10 Surprising Facts About ‘The Babadook’

If it’s in a word or in a look, there’s no escaping the impact this elevated horror flick had when it hit theaters in 2014.

Not the kind of nightly visitor you look forward to.
Not the kind of nightly visitor you look forward to. | IFC Films

In 2014, The Babadook came out of nowhere and scared audiences across the globe. The horror film, which was written and directed by Aussie Jennifer Kent, was based on her short film Monster. In The Babadook, a widow named Amelia (played by Kent’s drama schoolmate Essie Davis) has trouble controlling her young son Samuel (Noah Wiseman), who thinks there’s a monster living in their house. Amelia reads Samuel a pop-up book, Mister Babadook, and somehow, Samuel seems to manifest the creature into a real-life monster. The titular Babadook may be the villain, but the film explores the pitfalls of parenting and grief in an emotional way. 

“I never approached this as a straight horror film,” Kent told Complex in 2014. “I always was drawn to the idea of grief, and the suppression of that grief, and the question of, how would that affect a person? ... But at the core of it, it’s about the mother and child, and their relationship.”

Shot on a $2 million budget, the film grossed more than $10.3 million worldwide and gained an even wider audience via streaming networks. Instead of creating Babadook out of CGI, a team generated the images in-camera, inspired by the silent films of Georges Méliès and Lon Chaney.

In honor of its 10th anniversary, the film is even returning to theaters nationwide starting Thursday, September 19, with tickets going on sale on Wednesday, August 14. While we count down the days, here are 10 things you might not have known about The Babadook (dook, dook).

  1. The name ‘Babadook’ was easy for a child to invent.
  2. Jennifer Kent was worried people would judge the mother.
  3. Kent and Essie Davis toned down the content for the kid.
  4. The film is also about “facing our shadow side.”
  5. The film scared the hell out of the director of The Exorcist.
  6. The movie bombed in its native Australia.
  7. An art department assistant scored the role of the Babadook.
  8. You can own a Mister Babadook book (but it will cost you).
  9. The Babadook became a gay icon.
  10. Don’t hold your breath for a sequel.

The name ‘Babadook’ was easy for a child to invent.

Jennifer Kent told Complex that some people thought the creature’s name sounded “silly,” which she agreed with. “I wanted it to be like something a child could make up, like ‘jabberwocky’ or some other nonsensical name,” she explained. “I wanted to create a new myth that was just solely of this film and didn’t exist anywhere else.”

Jennifer Kent was worried people would judge the mother.

Amelia isn’t the best mother in the world—but that’s the point. “I’m not a parent,” Kent told Rolling Stone in 2014, “but I’m surrounded by friends and family who are, and I see it from the outside … how parenting seems hard and never-ending.” She thought Amelia would receive “a lot of flak” for her flawed parenting, but the opposite happened. “I think it’s given a lot of women a sense of reassurance to see a real human being up there,” Kent said. “We don’t get to see characters like her that often.”

Kent and Essie Davis toned down the content for the kid.

Noah Wiseman was 6 years old when he played Samuel. Kent and Davis made sure he wasn’t present for the more horrific scenes, like when Amelia tells Samuel she wishes he was the one who died, not her husband. “During the reverse shots, where Amelia was abusing Sam verbally, we had Essie yell at an adult stand-in on his knees,” Kent told Film Journal. “I didn’t want to destroy a childhood to make this film—that wouldn’t be fair.”

Kent explained a “kiddie version” of the plot to Wiseman. “I said, ‘Basically, Sam is trying to save his mother and it’s a film about the power of love.’”

The film is also about “facing our shadow side.”

Jennifer Kent
Kent also told IndieWire that she was also interested in telling more stories, claiming it's "difficult to get the stories through that give a female perspective." | Rodin Eckenroth/GettyImages

Kent told Film Journal that “The Babadook is a film about a woman waking up from a long, metaphorical sleep and finding that she has the power to protect herself and her son.” She noted that everybody has darkness to face. “Beyond genre and beyond being scary, that’s the most important thing in the film—facing our shadow side.”

In 2014, she told IndieWire that she didn't really set out to tell a story about motherhood. Rather, she was interested in exploring the “repercussions of suppressing darkness and suppressing difficult experiences.”

The film scared the hell out of the director of The Exorcist.

In an interview with Uproxx, William Friedkin—director of The Exorcist—said The Babadook was one of the best and scariest horror films he’d ever seen. He especially liked the emotional aspect of the film. “It’s not only the simplicity of the filmmaking and the excellence of the acting not only by the two leads, but it’s the way the film works slowly but inevitably on your emotions,” he said.

The movie bombed in its native Australia.

Essie Davis and Noah Wiseman in a scene from 2014's "The Babadook."
Essie Davis and Noah Wiseman in a scene from 2014's "The Babadook." | IFC Films

Even though Kent shot the film in Adelaide, Australians didn’t flock to the theaters; it grossed just $258,000 in its native country. “Australians have this aversion to seeing Australian films,” Kent told The Cut. “They hardly ever get excited about their own stuff. We only tend to love things once everyone else confirms they’re good … Australian creatives have always had to go overseas to get recognition. I hope one day we can make a film or work of art and Australians can think it’s good regardless of what the rest of the world thinks.”

An art department assistant scored the role of the Babadook.

Tim Purcell worked in the film’s art department but then got talked into playing the titular character after he acted as the creature for some camera tests. “They realized they could save some money, and have me just be the Babadook, and hence I became the Babadook,” Purcell told New York Magazine. “In terms of direction, it was ‘be still a lot,’” he said.

You can own a Mister Babadook book (but it will cost you).

In 2015, Insight Editions published 6200 pop-up books of Mister Babadook. Kent worked with the film’s illustrator, Alexander Juhasz, who created the book for the movie. He and paper engineer Simon Arizpe brought the pages to life for the published version. All copies sold out but you can find some Kent-signed ones on eBay, going for as much as $500.

The Babadook became a gay icon.

It started at the end of 2016, when a Tumblr user started a jokey thread about how he thought the Babadook was gay. “It started picking up steam within a few weeks,” Ian, the Tumblr user, told New York Magazine, “because individuals who I presume are heterosexual kind of freaked out over the assertion that a horror movie villain would identify as queer—which I think was the actual humor of the post, as opposed to just the outright statement that the Babadook is gay.” In June, the Babadook became a symbol for Gay Pride month. Images of the character appeared everywhere at this year's Gay Pride Parade in Los Angeles.

Don’t hold your breath for a sequel.

Kent, who owns the rights to The Babadook, told IGN that, despite the original film's popularity, she's not planning on making any sequels. “The reason for that is I will never allow any sequel to be made, because it’s not that kind of film,” she said. “I don’t care how much I’m offered, it’s just not going to happen.”

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A version of this story was originally published in 2017 and has been updated for 2024.