Original post here. Original text:
Tag Archives: vore
Eerie tentacle beast
Original post here. Image contains the text “Eerie! Super Special Summer Giant! The Manhungers: Search the stars for the captive of deadly man-eating aliens. Plus, Extermiator One! He was created half-man, half-mahcine! For one purpose: to kill! More pages, more stories, more color, than ever!” Sourced to spaceghostzombie via spacebitches.
The Ultimate Guide to Carnivorous Plants
Original post here. Images contain the url http://www.taurusartworks.com/. Sourced to bbstatdrawn via april476.
Big gulp
This animated .gif consists of a few frames from the 2010 movie Sharktopus. According to Wikipedia, the movie features a half-shark, half-octopus creature commissioned by the U.S. Navy that escapes its creators to attack beach-goers in Puerto Vallarta. There’s a short poor-quality clip on YouTube featuring the bungee-jumping scene from which this .gif was excerpted. A few more Sharktopus .gifs may be seen in this Tumblr post.
Image provenance by Bacchus at Erosblog.
Frankestein’s Monster and the vore plant
Original post here. The pair of images are a comic with captions and dialog as follows:
Panel One
Title (1): The Monster of Frankestein and the Plant
The Scientist (2): There. See? It eats spiders now! The plant eats spiders! It has advanced — only week ago it could only eat flies! What will it be able to eat next week? And the week after? And then, in time, perhaps…
Panel Two
Caption (1): The scientist puts the baby donw on the floor in reach of the plant’s tentacles…and at the same time, the Frankenstein Monster emerges from another room…
Panel Three
Caption (1): The monster quickly sees what is going to happen to the baby. Infuriated, he sends the scientist sprawling…
Panel Four
Caption (1): …and grabs the baby out of the way of the reaching tentacles!
Panel Five
The Scientist (1): You moronic beast! What are you doing? Helping me or hindering me? You’re here to help me! Give me that baby!
Panel Six
The Scientist (1): Save me! Save me! Get this thing off me! I’ll do anything for you — give you anything! But save me before it eats me!
Panel Seven
Caption (1): The Frankestein monster moves toward the scientist. But his steps are slow. Not those of someone coming to another’s aid
The Scientist (2): Hurry! I can –feel –the teeth in me — hurry!
Panel Eight
The Scientist (1): Why — don’t you — get here faster…just get this thing…off me…and YAAAAH!
Panel Nine
Caption (1): Almost like a living animal, the plant pulsates, little sounds come from it as an awful hedeous thing happens! And the monster watches, just stands there and watches for two hours…
Panel Ten
Caption (1): That is all. The Frankenstein Monster knows the scientist will never bother him or anyone else evermore.
Panel Eleven
Caption (1): The plant is no longer hungry…its appetite is satiated. From flies to spiders to mice to a cat…and now an entire man. and the buds atop the plant once more undergo a change — a ghastly, awful change…
Image sourced via greatgrottu. Original text:
Some people think that Charles B. Griffith got the idea for his 1960 screenplay The Little Shop of Horrors from the 1931 short story Green Thoughts by John Collier, me I think a more likely candidate is a comic book story by Dick Briefer from 1951, The Monster of Frankenstein and the Plant.
Not the same, but look at the the design of the plant and the ending.
Tentacle vore
These are two images from a set of at least four (others are here and here) featuring an encounter between Ingrid, a character from the Street Fighter game franchise, and Shuma-Gorath, a monster from a Robert E. Howard story later used in several Marvel comics. Artist information for this series could not be discovered.
Image provenance by Bacchus at Erosblog.
Digestion
Original post here. Sourced to danhentai via bbstatdrawn.
Mermaid vore
According to Danbooru, this art is by the artist Pukao, who also sometimes goes by the name Pukarin, and is said to be a “Japanese artist specializing in cute chibi monster-girls.” In addition to the Danbooru galleries, the artist maintains a presence on Pixiv, and also here.
Image provenance by Bacchus at Erosblog.
Shark attack
According to this blog post, this image is artwork from a 1975 Japanese gekiga comic book official tie-in to the original Jaws movie, published by Herald Books. Another site explains that gekiga is not manga, being instead “a more dramatic style of Japanese comic art aimed at an adult audience.”
Image provenance by Bacchus at Erosblog.
King Kong gets an urban snack
Original post here. Sourced via damsellover. Original text: