Azazel in popular culture

Azazel, a demon from Jewish mythology, has been developed into characters in popular culture.[1][2][3]

Books

Movies

  • In the film "Fallen" with Denzel Washington, Azazel was a demonic entity passed from person to person by touch.
  • In the Turkish horror movie Şeytan-ı Racim, he helps to get rid of jinn-persecution, but impersonate to the people as a human called Mehmet Efendi.
  • In the film ‘’The House with a Clock in Its Walls’’, Azazel is a demon who offers corrupt powers to the antagonist Isaac Izard (played by Kyle MacLachlan).
  • In the film Semum, Azazil is mentioned by a demon to be his new lord after he has abandoned God.

Games

  • In The Binding of Isaac: Rebirth, Azazel is a playable character. He begins the game with the ability to fire a small red laser called brimstone and has the appearance of a demon, with black skin and wings.
  • In the 2011 action video game El Shaddai: Ascension of the Metatron, Azazel is one of the strongest Grigori who controls the human evolutions also the angelic and mortal technologies. Azazel is the right-man of the fallen angel Semyaza. In the near-end game, Azazel transforms into a Locust-like monster.
  • Azazel is a demon in many of the Shin Megami Tensei series of video games, whose lore describes it as a Grigori in Judaism.
  • In Star Ocean: Till the End of Time, Azazel is the Sphere Corporation's Chief of Security and helps release the Executioneers by orders from Luther Lansfield. His name was changed to Azazer in the English version.
  • Azazel is the name of the final boss in Namco's Tekken 6. He is a huge, demonic, crystalline, dragon-like creature, and he is fought inside an ancient, torch-lit temple in the Middle East.
  • Azazel is the name given to the Shadow of Ichiryusai Madarame, the second boss of Persona 5.
  • Azazel appears in the Warhammer Fantasy world as a champion of the chaos god Slaanesh.
  • In Kingdom of Loathing, Azazel, the Archduke of Hey Deze, sends the player on a quest to return his misplaced talismans of evil power. He is described as a "rip in reality that's full of red, glowing eyes and razor-sharp teeth".[5]
  • In Helltaker, Azazel appears as one of the characters the protagonist can add to his harem.
  • In Origins, the first installment of the Detectives United series of hidden object games from Elephant Games, Azazel is the name of one of the five stones of power needed to construct an artifact called the Reality Cube. Its specific virtue is that it can supply an unlimited source of energy.
  • Azazel appears in Dragalia Lost as a summonable dragon whose existence was scrubbed from history by the Ilian Church.

Television

  • In the CW TV series Supernatural, Azazel is the main antagonist in seasons one and two, whom the main characters begin hunting to seek revenge for the death of their mother. However, the name is not mentioned until season three, prior to this he is always called "the Yellow-Eyed Demon".
  • In the anime Rage of Bahamut: Genesis, Azazel is an antagonistic fallen angel and the subordinate of Lucifer, both of whom side with the demons against the gods.
  • In the mini-series Fallen, Azazel appears in the second part. He is released after 5000 years of imprisonment and starts his search for Aaron.
  • The British TV series Hex featured fallen angel Azazeal (Michael Fassbender) as one of its primary antagonists.
  • The Mortal Instruments TV adaptation Shadowhunters depicted Azazel in season 2, portrayed by Brett Donahue.
  • The anime High School DxD features a fallen angel named Azazel.

References

  1. Music popular culture identities - Page 143 Richard Young - 2002 "The band Azazel is named after a traditional Jewish demon (although there are non- Israeli bands called Azazel as well). Bishop Of Hexen's CD Archives of an Enchanted Philosophy (Hammerheart, 1996) draws on biblical stories of witches."
  2. Supernatural Youth: The Rise of the Teen Hero in Literature and ... - Page 145 Jes Battis - 2011 " Azazeal is based on Azazel, the fallen angel credited with inventing warfare and with teaching men to create weapons from the Book of Enoch;30 this figure, who is ..."
  3. Overkill: Sex and Violence in Contemporary Russian Popular Culture - Page 234 Eliot Borenstein - 2008 "When Akunin introduces his readers to Erast Petrovich Fandorin in Azazel' (The Winter Queen), the young hero is an orphan, and Fandorin's rootlessness is ..."
  4. Milne, Lesley (1990). Mikhail Bulgakov: A Critical Biography. Cambridge University Press. p. 246. ISBN 9780521227285.
  5. Asymmetric Publications. Kingdom of Loathing. Scene: Entering Pandamonium for first time. Level/area: Pandamonium. Azazel hovers over his throne. He looks like a rip in reality that's full of red, glowing eyes and razor-sharp teeth.
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