Silver bullet
In
Ballistic effectiveness
Silver bullets differ from lead bullets in several respects.
The terminal impact is somewhat speculative and will depend on a variety of factors including bullet size and shape, flight distance, and target material. At short ranges, the silver bullet will most likely give better penetration due to its higher shear modulus, and will not deform as much as a lead bullet.
A 2007 episode of
In folklore
Some authors asserted that the idea of the
An account of a Jämte about were-bears in 1936 attributes bullets of silver as the method of killing.[12] Swedish folklore tends to ascribe silver bullets as a catch all weapon against creatures, as wizards or the skogsrå, that are "hard" against regular ammunition.[13][14]
In the Brothers Grimm fairy-tale of The Two Brothers, a bullet-proof witch is shot down by silver buttons, fired from a gun.
In some epic folk songs about Bulgarian rebel leader Delyo, he is described as invulnerable to normal weapons, driving his enemies to cast a silver bullet in order to murder him.[15]
In popular culture
A number of fictional Wild West heroes used silver bullets as weapons, to symbolize their purity of heart. The best known of these was the Lone Ranger in all his incarnations: after solving the problem of the week, he would leave a silver bullet behind as his mark. Clayton Moore, who played the Ranger in the television series, was known to give away silver bullet props, made from aluminum, to fans in the 1950s.[16]
Fantasy-horror has continued the use of silver bullets as monster-slayers.
In an untitled early Batman serial from 1939, written by Gardner Fox for Detective Comics issues 31 and 32, Batman declares that "only a silver bullet may kill a vampire," and swiftly forges such a weapon to defeat the coven of vampires who kidnapped Bruce Wayne's fiancée.
The 1941 film The Wolf Man, and its sequels and spinoffs, codified silver (whether in bullet form or otherwise) as the definitive death-dealer for werewolves, to the point where this weakness is often regarded as exclusive to lycanthropes. Notable film examples are Silver Bullet (1985) and Cursed (2005), with the latter being in part a self-referential spoof of the 1941 film.
The Strain novels by Guillermo del Toro and Chuck Hogan return the silver bullet to its earlier status as a weapon against the strigoi, who are broadly analogous to vampires.
See also
- Golden hammer
- List of topics characterized as pseudoscience
- M829A1, nicknamed the "Silver Bullet"
- Magic bullet (medical)
- "No Silver Bullet"
- Silver Arrows
- Silver lining
References
- ^ Guiley, Rosemary, ed. (2011). "Silver". The Encyclopedia of Vampires & Werewolves (2nd ed.). Checkmark Books. p. 313.
- ^ Bunson, Matthew, ed. (1993). "Silver Bullet". The Vampire Encyclopedia. Gramercy Books. p. 240.
- ^ Briggs, Michael (September 2008). "History Channel Shoot". Patricia Briggs. Retrieved January 25, 2017.
In this photo, you can see the marks the rifling in the barrel left on the bullet when it was fired. I'd like to see a little more on the nose, but the driving bands show very nice engraving.
- ^ Mythbusters: Silver vs. Lead Bullets (Television production). The Discovery Channel. 2007. Retrieved January 25, 2017.
- ^ Mythbusters: Hollywood Gunslingers (Television production). The Discovery Channel. June 17, 2012.
- ^ Briggs, Michael. "Silver Bullets". Patricia Briggs. Retrieved January 25, 2017.
- ISBN 1-85348-888-7.
- ISBN 978-1578593675.
- ISBN 978-1502605108.
- ISBN 978-2-37873-070-3.
- ISBN 2-9516719-0-3.
- ^ Ella Odstedt 2004: Norrländsk folktradition. Uppsala. s. 147
- ^ Finlands svenska folkdiktning II 3:2, s. 330
- ^ Sven Rothman 1941: Östgötska folkminnen. Uppsala. s.41
- ISBN 978-954-304-232-6.
- ^ "Lone Ranger "silver bullet"". National Museum of American History. 24 April 2019. Retrieved 8 May 2023.