Langsuir: Chronicles

In the present day, Maya Sunari survives a horrific plane crash over the Straits of Malacca—a crash no black box can explain. When she wakes in the morgue, she finds the hole in her neck. She no longer needs food; she needs memory. The Chronicles posits that the Langsuir feeds on blood not for sustenance, but for the memories contained within it. Each victim gives her a flash of their life, allowing her to piece together the history of her original murderers’ bloodline.

Maya Sunari’s final line in Volume One sums it up: “You built your empire on my silence. Now, I will scream until your bloodline forgets its own name.” langsuir chronicles

The action sequences are balletic. Because the Langsuir flies using leaves rather than wings, the fight scenes involve razor-sharp foliage, aerial acrobatics between skyscrapers, and a horrifying ability to phase through durian thorns. The "Birth Scene" in Issue #4—where Maya must re-enact her ancestor’s death to unlock a new power—has been called by horror critics as "the most disturbingly beautiful five pages in modern Southeast Asian comics." With the announcement of a live-action series from HBO Asia (directed by The Return ’s Bradley Liew), Langsuir Chronicles is poised to become the next international horror phenomenon, following in the wake of Ju-On and The Wailing . However, purists are worried about the adaptation. Can CGI truly capture the texture of the mengkuang leaves? Can a Western audience understand that the Langsuir’s true horror is not that she kills you, but that she makes you feel the weight of history? In the present day, Maya Sunari survives a

In the shadowy pantheon of Southeast Asian horror, few figures are as tragic—or as terrifying—as the Langsuir . While the Pontianak is often cited as the region’s premier vengeful spirit, the Langsuir is its more chaotic, aerial, and sorrowful cousin. The burgeoning dark fantasy series, Langsuir Chronicles , takes this ancient folklore and spins it into a sprawling epic of blood magick, colonial trauma, and the monstrous hunger that lives within every wronged woman. The Chronicles posits that the Langsuir feeds on

★★★★½ (Essential reading for dark fantasy fans) Trigger Warnings: Pregnancy loss, body horror, colonial violence, blood consumption. Have you encountered the Langsuir in your local folklore? Does the idea of a "memory vampire" terrify you more than a physical one? Share your thoughts below.

In the series, the Langsuir curse is explicitly a reaction to systemic violence. Maya does not kill indiscriminately. She is a "Sovereign Taker"—a judge, jury, and executioner of those who abuse power. In one powerful chapter, she stalks a human trafficker through the Petronas Twin Towers, not with supernatural stealth, but with the horrifying patience of a woman who has lost a child.