2nd March, 2015.
OK …
Do you believe the hype?
No, that’s a fairly honest question, there.
Do you believe that, if you hear something getting talked about — very favourably — that it’s something you should have a look at?
Or are you, like me, who’s prepared to take the hype with a pinch or two of salt?
I think that, at my age, a pinch of salt is usually worth having.
Sometimes, though … ?
Sometimes, it turns out favourable hype — or favourable word-of-mouth — turns out to be justified.
The film I’ve just sat and watched, tonight?
And yes …
‘Wow’ is justified. I think we can believe the hype about The Babadook.
Set in modern-day Australia,
The Babadook sees
Essie Davies as Amelia, a single mother who has been traumatised, after the death of her husband, some six years earlier: as he was driving her to the hospital to give birth to their son, Samuel, played by
Noah Wiseman.
Sam, of course, is DEEPLY traumatised: making and using improvised weapons, having problems at school AND imagining monsters of a particularly vicious sort.
And talking of nothing but, to friends and family.
That’s not the worst of it: things at home are worse.
Especially after Sam finds a mysterious pop-up book on his shelves, called Mister Babadook on his shelves.
And talks his mother into reading it to him as a bedtime story.
Things …
Go …
Slowly …
Downhill …
Now … Wow … ?
Yes.
WOW.
And that’s not a word I use, a lot.
You see, there’s not that many films I wax lyrical about. There’s plenty I give a four star rating to —
The Babadook will be one of them — but not many I stick the word ‘
genius’ too.
There’s even fewer films I text my friends about … while I’m watching the film.
The Babadook is one of the latter, beautiful films.
The Babadook is not your run-of-the-mill, body-horror.
The Babadook is not torture porn.
The Babadook is certainly not blood soaked.
Nor is it a slaughter-laden, splatter punk flick: nor any kind of teen-killing slasher film intent on shocking the bejeebers out of an audience UNDER the age of consent, and teaching them sex is bad.
Oh, no.
The Babadook is a horror film that’s intent on — right from the start — piling one single, slow, nerve-jangling moment after another: and not stopping until it’s deeply ambiguous — and simultaneously quite clear — ending.
Reminding ALL of us that humanity is capable of scaring the life out of itself.
That humans are, sometimes, their own worst enemies.
And that, truly?
The Babadook
★★★★
*SPOILERS*
ReplyDeleteJust as a final thought … ?
Those of us who’ve SEEN The Babadook will realise that the Babadook is Amelia’s own subconscious demon: it’s literally why, at the end of the film, she hasn’t got rid of the Babadook: merely learnt how to deal with it.
A friend of mine, Faye, watched it, last night: and asked me a question I’d given little thought to, until she asked me this.
“Where did the book come from?”
My personal thought?
And something I told her?
It’s homemade … …
All I can say is a big DITTO to all your thoughts on this film. Wow! :)
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