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In the film Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest, the Kraken is a hideous marine being, pirate Davy Jones' monster, who can tear off your face and drag you into the abyssal depths of the sea with its mouth. He is summoned when the crew of his ship, the Flying Dutchman, turns a steering wheel with handles, which when it reaches the top hits the hull, vibrating the sea and awakening the Kraken.
There is a clear reference to the Kraken in Clash of the Titans, a 1981 film that had convincing special effects at the time, when Perseus kills the kraken, showing Medusa's head turning it into stone. In this film, which portrays some brushstrokes of Greek mythology. The Kraken is the being created by Cronos with the purpose of defending him when present on Earth, a time when he would be weakened. Cronos (in Greek: Κρόνος, god of time, Χρόνος[1]) is the supreme deity of the second generation of gods in Greek and Titan mythology, corresponding to the Roman god Saturn. In the 2010 remake, the sea creature had been created by Hades, under the control of Poseidon, and was sent to destroy the city of Argos if Princess Andromeda's sacrifice was not met, but Perseus intervened, as happened in the first version of the film. , petrifying him with Medusa's head, ending Hades' curse.
The mythological being also appears in an episode of the cartoon Fairly OddParents, in which Cosmo (one of the fairies and main characters of the program) is tried for having sunk Atlantis (9 times). And Ben 10, a monster that wanted to protect Jonah Melville's eggs, and also in Knights of the Zodiac, the marina general of the Arctic Ocean, Isaac, is represented by Kraken. Jules Verne also mentions Kraken several times in his work Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea. And in God of War 2 Kratos (the game's protagonist) faces Kraken. Tomb explorer Lara Croft in Tomb Raider: Underworld also encounters Kraken, who has become trapped in an underwater cave in Niflheim.
The Kraken was a sea monster widely used in popular culture, including a lot of information, mainly from films, and series that use it in legends, such as the film Clash of the Titans[which one?]. It also appears in the game Age of Mythology as a mythical Norse marine unit with the scientific name Psychroteuthis Pelagii. It is also a Boss Monster in the RPG Earthbound, and the Action RPG Dragon's Crown (Atlus).
In the Manga/Anime One Piece, the Kraken appears while the Straw Hat crew is on their way to Fishman Island. After being defeated by Luffy, the Kraken (named Surume) is tamed by him to help guide the ship.
In the RPG game Shining Force II, for Mega Drive, the Kraken appears as a monster that attacks the protagonists' boat during the adventure.
In the Paradise Island expansion of the real-life simulation game, The Sims 3, the Kraken is present at sea, whose function is to attack boats.
Kraken also makes an appearance in the Action/RPG game The Last Story, as a boss in two alternative missions, in the first it appears as a black octopus, with red eyes and whose tentacles grab characters and crush them. In the last mission of the game (also an alternative), Kraken appears with a pink color, being the culprit for the water contamination.
The Kraken appears in George R. R. Martin's saga, A Song of Ice and Fire, later adapted for TV as the HBO series Game of Thrones. In history, the Kraken is a symbol of House Greyjoy of Pyke, a noble family that controls a small archipelago, and are known as the "Iron Men".
The Kraken is also portrayed as a deep-sea monster in the book The Tiger's Voyage, which is part of author Colleen Houck's acclaimed Tiger Saga.
In the Harry Potter saga, the kraken appears as the giant squid residing in the Hogwarts castle lake. Here, rather than a monster, he appears as a gentle magical creature, swimming calmly on the surface of the lake and saving students from drowning.
In the game Archeage, the Kraken appears at sea destroying boats and attacking players.
Also in the MOBA style game, Smite, the Kraken is used
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