Nadie
07/11/17 06:41AM
geekgirl8 said:
Kaa in the books is the fucking coolest, and I am perpetually in a state of mild irritation that he has not been adapted properly to film yet. XD I want to see him dance and hypnotize the monkeys in glorious HD graphics, goddammit! That is all that I want! *slams fist*

And hell yeah, the words he uses when he hypnotizes small helpless animals is awesome. I say go for it, the snek needs more love. \o/


God, I wish I could remember what it was, but I don't: a loooooooooooooong time ago I saw some old other animated adaptation of the jungle book where Kaa actually did do the dancing thing on the Bandar-Log. Wouldn't know where to begin to search for it though.

But yeah... wouldn't it be nice if a certain Cornflower encountered a certain adder? Subtly seduced, silently but suddenly sucked into the snake's starving stomach?
geekgirl8
07/11/17 06:45AM
Nadie said:
God, I wish I could remember what it was, but I don't: a loooooooooooooong time ago I saw some old other animated adaptation of the jungle book where Kaa actually did do the dancing thing on the Bandar-Log. Wouldn't know where to begin to search for it though.

But yeah... wouldn't it be nice if a certain Cornflower encountered a certain adder? Subtly seduced, silently but suddenly sucked into the snake's starving stomach?


OH I know exactly which one you're talking about, it was a Russian animated cartoon! youtu.be/TAkyKttnKaM?t=2204

WELL I don't go in for the whole vore thing personally, but if that is your cup of tea, I say sip it! Or rather in this case, gulp it!

Nadie
07/11/17 06:52AM
geekgirl8 said:
OH I know exactly which one you're talking about, it was a Russian animated cartoon! youtu.be/TAkyKttnKaM?t=2204

WELL I don't go in for the whole vore thing personally, but if that is your cup of tea, I say sip it! Or rather in this case, gulp it!




That might be the animation, but I don't think so. I think it was an even different one. Something very low budget, and I know it was in English. Maybe I'll find it one day.

And as for the vore... yeah... It's a real shame being in a minority of a minority here. Lonely. But when life gives you anthropomorphic mice and hungry venomous snakes, you make lemonade.
laststand0810
08/22/17 07:50AM
sooo I was looking for a major thread for hypnosis in manga... like the Mind Control Scenes in Japanese and Western Animation!! thread for anime, but there seems to have none.... so I just post here, hope it will become one like the above

chapter 7 of Maou no Hisho featuring main heroine being brought out to be experimenting brainwashing methods on, on which she gladly accepted, got many varieties to look for, just it was a PG home comedy manga so don't expect to have any sexual means. All of the routes lead to hilarious conclusion which is kind of amusing :)
Whisper
08/22/17 07:40PM
You can read the mandchurian candidate as well, a soldier being brainwashed by the communists, becoming a sleeper agent tasked to assassinate and forget to set up a coup in the US
His trigger being the queen of diamonds card.
Contorted
08/23/17 04:08AM
".....And when you're down here with me, YOU'LL FLOAT TOO!"
Nadie
08/23/17 04:12AM
Contorted said:
".....And when you're down here with me, YOU'LL FLOAT TOO!"


<<www.youtube.com/watch?v=iJX0zXvrgmU|Indeed.>> Now I think about it, Stephen King wrote a very descriptive account of the hypnotic effects of vampires' eyes in 'Salem's Lot. Kind of ruins the whole 'horror' angle when you're (I'm) consequently rooting for the bloodthirsty creatures of the night.
Contorted
08/23/17 04:54AM
Nadie said:
<<www.youtube.com/watch?v=iJX0zXvrgmU|Indeed.>> Now I think about it, Stephen King wrote a very descriptive account of the hypnotic effects of vampires' eyes in 'Salem's Lot. Kind of ruins the whole 'horror' angle when you're (I'm) consequently rooting for the bloodthirsty creatures of the night.


Considering how a lot of King's books are connected through The Dark Tower series, that isn't all that surprising.
Nadie
08/23/17 04:55AM
Contorted said:
Considering how a lot of King's books are connected through The Dark Tower series, that isn't all that surprising.


King's continuity between otherwise unrelated books makes my brain itch.
TheFinalAnubis
03/22/18 11:01PM
Just gonna flat out say it since No one else has. There's a series of books called The Hypnotists. Id recommend at least reading the first one
Contorted
03/23/18 12:04AM
TheFinalAnubis said:
Just gonna flat out say it since No one else has. There's a series of books called The Hypnotists. Id recommend at least reading the first one


Care to go into more detail about what they're about besides the obvious?
someguy231
03/23/18 04:41AM
As far as I read in the Legend of Drizzt novels, for the Dark Elf Trilogy, Malice Do'Urden loves to use the Command Spell, if that counts as MC.
TheFinalAnubis
03/23/18 05:51AM
Contorted said:
Care to go into more detail about what they're about besides the obvious?


I'll try to sum it up as best as I can. A kid discoveres by accident that he can control people's minds with his eyes that shift color (not kaa like, more of a mood ring type, just softer and faster) and he is recruited into this institute that trains anyone with the ability to be "mind benders" aka hypnotists to perfect their talent. The kid is actually an incredibly powerful hypnotist because both of his parents have families with a reputation as powerful hypnotists throughout history. The director of the institute actually turns out to be a bad guy who has been secretly hypnotizing celebs and politicians, and actually rigs an upcoming election to make sure he's pulling the strings of NYC. The director actually finds out that the kid has the ability to hypnotize through video, something previously thought impossible, and creates a virus that causes a pop-up video of the kid using his eyes to hypnotize and rig the election. Shit goes down, the kid actually gets hypnotized himself and almost jumps to his death from a really tall height, and the director is of course arrested but the kid has to move cities to protect his family. I skipped a lot but it's a good book
Knuke
03/23/18 07:11AM
TheFinalAnubis said:
I'll try to sum it up as best as I can. A kid discoveres by accident that he can control people's minds with his eyes that shift color (not kaa like, more of a mood ring type, just softer and faster) and he is recruited into this institute that trains anyone with the ability to be "mind benders" aka hypnotists to perfect their talent. The kid is actually an incredibly powerful hypnotist because both of his parents have families with a reputation as powerful hypnotists throughout history. The director of the institute actually turns out to be a bad guy who has been secretly hypnotizing celebs and politicians, and actually rigs an upcoming election to make sure he's pulling the strings of NYC. The director actually finds out that the kid has the ability to hypnotize through video, something previously thought impossible, and creates a virus that causes a pop-up video of the kid using his eyes to hypnotize and rig the election. Shit goes down, the kid actually gets hypnotized himself and almost jumps to his death from a really tall height, and the director is of course arrested but the kid has to move cities to protect his family. I skipped a lot but it's a good book


I'm just gonna be that guy: Any sexy time or nah?
Grim
03/23/18 12:15PM
there's examples in practically every vampire series book ever, although rarely to the main character, or is so there is less sexuality to it
examples I can think of include through out the Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter series by Laurell K. Hamilton, several of the red court and white court vampires in the Harry Dresden series by Jim Butcher [which also has faerie control], and the Hollows series by Kim Harrison

however, despite there being mind control in all of these, there's something about them that fails to make it titillating, at least to me

Now there are three books in particular in which the hypnosis scene sparked my mind;

In "the White Gryphon" by Mercedes Lackey and Larry Dixon, there is a minor villain early on who is the equivalent of a magical fantasy therapist; he has been enslaving and sexually dominating at least 6 of his female clients. We see one of our protagonists bust in on a session he's having, and the woman, who is naked and bound in an uncomfortable position by ordinary thread, is so entranced won't move or acknowledge the presence of the guards stopping her master because she has not been ordered to

While there are a few sprinklings of mind control or magic dominance throughout, in the 3rd book of the Mercy Thompson series, "Iron Kissed", by Patricia Briggs, has a human as the main villain with a fey artifact, a goblet; in addition to healing and truth powers, it can also "enslave" humans - we mostly see it work like a potent "charm person" on our protagonist, who is normally resistant to magic - he is manipulating her throughout the story, and he makes her drink a lot from it towards the end, and it really messes her up

Lastly, and I might be projecting a little too much on this one, is "Lost in Translation" by Margaret Ball, in which a college girl accidentally gets sekaikei'd to a magical world by the villain, who immediately puts her under a charm spell so she won't report him, and she's pretty much bespelled by him throughout the entire book.... its not a great book, but I had several daydream fantasies that he would fall in love back and give up his evil ways
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