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Horror Meets Parenthood: Baby is a Bloodsucking Nightmare
14 Feb
Summary
- Film blurs horror with parental anxieties after childbirth.
- Baby exhibits monstrous traits, causing intense parental fear.
- Metaphors of child-rearing are amplified with gore and humor.

Hanna Bergholm's latest film, 'Nightborn,' delves into the profound anxieties of new parenthood through a horror-infused lens. The story follows a couple, Saga and Jon, who move into an isolated country home, only for their newborn son, Kuura, to exhibit disturbing, blood-sucking tendencies. This narrative skillfully uses exaggerated elements of infant care, such as feeding and sleepless nights, to create visceral, often grotesque, horror sequences.
The film intertwines classic child-rearing moments with shocking gore and dark humor, transforming the universal experience of welcoming a new baby into a terrifying ordeal. While the metaphors can become repetitive, Bergholm's distinct comic touch and the committed performances of Seida Haarla and Rupert Grint elevate the material. The visual craft, from cinematography to set design, enhances the unsettling atmosphere, leaving audiences to question the true nature of the child's monstrousness.




