Copyright 2018 by Gary L. Pullman
The
Invasion of the Body Snatchers
(1978) remake starring Donald Sutherland takes an eerie turn when a
dog with a man's face makes its—his?—appearance on the screen.
Offhand, I don't remember what accounts for this strange
human-bestial hybrid, but, according to a synopsis
of the film, “Matthew and Elizabeth are exposed as human when”
Elizabeth screams “upon seeing a mutant dog with a human face, the
result of . . . . a mutagenic effect” which caused the assimilation
of “both Harry and the dog into a composite organism.”
Such special effects were
relatively new at the time, and the human-canine “composite
organism” looked especially bizarre on film. Of course, such
hybrids have a long history. Ancient mythology, Egyptian, Greek,
Chinese, and otherwise, frequently includes such creatures as the
sirens (bird women and, later, fish women), lamias (snake men and
women), harpies (women with eagles' wings), gorgons (women with
snakes for hair), satyrs (goat men), centaurs (horse men), sphinxes
(lions with human heads), and many others.
Some hybrids consist of
human bodies with animal heads (the jackal-headed Anubis, the
cat-headed Bastet, the elephant-headed Ganesha, the frog-headed
Hequet, the falcon-headed Horus and Monthu, the ram-headed Khnum, the
cobra-headed Meretseger, the crocodile-headed Sobek, the ibis-headed
Thoth, and the boar-headed Varaha, to name but a few).
Other hybrids are anthropomorphic creatures with added animal parts, including the wings of birds (angels), insects (fairies), or bats (the dragon Hatuibwari); birds' legs (Lilitu) dogs' legs (Adlet), or other animals' legs; and cows' horns (Hathor) or stags' antlers Pashupati). To their anthropomorphic forms, some hybrids add even more animal parts, as many as three, four, five, or even more, from diverse species. For example, the Japanese Baku has an elephant's head, a rhinoceros's eyes, a tiger's legs, a bear's body, and an ox's tail.
Other hybrids are anthropomorphic creatures with added animal parts, including the wings of birds (angels), insects (fairies), or bats (the dragon Hatuibwari); birds' legs (Lilitu) dogs' legs (Adlet), or other animals' legs; and cows' horns (Hathor) or stags' antlers Pashupati). To their anthropomorphic forms, some hybrids add even more animal parts, as many as three, four, five, or even more, from diverse species. For example, the Japanese Baku has an elephant's head, a rhinoceros's eyes, a tiger's legs, a bear's body, and an ox's tail.
One reason such creatures
are horrific is that they represent exceptions to the taxonomy, or
classification system, scientists use to classify organisms. For
scientists (and the vast majority of laypersons), there is a
clear-cut demarcation, or boundary line, between human beings (the
only extant members of the subtribe Hominina)
and non-human animals. When such boundaries are crossed, as they are,
or would be, with human-animal hybrids, not only confusion results,
but so does the idea that humans are somehow superior to “lesser”
(non-human) animals. To insist on a difference between human beings
and non-human animals is to maintain the superiority of the former
over the latter. If humans are nothing more than an animal, every
non-human animal is equal to humans in status and importance. There
can be no hierarchy, such as that which was established by medieval
Christianity's doctrine of the divinely established “great chain of
being,” the basis, like God's decree, in Genesis 1:26, that “man”
should “have dominion” over the earth and its fauna:
And
God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness: and let
them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the
air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every
creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.
Rather than being the
image of God, and “the
crown of creation,” humans would be just another member of the
animal kingdom.
The taboo against bestiality is probably intended to safeguard the qualitative difference between humans and nonhuman animals. The fact that, although not universal, this taboo is widely in effect across the globe, with offenders subject to death or incarceration in some cases, suggests how insistent the separation between the categories of human and nonhuman continue to be. In horror fiction, it is the violation of this separation, the boundary between human and nonhuman animals that the violation represents, that is horrific, which is why the dog-faced hybrid in The Invasion of the Body Snatchers is eerie, even today, despite the less-than-spectacular (by today's standards) special effects that produced it.
The taboo against bestiality is probably intended to safeguard the qualitative difference between humans and nonhuman animals. The fact that, although not universal, this taboo is widely in effect across the globe, with offenders subject to death or incarceration in some cases, suggests how insistent the separation between the categories of human and nonhuman continue to be. In horror fiction, it is the violation of this separation, the boundary between human and nonhuman animals that the violation represents, that is horrific, which is why the dog-faced hybrid in The Invasion of the Body Snatchers is eerie, even today, despite the less-than-spectacular (by today's standards) special effects that produced it.
Other
movies (and novels) that mix both science fiction and horror, as they
do man (or woman) and nonhuman animals, include H. G. Wells's novel
1896 The
Island of Dr. Moreau,
the 1932 movie Island
of Lost Souls,
the 1986 movie The
Fly, the
2009 film Splice,
and the 2001 movie Dagon.