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Why Maternal Anxiety Makes For Great Horror Movies

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Narges Rashidi and Bobby Naderi in Under the Shadow.

Vertical Entertainment

Horror has never been short on the formidable mother figures. Consider Diane Freeling venturing into another dimension to yank her daughter Carol Anne back into the world of the living in Poltergeist, Ripley heading back into Xenomorph Queen hell to retrieve Newt in Aliens, Rachel frantically searching for solutions to save her son Aidan from a VHS-enabled curse in The Ring, and, hell, Pamela Voorhees in Friday the 13th — all women willing to go to extreme lengths on behalf of children.

On the flip side, there are the tyrants and termagants, the moms-as-villains keeping one sensible heel on their kids' throats — Psycho’s Norma Bates, eating her son up from the inside; Carrie’s Margaret White, with her warped ideas about sin; Dead Alive’s Vera Cosgrove, literally pulling Lionel back into her womb; and Black Swan’s Erica Sayers, pouring all her thwarted dancer’s dreams into her daughter.

And then there’s Amelia (Essie Davis) in The Babadook and her sister in shared delusions and spectral intruders, Shideh (Narges Rashidi), in the excellent new film Under the Shadow, heroes in mom-centric horror who manage to be a bit of both of these archetypes. They're protectors as well as demons — loving their kids but also feeling so worn out and smothered by their needs that they’re poised to snap. They are, in other words, human, which is the stuff of horror only when measured against ingrained, hard-to-shake ideas about motherhood as a state that should be effortless and instinctive. Women should want to spend all of their time with their children; it should be enough for them, even when it’s not.

The Babadook.

IFC Films

Under the Shadow, which is written and directed by Babak Anvari, has recently arrived in theaters, two years after Jennifer Kent’s 2014 breakout The Babadook; they're a pair of claustrophobic stories about a woman and her child, and the dark thing that may or may not be haunting them.

Under the Shadow takes place a few decades and a few thousand miles away from the present-day Australia in which Amelia and Sam (Noah Wiseman) live in The Babadook. But the two movies fit together like a minor key chord, resonating off each other in their themes of love and loneliness and the flutters of rancor that can lurk in the most devoted of motherly hearts. They could inaugurate their own compelling mini-genre devoted to a particularly pointed sort of maternal anxiety, one in which the protagonists are caught between a drive to shelter their children and a sense that their own identities are getting eroded by motherhood.

It’s not that Under the Shadow's Shideh is a reluctant wife and mother. She’s married to Iraj (Bobby Naderi), who she fights with but clearly loves. And she adores their child, Dorsa (Avin Manshadi), a saucer-eyed little girl fond of staging tea parties with her doll, Kimia. They’re a family of three who’ve carved out an urbane middle-class life in a Tehran apartment decorated in nostalgically hideous, period-appropriate earth tones.

But Shideh had dreams of also becoming a doctor, ones she was on the way to fulfilling when the 1979 Iranian Revolution put everything on hold. She got married, had Dorsa, and when the movie begins, some years later, she’s told that she can’t resume her studies, because she’s been blackballed under the new Islamic regime due to her political record. "I suggest you find a new goal in life,” a university official coolly tells her.

Under the Shadow.

Vertical Entertainment

It’s the ’80s in Iran, and you can feel Shideh’s horizons narrowing in ways that go beyond how she’s been consigned to being a housewife — in how impatiently she puts on a headscarf before allowing a repairman inside, or how she draws the curtains before slipping a Jane Fonda aerobics tape into the family’s forbidden VCR for her home workout. Whatever idealism she harbored about the future of the country has been replaced by a reality of religious conservatism that obviously doesn’t reflect her hopes.

Meanwhile, bombs are falling over the city, an unexploded missile even lodging itself in the roof of the family’s apartment building, the country in the midst of a war with Iraq that consumes most of the decade and that leads to Iraj being drafted away. When Shideh is left alone with their daughter, her restless personal dissatisfaction and the national anxiety converge with Dorsa's conviction that she’s being haunted by a djinn, a creature out of Islamic mythology, who means the family ill. It’s the djinn, Dorsa’s certain, who’s making her sick and who’s stolen Kimia, and as tensions grow in the house, Shideh is torn between frustration with her child and the suspicion that she may be onto something.

It’s no coincidence that in both Under the Shadow and The Babadook, horror comes creeping in by way of children’s tales that seep into adult awareness rather than the other way around. All of the terrors plaguing Amelia’s troubled son Sam at the start of The Babadook seem to congeal into a ghoulish pop-up book that just appears one day, giving his fears a focus while seemingly being created by them. In Under the Shadow, a boy who’s new to the building tells Dorsa about the djinn after being sent to live with relatives when his own parents are killed in an air raid; the connection between an attack from above and malevolent mystical beings lodges itself in Dorsa’s head until she’s sure djinn have spirited Kimia away upstairs in the bombed-out apartment.

For Amelia and Shideh, no scary story itself will ever be as alarming as the practical possibility of something keeping their kids up at night. These films are odes to the giddy vulnerability of exhaustion as much as they are about the supernatural, how these already worn-down parents trudge onward with less and less sleep, opening them up to ideas they know are irrational in the light of day.

Amelia stares, terrified, at the dark corners of her shadowy room at night, and Shideh envisions the cracks in the living room ceiling opening up under pressure from something meaning ill, as if they’re succumbing to their children’s nightmares, sanity slowly slipping away. Isolation only escalates the hauntings, or the shared psychosis. Amelia is a widow whose connection to her remaining family splinters thanks to Sam’s acting out, leaving the pair to spiral down into reclusive instability. Shideh is separated from her husband by national service — when he calls, the lines are so bad he’s barely audible — and she and Dorsa find their building rapidly emptying out due to the attacks, as their neighbors head for safer climes.

And yet, time to themselves is a denied luxury. The Babadook makes a dark joke out of how Amelia’s attempt to take advantage of a rare moment alone to eke out a solo orgasm gets interrupted by a scared Sam jumping into her bed. In Under the Shadow, Shideh demands that before Iraj leaves, he tell her if he believes her desire to go back to school makes her a bad mother. The dread these movies summon and simmer isn’t just about harm coming to children, but about not being good at motherhood, about missing something fundamental, about, in their darkest moments, the potential to be the thing that harms.

The Babadook.

IFC Films

Both Under the Shadow's and The Babadook's characters are also terrorized by pieces of clothing, which sounds funny but in practice is thoroughly eerie, especially given the connection the items have to the dead. Amelia’s late husband’s empty suits give form to the Babadook, and the patterned curtain in a photo of Shideh’s recently passed mother makes an appearance as a phantasmal chador.

The familiar, shabbily domestic turns ominous — scaring the women in the comfort of their own homes, with the comforts of their own homes, maybe, but also highlighting how personal these breakdowns are, colored by loss. Amelia has her grief as well as a sense of abandonment due to the death of her spouse. Shideh grapples with feelings of having failed to live up to her mother’s expectations, ones she’ll now never be able to fulfill. The stuff of their bereavement becomes the stuff of their fear.

And also, the stuff of their resentment. The Babadook may be an entity representing Amelia’s depression and mourning, but one of the movie’s most provocative suggestions is that, whether she remembers or not, she may actually be the one who created the book that so frightens Sam — she, who used to write, who “did some kids' stuff.” And, while Shideh tears the apartment apart trying to find Kimia, who Dorsa insists they can’t leave the city without, Under the Shadow hints that perhaps Shideh is the one who took the doll in the first place, in some unconscious act of spite against the daughter with whom she’s been left, when she once entertained more expansive plans for herself.

Under the Shadow.

Vertical Entertainment

Like The Babadook, Under the Shadow is scary, the cultural specificity of its spookiness making it no less effective when its creepy figures start lurking in doorways and rattling at windows. But these movies also make use of a panic that has nothing to do with the supernatural. They’re intimate horror movies about the dark things lurking in a family home, and, more interestingly, in the minds of women, in how unmoored they start to feel in identities defined by the children they’ve had, in their self-doubt, and their own shunted-aside longings. It’s what makes both films reverberate long after the standard haunted house movie has faded from memory. What's a monster lurking under the bed compared to the nagging suspicion that maybe there’s something monstrous within?


17 Powerful Photographs That Show The History Of Discrimination Against “Untouchables"

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The images are part of the exhibition at an international photo festival that begins in Nepal on Friday.

An exhibition called Dalit: A Quest for Dignity has opened in Nepal, featuring powerful photos and testimonies that document the experiences of the Nepali Dalits, who are considered the country's lowest caste. Dalits, previously known as "untouchables," face discrimination in their social and working lives.

The exhibition is part of Photo KTM, a two-week international photo festival that begins in Kathmandu on Friday. Unlike most photo exhibitions, Photo KTM aims to be unique by using the streets and alleys of the historic town of Patan as its gallery space; organizers say work by artists from Saudi Arabia, Iran, and Cambodia among others will be displayed on walls along the streets that were damaged by last year's earthquake.

Curator Diwas Raja KC said it is important to accurately record the history of Dalits. “Records are typically tools of oppression, techniques of power," he said. "They are means by which the rich have exploited the poor and the powerful have dominated the powerless."

The images below, provided exclusively to BuzzFeed News, show a collection of photos and stories from the exhibition, including details of the segregation of drinking water, debts between castes, and the suspected murder of a man who eloped with a young woman from a different caste.

Kathmandu, 1963

Kathmandu, 1963

Untouchability is commonly upheld through a prohibition on sharing of water and cooked food. During a morning break at Pharping Boarding School, everyone was served tea in ceramic tea cups, except for this sweeper, who, because of his caste, was given his tea in an empty tin can.

Jim Fisher

Kailali, 2007

Kailali, 2007

The municipality in Tikapur bowed to the demand of upper-caste villagers to separate their water supply from that of Dalits. At the Dalit tap seen here, this separation is welcome, for it emancipates them from the daily humiliation of awaiting the goodwill of an upper caste to pour them some water from afar.

Jakob Carlsen

Bajhang, 1989

Bajhang, 1989

There were systems established to keep Dalits poor and customs to remind them that poverty is their rightful place. Here a family of Sarkis are seen in their quarters in Bajhang.

Mary Cameron


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If You're Watching The Third Presidential Debate Here Is A Drinking Game

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DO NOT ACTUALLY DO THIS, YOU WILL DIE, WE CANNOT STRESS THIS ENOUGH.

So, you've decide to watch the debate tonight? You're going to need something to get you through it. You need...

So, you've decide to watch the debate tonight? You're going to need something to get you through it. You need...

Blightylad-infocus / Getty Images / BuzzFeed

Drink a very small sip every time:

Drink a very small sip every time:

Donfiore / Getty Images / BuzzFeed

Drink a large sip every time:

Drink a large sip every time:

Silvrshootr / Getty Images / BuzzFeed

Drink two sips every time:

Drink two sips every time:

Rez-art / Getty Images / BuzzFeed


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Which Pop Diva Is Your Nemesis?

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Feudin’ 9 to 5.

Thinkstock / Larry Busacca / Getty Images / BuzzFeed

Mel And Sue Comforting The Bakers On "Bake Off" Is Why They Will Be Missed So Damn Much

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Sue: “Every second spent crying is a second less showing them how good you are at baking.”

Who could forget when Dorret's bake melted last year and Sue said: "It's just a cake. It's just a cake?"

Who could forget when Dorret's bake melted last year and Sue said: "It's just a cake. It's just a cake?"

Love Productions / BBC

And when Ruby's creme patisserie curdled at the very start of series four and Sue comforted her:

And when Ruby's creme patisserie curdled at the very start of series four and Sue comforted her:

Love Productions / BBC

And then there's this series. At the start of the first Showstopper, Benjamina started to cry when her mirror glaze cake was not working. Sue said:

And then there's this series. At the start of the first Showstopper, Benjamina started to cry when her mirror glaze cake was not working. Sue said:

Love Productions / BBC


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The 13 Most Heartbreaking Moments For Anyone Who Doesn't Own A Dog

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This one is for everyone who pets dogs while their owners are in the store.

For you, any dog photos posted by your friends are an automatic "like".

And that's not even counting all the profiles specifically for dogs that you're following on Instagram.

Instagram: @buda

In fact, almost everything you look at online is dogs.

In fact, almost everything you look at online is dogs.

Thanks, internet.

Twitter: @manubarem

But the worst part is that it seems like the internet only exists to break your heart, leaving you in a constant state of suffering since you don't have a dog.

But the worst part is that it seems like the internet only exists to break your heart, leaving you in a constant state of suffering since you don't have a dog.

Science needs to invent a way to send virtual hugs to dogs over the internet.

facebook.com

Aside from following them online, you even PHYSICALLY follow dogs - and their owners - on the street, until you can "coincidentally" stop for a pet (of the dog).

Aside from following them online, you even PHYSICALLY follow dogs - and their owners - on the street, until you can "coincidentally" stop for a pet (of the dog).

And in most cases, you totally forget to acknowledge the owner.

Twitter: @felttheair


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How Do Your Biggest Turn-Offs In Guys’ Apartments Compare To Everyone Else’s?

Drake Is Officially The Hottest Man Alive And I Can't Take It

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Send help.

Everyone who's been paying attention is well-aware by now that Drake has been working on his fitness.

Everyone who's been paying attention is well-aware by now that Drake has been working on his fitness.

Drake / Via instagram.com

In a *big* way, no less.

In a *big* way, no less.

Drake / Via instagram.com

The transformation has truly been ~something~ to witness.

The transformation has truly been ~something~ to witness.

Drake / Via Instagram: @champagnepapi

And now we have yet another photo of the new-and-improved Drake to drool over, thanks to his trainer, who posted it on Instagram.

And now we have yet another photo of the new-and-improved Drake to drool over, thanks to his trainer, who posted it on Instagram.

Push Pounds / Via instagram.com


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Get The Best Of BuzzFeed Each Day With Our Daily Newsletter

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Stay on top of the most hilarious and viral content that BuzzFeed has to offer.

Jenny Chang / BuzzFeed

Do you sometimes struggle to keep up with the conversation about the hottest topics of the day? Well then the BuzzFeed Today newsletter is for you! Each day, we'll send you links to the most viral, hilarious, and heartwarming stories from the previous day. From the funniest fails to the quizzes everyone is talking about to the news stories you just can't miss, you'll get it all. It's never been easier to stay on top of the most popular stories making their way around the web.

Don't get lost in the conversation. Lead the conversation.

Sign up now for the BuzzFeed Today newsletter and never miss a story again!


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OMG You Guys, STD Rates Are The Highest They've Ever Been

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Please don’t have sex without reading this.

It's official: reported STDs have reached an all-time high, according to a new report released Wednesday by the CDC.

It's official: reported STDs have reached an all-time high, according to a new report released Wednesday by the CDC.

The latest Sexually Transmitted Disease Surveillance Report looked at the number of cases of gonorrhea, chlamydia, and syphilis reported in the US in 2015. However, some STDs — like HPV and herpes — are not nationally reported, so those numbers aren't included here.

And since this report only looks at diagnosed cases, it's safe to say that the actual number of infections is much higher.

Mukhina1 / Getty Images

More than 1.5 million cases of chlamydia were reported in 2015. That's a lot of chlamydia.

More than 1.5 million cases of chlamydia were reported in 2015. That's a lot of chlamydia.

This super common infection increased by 5.9% from 2014. And nearly two thirds of all cases were in young people aged 15-24.

FYI: Most people with chlamydia have no idea they have it, because it often pops up without symptoms. And chlamydia can be transmitted through oral, vaginal, and anal sex. So make sure you're getting tested regularly if you're having any type of sex. Here's how to know how often you need to be getting tested.

instagram.com

There were nearly 400,000 cases of gonorrhea reported in 2015.

There were nearly 400,000 cases of gonorrhea reported in 2015.

This went up 12.8% since 2014, and the majority of new cases were reported by men who have sex with men. About half of all gonorrhea cases were in young people aged 15-24.

Again, gonorrhea often comes with no symptoms at all, especially in women. It can be transmitted during oral, anal, or vaginal sex — causing infections in the genitals, throat, or rectum. So make sure you're getting tested if you're at risk, even if you feel and look totally fine.

Jfanchin / Getty Images

Rates of syphilis increased the most from 2014. Nearly 24,000 cases were reported, which was up by 19%.

Rates of syphilis increased the most from 2014. Nearly 24,000 cases were reported, which was up by 19%.

These included cases of primary and secondary syphilis, which are the first two stages of the infection. These are the stages when most people notice symptoms, like a single sore, multiple sores, or rashes in your mouth, vagina, or anus. You can also get a rash on the bottoms of your hands and feet.

Syphilis is spread through vaginal, anal, or oral sex when someone has a sore, which can be on the genitals, rectum, anus, mouth, or lips.

Men who have sex with men made up most of the new syphilis cases. The rate of syphilis in women decreased by 27% since 2014, but the rate of congenital syphilis (passing it to a baby through childbirth) increased by 6%.

Jarun011 / Getty Images


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These Artists Have Turned Their Palettes Into Stunning Paintings

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“The palette is the point of origin from which ideas become realised … a reflection of the human experience.”

Over 50 artists from around the world have taken part in a project that puts their paint palette at the centre stage of their work.

Point of Origin features art painted directly on to the wooden palettes owned by artists, to convey the link between an artist’s mind and the personal work they produce.

The Lodge Gallery

Artists have taken the brief and interpreted it in striking and individual ways, including lifelike raspberries, goldfish swimming in dark water, portraits, and nudes.

By Alonsa Guevera

By Alonsa Guevera

The Lodge Gallery


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Your Starbucks Order Will Reveal Your Favorite Sex Position

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Is your sex life more Grande or Venti?

Can You Guess The Famous Book Without It's Title Or Author?

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Please DO judge a book by it’s cover.

21 Times The Election Proved That We've All Gone Totally Insane

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Let’s be honest, the entire country has gone batshit crazy.

When Stephen Colbert was forcibly removed from the DNC for impersonating a Hunger Games character.

When Stephen Colbert was forcibly removed from the DNC for impersonating a Hunger Games character.

Mark Kauzlarich / Reuters

Mark Kauzlarich / Reuters


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19 Moon Tattoos That Are Actually Works Of Art


These Moms Want To Know Why "Highlights" Magazine Doesn't Include LGBT Families

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The magazine says the “topic of same-sex families is still new.”

This is Kristina Wertz, her partner Kara Desiderio, and their 1-year-old daughter, who absolutely loves Hello Magazine, the version of Highlights for kids under two.

This is Kristina Wertz, her partner Kara Desiderio, and their 1-year-old daughter, who absolutely loves Hello Magazine, the version of Highlights for kids under two.

Kristina Wertz

"I appreciate that there is racial diversity represented in the magazine, but I'm very disappointed that there is no representation of same sex parents," wrote Desiderio.

"Since becoming a parent, I feel keenly aware of the messages kids’ books send to tiny minds. There is a deep need for books that positively reflect back the diversity of the world around us and I hope that Highlights embraces that diversity because we would love to keep highlights in our little one's life as she keeps growing."

They received a message from magazine saying their concerns were sent to the editorial department, with a response from them expected to follow.

But after two weeks passed without a response, Wertz reposted the email on Highlights' Facebook page.

But after two weeks passed without a response, Wertz reposted the email on Highlights' Facebook page.

Facebook: HighlightsforChildren


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This Woman And Her Dog Deserve All Of The Best Halloween Costume Awards

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Halloween has officially been won.

Anyone who has ever attempted a couples costume knows just how difficult they can be to pull off. However, that wasn’t the case for Kate Banaszak and her dog, Kellan the Irish Wolfhound, who dressed up as Wayne and Garth from Wayne’s World to create this perfectly magnificent costume.

Anyone who has ever attempted a couples costume knows just how difficult they can be to pull off. However, that wasn’t the case for Kate Banaszak and her dog, Kellan the Irish Wolfhound, who dressed up as Wayne and Garth from Wayne’s World to create this perfectly magnificent costume.

Reddit/ enelprinceofthemoon / Via reddit.com

From Wayne’s hat and white guitar, to Garth’s messy hair and black framed glasses, it’s all on point.

From Wayne’s hat and white guitar, to Garth’s messy hair and black framed glasses, it’s all on point.

Reddit/ Paramount Pictures / Via reddit.com

So much accuracy.

So much accuracy.

Reddit/ Paramount Pictures / Via reddit.com

I was looking for a great idea for a "duo" costume for the two of us. I'm a huge fan of Wayne's World, so that idea came pretty naturally! We do a couple costume contests around Halloween, so at first I was afraid the masses may not "get it." I went with the idea anyway, and it looks like it was a good one.

I figure why stop at Halloween, so hopefully more ideas will be forthcoming!


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What Does The Superpower You Wish You Had Say About You?

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The power to read minds or the power to fly?

This Man Turned His Sister And Her Dog Into Renaissance Portraits And It's Hilarious

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“She loves big obnoxious things.”

These are some past gifts from Gullo: a head from a suit of armor and a shirt inspired by Meg's dog, Delores.

This year he wanted to do something unbeatable for her birthday, Gullo said. He tried to commission Renaissance portraits of Meg and Dolores, but the cost was too high. So, he went full DIY.

This year he wanted to do something unbeatable for her birthday, Gullo said. He tried to commission Renaissance portraits of Meg and Dolores, but the cost was too high. So, he went full DIY.

Joe Gullo


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Can You Actually Tell Which Of These Headphones Are Actually The Most Expensive

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