int_e8b0f099
type
Dark Is Evil
 Slime (1953) / int_e8b0f099
comment
Dark Is Evil: The slime is gray-black in color.
 Slime (1953) / int_e8b0f099
featureApplicability
1.0
 Slime (1953) / int_e8b0f099
featureConfidence
1.0
 Slime (1953)
hasFeature
Slime (1953) / int_e8b0f099
 Slime (1953) / int_eabb8130
type
Swamps Are Evil
 Slime (1953) / int_eabb8130
comment
Swamps Are Evil: The oozy Wharton's Swamp, where the slime ends up after being washed ashore.
 Slime (1953) / int_eabb8130
featureApplicability
1.0
 Slime (1953) / int_eabb8130
featureConfidence
1.0
 Slime (1953)
hasFeature
Slime (1953) / int_eabb8130
 Slime (1953) / int_ead0869d
type
Acquitted Too Late
 Slime (1953) / int_ead0869d
comment
Acquitted Too Late: Henry Hossing is initially suspected of having killed the missing Rupert Barnaby and Jason Bukmeist. Eventually, survivors begin reporting the truth. Not that it does Henry much good, considering he was the first victim.
 Slime (1953) / int_ead0869d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Slime (1953) / int_ead0869d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Slime (1953)
hasFeature
Slime (1953) / int_ead0869d
 Slime (1953) / int_ee19d278
type
Blob Monster
 Slime (1953) / int_ee19d278
comment
Blob Monster: From the bottom of the sea!
 Slime (1953) / int_ee19d278
featureApplicability
1.0
 Slime (1953) / int_ee19d278
featureConfidence
1.0
 Slime (1953)
hasFeature
Slime (1953) / int_ee19d278
 Slime (1953) / int_f23ad6de
type
Food Porn
 Slime (1953) / int_f23ad6de
comment
Food Porn: Brennan makes Henry's $2 breakfast sound like the most delicious thing in the world (likely as part of setting him up as Too Happy to Live to make the reader more sympathetic to the guy).
 Slime (1953) / int_f23ad6de
featureApplicability
1.0
 Slime (1953) / int_f23ad6de
featureConfidence
1.0
 Slime (1953)
hasFeature
Slime (1953) / int_f23ad6de
 Slime (1953) / int_f44ea9dc
type
Howl of Sorrow
 Slime (1953) / int_f44ea9dc
comment
Howl of Sorrow: Jibbe emits one after his owner is killed.
 Slime (1953) / int_f44ea9dc
featureApplicability
1.0
 Slime (1953) / int_f44ea9dc
featureConfidence
1.0
 Slime (1953)
hasFeature
Slime (1953) / int_f44ea9dc
 Slime (1953) / int_f88bba7c
type
Detect Evil
 Slime (1953) / int_f88bba7c
comment
Detect Evil: The sheer alien smell and presence of the slime typically allows its victims to sense its presence just before it strikes, eliciting a sense of Primal Fear within them.
 Slime (1953) / int_f88bba7c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Slime (1953) / int_f88bba7c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Slime (1953)
hasFeature
Slime (1953) / int_f88bba7c
 Slime (1953) / int_fa6bfde9
type
Have a Gay Old Time
 Slime (1953) / int_fa6bfde9
comment
Have a Gay Old Time: At one point, Gowse is described as "queer."
 Slime (1953) / int_fa6bfde9
featureApplicability
1.0
 Slime (1953) / int_fa6bfde9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Slime (1953)
hasFeature
Slime (1953) / int_fa6bfde9
 Slime (1953) / int_fab3c1e1
type
Weakened by the Light
 Slime (1953) / int_fab3c1e1
comment
Weakened by the Light: Due to how used it is to the bottomless black depths of the sea, the monster really hates light, which actually burns its flesh. Any light, from daylight, which it hides from by burying itself in pond muck during the day, to the light from fire like Henry Hossing's campfire, to artificial light produced by flashlights.
 Slime (1953) / int_fab3c1e1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Slime (1953) / int_fab3c1e1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Slime (1953)
hasFeature
Slime (1953) / int_fab3c1e1
 Slime (1953) / int_fd1b902c
type
Non-Malicious Monster
 Slime (1953) / int_fd1b902c
comment
Non-Malicious Monster: Just really dangerous. Whatever one may think of the slime, which is dark, voracious and exceptionally violent, it's still just a protoplasmic predator without a malicious thought in what passes for its mind. The only evilness attributed to it comes from its understandably terrified human victims, who are more put off by its alien presence than anything else.
 Slime (1953) / int_fd1b902c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Slime (1953) / int_fd1b902c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Slime (1953)
hasFeature
Slime (1953) / int_fd1b902c
 Slime (1953) / int_ff6ae1f6
type
Evil-Detecting Dog
 Slime (1953) / int_ff6ae1f6
comment
Evil-Detecting Dog: Barnaby's hunting dog Jibbe bolts the second he senses the titular menace is close by, much to his owner's surprise and consternation.
 Slime (1953) / int_ff6ae1f6
featureApplicability
1.0
 Slime (1953) / int_ff6ae1f6
featureConfidence
1.0
 Slime (1953)
hasFeature
Slime (1953) / int_ff6ae1f6
 Slime (1953) / int_name
type
ItemName
 Slime (1953) / int_name
comment
 Slime (1953) / int_name
featureApplicability
1.0
 Slime (1953) / int_name
featureConfidence
1.0
 Slime (1953)
hasFeature
Slime (1953) / int_name
 Slime (1953) / int_name
itemName
Slime (1953)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Slime (1953)
hasFeature
Blob Monster / int_2d296621
 Slime (1953)
hasFeature
Disposable Vagrant / int_2d296621
 Slime (1953)
hasFeature
Monster Media / int_2d296621
 Slime (1953)
hasFeature
Novelette / int_2d296621
 Slime (1953)
hasFeature
Ominous Obsidian Ooze / int_2d296621
 Slime (1953)
hasFeature
Sci-Fi Horror / int_2d296621
 Slime (1953)
hasFeature
Short Story / int_2d296621