Synopsis
If it's in a word, or it's in a look, you can't get rid of...
A grieving single mother and her child fall into a deep well of paranoia when an eerie children's book manifests in their home.
Directed by Jennifer Kent
A grieving single mother and her child fall into a deep well of paranoia when an eerie children's book manifests in their home.
Mister Babadook, Le Babadook, הבאבאדוק, Babadook, Der Babadook, Бабадук, Babadook: Οι Σελίδες Του Τρόμου, באבאדוק, A Babadook, O Senhor Babadook, 鬼书, บาบาดุค ปลุกปีศาจ, 바바둑, O Babadook, Karabasan, 鬼敲門, Бабадок, ババドック ~暗闇の魔物~, Babaduks, Babadukas, Sách Ma, Omul negru
This review may contain spoilers. I can handle the truth.
im glad im not the only one who thinks of my depression as a gay man in a top hat that i feed worms to in my basement
This review may contain spoilers. I can handle the truth.
when he stabbed her and then said "sorry mummy" HSHDJSJJSNMFBSNSNFNXM
Hoop-Tober, Film 28 of 31:
Once an addict, always an addict. Or so the saying goes.
The Babadook is not a horror film... not to me, at least. It's a dark, brooding psychological drama that utilizes tropes of the horror genre to convey an underlying message. It's a film about two things: grief and drug addiction. This is quite clear to me. "You can't get rid of The Babadook." Certainly, you can't; you can't get rid of your addictions, and you can't get rid of the feeling of missing your deceased loved ones... you can only tame yourself to live without harmful, escapist tendencies. The ending of this film is in perfect concordance with this notion. Amelia is a woman…