Tell me if this story sounds familiar: A child becomes more and more
afraid that their parent has been taken over by some sort of evil entity and is
now out to kill them. Or how about this one: After losing sleep continuously
and isolating themselves from the world, a parent slowly succumbs to the demons
that plague them and allows their baser instincts to take over, leading to
violence against their family members.
Those two descriptions could apply to either Stanley Kubrick’s The
Shining (1980) or to Jennifer Kent’s The Babadook (2014), two films
that on the surface share little in common except that they are both horror
films. But upon looking closer, the films have more similarities than first
thought, especially concerning the two main characters. Both Jack Torrance
(Jack Nicholson) and Amelia Vanek (Essie Davis) are pushed to edge of their
sanity through paranormal forces, who then persuade them to turn on their
respective families.
The way that Jack and Amelia begin their descent into madness begins
with them losing sleep. It’s more obvious in The Babadook that Amelia is
suffering from sleep loss. Her son, Samuel (Noah Wiseman), keeps her awake for
most of the night with his own fears of monsters under the bed, causing dark
shadows to fall under her eyes and her smile to become more and more
strained.
There are only a couple of little clues in The Shining that point
to Jack’s own sleeplessness. During the scene with Danny (Danny Lloyd) in the
bedroom, Jack admits to his son that he has been having trouble sleeping. This
is backed up later in the film when Jack has a nightmare, one where he kills
Danny and Wendy (Shelley Duvall). These nightmares are what’s probably keeping
him awake. The sleeplessness that both characters feel make them vulnerable,
and allow the malicious forces around them to influence them in unsettling
ways.
Once both characters are vulnerable, they are then isolated from the
world. In The Shining, the isolation is very literal, with the Torrance
family being cut off after being snowed in, with no way to contact anyone after
Jack sabotages the radio and snowmobile. Amelia’s isolation is a little more
subtle, as throughout the film she breaks contact with those around her,
including workmates, her sister, and her neighbour. After effectively blocking
everyone out of her and her sons’ life, she then locks them up in the house and
breaks the phone line, making their isolation complete.
The final part of the two characters' descent is through giving into
temptation. In the first scene at the Gold Room, Jack says to himself that he’d
give anything for a drink, even his soul, and when his prayers are answered he
is told by Grady (Philip Stone) that he must stop his son from bringing outside
influences into the hotel by killing him and Wendy if he wants to remain at the
Overlook. Amelia is presented with a vision of her dead husband (Benjamin
Winspear) telling her that they can be together if only she gives him
Samuel.
Once they are fully under the influence of their demons, Amelia and Jack
begin to lose their humanity. Jack has become so influenced by the Overlook
that he has become less of a man and more of an animal. He lumbers through the
maze, shouting out Danny’s name over and over until the shouts become nothing
more than primitive grunts and screams. Even the way he moves becomes less
human; he drags his legs and hunches over himself as he fights through the snow
while looking for his son.
When the Babadook completely takes over Amelia, she too becomes more
animalistic, more cat-like in the way she moves. Her arms are straight by her
sides when she runs, almost as if she is preparing to pounce. She moves her
head stiffly when she talks, and like Jack gives up on speech altogether and
just screams her frustrations at Samuel.
In the Under Your Bed podcast, Gerard Lough described The
Shining as being about “a dark side of a family unit, a family unit that’s
breaking down” (2012). I think you could describe The Babadook the same
way. Both films are about families being pushed to the edge of hysteria, and
how they either come out the other side or are lost forever.
References:
· The
Babadook 2014, DVD, Umbrella Entertainment, directed by Jennifer
Kent.
· Murphy,
B & Lough, G 2012, Under Your Bed Podcast, podcast, 10 August, Under
Your Bed, viewed 2 Sept 2016,
<http://underyourbed.org/wp/blog/the-horrorcast-episode-3-gerard-lough/>.
· The
Shining 1980, DVD, Warner Bros., directed by Stanley Kubrick.



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