Animal Sex Snake: Sex Video
Serpents on Screen: A Comprehensive Filmography and Analysis of Popular Snake Videos
2.2 Snakes as Horror or Psychological Symbols
- Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981) – Indy’s fear of snakes (“Why did it have to be snakes?”) in the Well of Souls scene. Real non-venomous snakes (e.g., Natrix spp.) were used, along with rubber props. The scene plays on ophidiophobia as a character flaw.
- Conan the Barbarian (1982) – The “Pit of Snakes” sequence uses red-tailed boas to symbolize doom and resurrection.
- The VVitch (2015) – A pet corn snake appears as a familiar, subverting horror by showing the snake as a calm, domestic creature before the narrative shifts to goat-based terror.
3.5 Myth-Busting and Educational Shorts
- Creator: The Late Braxton Ray (and others like Clint’s Reptiles).
- Popular topics: “Do snakes have ears?” (no external ears, but detect vibrations); “Are all snakes venomous?” (no); “Can a snake swallow a human?” (only very large pythons/anacondas, and extremely rare).
- Metrics: One 60-second TikTok debunking “snakes chase humans” received 47 million views, demonstrating high public appetite for correcting misinformation.
3. The Animated Charmer: The Rescuers (1977)
The Snake: Medusa’s pet, Brutus and Nero. While Disney usually makes snakes evil, here they made them tragicomic. These two bumbling albino pythons are the hench-pets of the villain Madame Medusa. They are clumsy, easily fooled, and surprisingly cute—proof that a snake can get a laugh.