5 haunted vehicles that will leave Christine with her palettes up!

When Voldemort wanted to become immortal, he turned objects such as his mother's ring, diary and tiara into horcruxes, storing a piece of his soul in each of them. In the long "7 Wishes", a seemingly innocent music box made people die in terrible accidents.

We can go on listing real or fictional examples of how different objects can carry curses and evil spirits, and that goes for houses too. But it's not just them! Do You Know These 5 Cursed Vehicle Stories?

1. The Black Volga of the Demo

In the 1960s, in Poland, a black limousine with white curtains was seen wandering the city streets without a driver - although some people swear they saw it piloted by Satan himself, while others saw nuns or priests in the driver's seat.

Whenever she appeared, children disappeared. Some people appeal to reason and believe that the person driving the vehicle kidnapped children to perform sacrifices or steal their organs; others believed that he carried some curse that carried the souls of the innocent.

2. Would it be the Andante Bus?

Speaking of references to Harry Potter, do you remember the magic bus that appeared in the third movie, which roamed the streets of London with magicians who needed a ride? Maybe JK Rowling was inspired by an urban legend to create it!

Between 1930 and 1990, at exactly 1:15 am, almost every day some people saw a bus speeding down the street in Cambridge Gardens, London. No matter how many people reported the vehicle, the police never found it.

3. The demonic Golden Eagle

A 1964 special edition of the Dodge, called Golden Eagle, was used by police in the state of Maine. Three police officers used the car to work and committed horrible crimes, killing their own families.

When the vehicle was sold, the family who bought it said that several times the doors would open mysteriously on their own. Two children were run over next to him, and a third, who touched the car, was killed in a fire with his entire family.

If not enough, when the fame about the car spread, members of local churches tried to vandalize it, and many of them ended up dying shortly thereafter.

This car could easily have inspired Christine, the demonic car in the book (and later movie) created by Stephen King.

4. The Archduke's Limousine

In history classes, you probably learned that the assassination of Archduke Francisco Ferdinando served as a trigger for the beginning of World War II.

The crime occurred when Franz and his wife, Sophie, were inside a Gräf & Stift limousine, which, oddly enough, was undamaged. It turns out that for the next 12 years the car went through the hands of 15 owners, and all had very tense destinations.

The car caused 13 deaths and was involved in 6 accidents - it was famous for falling on people, denting them. Today he is at the War History Museum in Vienna (Austria). But be careful when visiting as it does not give much luck!

5. James Dean's Porshe

"Little Bastard" was the name of the Porsche 550 Spyder that had just been acquired by James Dean, in love with cars and speed. His friend - "Star Wars" actor Alec Guinness - told him he had a bad feeling and asked him not to get in the car; otherwise it would be dead in less than a week.

Yeah! The warning was frighteningly more accurate than Samara (from "The Calling"); Exactly 7 days later, James Dean was killed in an accident with Little Bastard on Route 466. His car - nearly 150 km / h - crashed into a car in front of him.

The curse doesn't stop there. Two doctors who bought parts of Jean's car suffered accidents after that; George Barris, who bought Dean's crashed car, sold two of the wheels that had not been damaged in the crash, and the car that used them also suffered damage when both tires burst simultaneously. And not only that: Barris says that once, two bad guys tried to steal the car and ended up seriously injuring themselves in the process.

There are those who suspect the stories and say that Barrels is a charlatan, but the truth is that, at least for Dean, the curse may have been true.

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