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The Babadook (2014) - Jennifer Kent
Both the most modern and most authentically "horror" film examined so far, Kent's The Babadook is an excellent horror film based around a woman's struggles with motherhood, love and death. Atmospheric, highly stylized and psychologically penetrating, the film is deeply unnerving and manages to be scary with minimal gore, no jump scares, and a monster brought to life using intentionally low-budget methods. Much like Eraserhead, The Babadook manages to create a world with a universal sense of strangeness that pervades the entire film universe and further emphasizes the titular monster's inescapability and power over the characters.
The monstrous ideology
Ideology gives structure to our deepest fears, our emotional insecurities, our latent desires. It sculpts the nebulous and formless into concrete entities. Ideology personifies and projects. It not only structures our reality, but structures the way see reality itself.
Ideology therefore functions much like a metaphorical "monster under the bed." The parent knows that there is nothing actually under the bed, yet goes along with the child and "clears the area" so the child knows they are safe. This is the primary functioning of ideology today. We know that there is no monster, but it is more distressing to have to admit there isn't anything is under the bed, because then the monster really is just inside your head. Instead of being a comfort, this is angst inducing and absolutely terrifying.
This is a thematic element frequently experimented with by the film. The physicality of the monster is de-emphasized and minimal compared to the mental havoc wreaked by the being's presence. The Babdook's power as antagonist lies primarily in its ability to manipulate its victims into destroying themselves instead of physically harming them. This is not a wholly unique concept for a horror movie, yet The Babdook makes the story of the family and the monster be extremely personal and specifically relate to the life experiences of the protagonist.
The monster: real or symbolic?
The proper hermeneutic approach to examining this film rests primarily on what the monster itself is supposed to be. There are two primary perspectives: the monster is something just as real as the boy and his mother, while the other perspective is that the monster is a construction, a manifestation of the mother's own feelings of loss toward her dead husband. I think the second perspective has much more resonance and impact, as the former reduces evil to being necessarily physical, while the second creates a more coherent narrative in relation to the film as a whole.

Killing the monster and the aftermath of an event


The liberation of the psyche thus is not accidental nor is it subject to willpower, but is a honing, refining process. Like the forging of a sword, the Babadook torments and punishes until the authentic self is shaped out of the rough-hewn steel of trauma.