The Babadook finally invades homes tomorrow. Be scared of our review.
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"This is some strange kinda porno!" |
Few
films outside of Scottish director Lynne Ramsay’s We Need to Talk About Kevin or British director Neil Marshall’s The Descent capture in a bottle the
damaged perspective of a mother in a state of psychological trauma quite like
Jennifer Kent’s The Babadook. Where most studies of madness depict a
gradual descent towards the hallucinatory, The
Babadook drops you into Amelia’s (Essie Davis) nightmare immediately and
realistically creates a portrait of paranoia and fevered anxiety without
compromise or exit. It comes as no
surprise Kent was an understudy of Danish director Lars Von Trier on the set of
Dogville, as both Trier and Kent
fearlessly push their respective actresses towards a full throated shriek and
allow their anti-heroines to wallow in despair and grief before eventually
turning violent. These are artists not
afraid to shine their spotlights deep into the pit in search of the inferno.
As Amelia’s burgeoning psychosis and fear
both for and of Samuel (her son) intensify, the film’s attitude becomes more maniacal
with transformative set design, rapid changes in cinematographic and sonic
tonality, and increasingly surreal scenarios.
Much like The Exorcist (whose
creator has gone on to proclaim The
Babadook to be the scariest film he’s ever seen), The Babadook is a tense buildup to a roar and performs the unusual
feat of shifting our own fears away from Samuel and the Babadook towards
Amelia.
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"The Phantom Menace!!!! Noooooooo!!!!!" |
For
a film so focused on the idea of an uncanny demonic entity from a storybook,
there’s something to be said for just how much more terrifying Amelia is than
anything her son or the Babadook do. This is the scariest woman to grace the silver screen in years! Take for instance a scene where Amelia goes
toe to toe with the Babadook in a hallway, as the dimly lit manifestation
reaches with lanky arms outstretched, lit in such a way that would make Ridley
Scott jealous he didn’t use more of this technique in Alien. As the two engage in
a screaming match, I was infinitely more terrified of Amelia than anything the
monster movie’s creature had to offer.
Equally strong, if not stronger, is newcomer child actor Noah Wiseman as
an intelligent boy who is either fraught with demons or is simply reacting to
Amelia, likely the latter. Some of the
things this boy says and does, including a bizarre scene where he goes into
what looks like a possessed seizure, will make your blood run cold. Not since Linda Blair has a child actor been this terrifying!
click to buy |




-Andrew Kotwicki