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A History of Singapore Horror

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7 July 2017

Singaporeans have always had a morbid fascination with the supernatural. Ng Yi-Sheng examines the culture of horror in our oral folklore, books and films.

An illustration of Hantu Puteri (Ghost Princess) by A. F. Anthony. All rights reserved, McHugh, J. N. (1959). Hantu Hantu: An Account of Ghost Belief in Modern Malaya (2nd edition) (p.45). Singapore: Published by Donald Moore for Eastern Universities Press. (Call no.: RCLOS 398.3 MAC).

An illustration of Hantu Puteri (Ghost Princess) by A. F. Anthony. All rights reserved, McHugh, J. N. (1959). Hantu Hantu: An Account of Ghost Belief in Modern Malaya (2nd edition) (p.45). Singapore: Published by Donald Moore for Eastern Universities Press. (Call no.: RCLOS 398.3 MAC).

Folk Horror (1810s–1940s)

An anchak or sacrificial tray used by the Malay medicine man (or bomoh) for occult practices. The tray has a fringe around it called “centipedes’ feet”. The ketupat and lepat (rice receptacles made of plaited palm fronds) are hung from the “suspenders” attached to the tray. All rights reserved, Skeat, W. W. (1900). Malay Magic: Being an Introduction to the Folklore and Popular Religion of the Malay Peninsula (p. 414). London: Macmillan and Co. Collection of the National Library, Singapore. (Accession nos.: B02930611K; B29267256F).

An anchak or sacrificial tray used by the Malay medicine man (or bomoh) for occult practices. The tray has a fringe around it called “centipedes’ feet”. The ketupat and lepat (rice receptacles made of plaited palm fronds) are hung from the “suspenders” attached to the tray. All rights reserved, Skeat, W. W. (1900). Malay Magic: Being an Introduction to the Folklore and Popular Religion of the Malay Peninsula (p. 414). London: Macmillan and Co. Collection of the National Library, Singapore. (Accession nos.: B02930611K; B29267256F).

Diorama featuring hapless souls being tortured in the afterlife at Haw Par Villa’s Ten Courts of Hell. Photo by David Shamma, 22 March 2014. Courtesy of Flickr.

Diorama featuring hapless souls being tortured in the afterlife at Haw Par Villa’s Ten Courts of Hell. Photo by David Shamma, 22 March 2014. Courtesy of Flickr.

Malayan Horror (1950s–1970s)

Maria Menado as the pontianak, a female vampire from Malay mythology, in B.N. Rao’s 1957 Dendam Pontianak. © Dendam Pontianak. Directed by B. Narayan Rao and produced by Cathay-Keris Films, 1957.

Maria Menado as the pontianak, a female vampire from Malay mythology, in B.N. Rao’s 1957 Dendam Pontianak. © Dendam Pontianak. Directed by B. Narayan Rao and produced by Cathay-Keris Films, 1957.

Singaporean Horror (1980s–early 2000s)

Damien Sin has published four volumes of his Classic Singapore Horror Stories while Russell Lee’s True Singapore Ghost Stories is already into its 25th volume. Both series are huge hits with horror fans in Singapore. All rights reserved, Angsana Books.

Damien Sin has published four volumes of his Classic Singapore Horror Stories while Russell Lee’s True Singapore Ghost Stories is already into its 25th volume. Both series are huge hits with horror fans in Singapore. All rights reserved, Angsana Books.

An illustration from the story “Suffer the Children” in Damien Sin’s Classic Singapore Horror Stories (Book 1) . All rights reserved, Sin, D. (1992). Classic Singapore Horror Stories (p. 74). Singapore: Flame of the Forest. (Call no.: RSING S823 SIN)

An illustration from the story “Suffer the Children” in Damien Sin’s Classic Singapore Horror Stories (Book 1) . All rights reserved, Sin, D. (1992). Classic Singapore Horror Stories (p. 74). Singapore: Flame of the Forest. (Call no.: RSING S823 SIN)

(Above) Incredible Tales, an anthology series based on local horror narratives, was screened on Mediacorp’s Channel 5 from 2005 to 2013. Courtesy of Mediacorp.(Top) Film still and movie poster from Kelvin Tong’s The Maid (女佣; 2006). The film is about a newly arrived Filipino domestic worker in Singapore who encounters supernatural forces during the Chinese seventh lunar month. Courtesy of Mediacorp.

(Above) Incredible Tales, an anthology series based on local horror narratives, was screened on Mediacorp’s Channel 5 from 2005 to 2013. Courtesy of Mediacorp.(Top) Film still and movie poster from Kelvin Tong’s The Maid (女佣; 2006). The film is about a newly arrived Filipino domestic worker in Singapore who encounters supernatural forces during the Chinese seventh lunar month. Courtesy of Mediacorp.

Cosmopolitan Horror (2000s–present)

Universal Studios Singapore’s Halloween Horror Nights is an annual festival of horror held since 2011. The event features actors playing creepy characters straight out of Hollywood: vampires, aliens, witches, serial killers and clowns. Interspersed with these are a few scares inspired by non-American cultures, such as Chinese fox fairies, Japan’s Suicide Forest and the Mexican Day of the Dead. Courtesy of Dejiki.com.

Universal Studios Singapore’s Halloween Horror Nights is an annual festival of horror held since 2011. The event features actors playing creepy characters straight out of Hollywood: vampires, aliens, witches, serial killers and clowns. Interspersed with these are a few scares inspired by non-American cultures, such as Chinese fox fairies, Japan’s Suicide Forest and the Mexican Day of the Dead. Courtesy of Dejiki.com.

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