The Babadook - Movie Review
Director: Jennifer Kent
Genre:
Horror
Release date: November 28, 2014
(US)
Run Time: 94 minutes
Cast:
- Essie Davis as Amelia,
- Noah Wiseman as Samuel,
- Daniel Henshall as Robbie,
- Hayley McElhinney Claire,
- Barbara West as Mrs. Roach,
- Benjamin Winspear as Oskar,
- Cathy Adamek as Prue,
- Craig Behenna as Warren,
- Adam Morgan as Sergeant,
- Peta Shannon as Mother
Review: A surpringly uncommon
tactic often effective horror takes an
everyday situation that is easy to carry and ramp up the craziness.
Prime Minister assured
functionality Australian writer-director Jennifer Kent is the guy everyone knows (or has been), so afraid of the bogeyman - or
whatever his nights chasing imaginary horrors
- complete changes in the life of his parents and his.
Young Noah Wiseman is a force of nature like Sam, while the most vulnerable children and embarrassing imaginable infect his worn mother (Essie Davis) with insomnia (at one point, she gets in bed while using her vibrator ) with a tantrum screaming in the car while kicking his chair and trouble to bring weapons to fight the monsters home school. The background story - Amelia's husband died in a car accident with her at the hospital for his son - he moves and locked the portrait of mother and son in a single, escalating fantasy is exciting and credible horrible. The last part, which refers to the origin of the sample is the voltage and unexpected.
Initially, we are trapped in a house with a child who is relentless in his imagination - to the point that her mother suspected that Baba Dook evidence of industrial activity, such as broken glass in the soup. Then goes deep into troubled mental landscape that The Babadook Amelia, who promised to kill his son for possession to write the film, takes over and Sam has reason to be afraid of death. In movies like The Amityville Horror and The Shining, parents are affected by the supernatural as threats to their children, but it is a rare case of the syndrome that affects a mother. How amazing mother removed Davis, struggling to cope with a child who always say and do the wrong things at the wrong time - he complained of drugs administered to him to sleep, so that social services are a call.
The Babadook shares some characteristics with contemporary ghost stories Oculus, mother or insidious, but with a strong base character. It's really scary to jump in their time, but also ensures a lasting sense of fear that will stay with you for days - certainly come the next time you wake up in the middle of the night wondering what the sound very scratch. His expressionist style means that it is not easily reduced to a simple story of a psychological disappointment - it is a real monster, although uncertainty about the nature of the disturbing object is executed.
Young Noah Wiseman is a force of nature like Sam, while the most vulnerable children and embarrassing imaginable infect his worn mother (Essie Davis) with insomnia (at one point, she gets in bed while using her vibrator ) with a tantrum screaming in the car while kicking his chair and trouble to bring weapons to fight the monsters home school. The background story - Amelia's husband died in a car accident with her at the hospital for his son - he moves and locked the portrait of mother and son in a single, escalating fantasy is exciting and credible horrible. The last part, which refers to the origin of the sample is the voltage and unexpected.
Initially, we are trapped in a house with a child who is relentless in his imagination - to the point that her mother suspected that Baba Dook evidence of industrial activity, such as broken glass in the soup. Then goes deep into troubled mental landscape that The Babadook Amelia, who promised to kill his son for possession to write the film, takes over and Sam has reason to be afraid of death. In movies like The Amityville Horror and The Shining, parents are affected by the supernatural as threats to their children, but it is a rare case of the syndrome that affects a mother. How amazing mother removed Davis, struggling to cope with a child who always say and do the wrong things at the wrong time - he complained of drugs administered to him to sleep, so that social services are a call.
The Babadook shares some characteristics with contemporary ghost stories Oculus, mother or insidious, but with a strong base character. It's really scary to jump in their time, but also ensures a lasting sense of fear that will stay with you for days - certainly come the next time you wake up in the middle of the night wondering what the sound very scratch. His expressionist style means that it is not easily reduced to a simple story of a psychological disappointment - it is a real monster, although uncertainty about the nature of the disturbing object is executed.