The Devil Went Down to Savannah
There are bad horror movies, and then there’s Baby Blues—a film so profoundly unpleasant, so artistically tone-deaf, it feels like a public service announcement directed by Satan. Co-directed by Lars Jacobson and Amar Kaleka, this 2008 psychological horror film claims to be “loosely based” on the Andrea Yates tragedy, which is like saying Titanic was loosely based on a pool party gone wrong. Set in the 1980s but filmed entirely in Georgia on what appears to be a cursed Cracker Barrel, Baby Blues aims for gritty realism and lands squarely in the “please make it stop” category.
It’s a film about maternal madness, isolation, and chicken farming. You know, the holy trinity of box-office poison.
Plot Summary (or, How to Lose Custody of Your Audience)
The movie begins on a rural farm so far removed from civilization that even cell service has given up. The mother, played by Colleen Porch, is already looking like she’s one casserole away from collapse. Her husband (Joel Bryant), a truck driver with the emotional depth of a flat tire, returns home for a single day, impregnates his wife again through what might be the least romantic interaction ever filmed, and then immediately leaves.
And that’s when things start to go downhill—fast.
Alone, exhausted, and apparently allergic to therapy, Mom descends into a psychotic break. She kills the baby, because of course she does, and then sets her sights on the rest of her children like a demonic Mary Poppins. Her eldest son, Jimmy (Ridge Canipe), is forced to become the film’s makeshift hero—a prepubescent MacGyver battling his homicidal mother with farm tools and good intentions.
What follows is ninety minutes of domestic terror, screaming, and rural despair. Mom tries to drown her daughter, strangle her sons, and commit several acts of slow-motion insanity that make you question why you didn’t just rewatch Home Alone.
By the time Dad returns, having learned of the carnage via CB radio (because this film was legally required to feature one), only Jimmy is left standing. The final scene delivers one last punch to the gut: Mom is alive, pregnant again, and singing “Rock-a-bye Baby” to herself like the ghost of bad parenting. The credits roll, and you realize you’ve just watched a film so depressing it should come with a wellness hotline.
Acting: Mother Knows Worst
Let’s be clear—Colleen Porch gives it her all. She’s sweaty, wild-eyed, and genuinely terrifying, but in a way that suggests the director simply said, “Pretend your children are the script supervisor,” and let her go feral. Her performance is the cinematic equivalent of a car alarm that never turns off—loud, jarring, and impossible to ignore.
Ridge Canipe, as Jimmy, tries valiantly to hold the film together, but asking a child actor to anchor a story about infanticide is like asking a Boy Scout to perform brain surgery. He alternates between screaming and looking traumatized, which, to be fair, is also the audience’s emotional arc.
The rest of the cast barely qualifies as human wallpaper. Joel Bryant, as the father, appears briefly to remind us that absentee parenting is an underrated horror trope. The younger siblings, Kali Majors and Holden Maynard, exist primarily to scream, cry, and die—perhaps the most honest depiction of childhood ever put on film.
Tone: Misery, With a Side of Cornbread
It’s hard to tell what Baby Blues is trying to be. A slasher film? A psychological drama? A grim PSA about rural healthcare? The tone oscillates wildly between somber tragedy and low-budget gore-fest. One minute, it wants you to empathize with a mentally ill mother; the next, it’s filming her from Dutch angles while ominous violins screech like dying raccoons.
The movie wants to be The Shining, but it has the budget and lighting of a daytime soap. The isolated farmhouse setting could have been chilling—wide fields, creaky barns, a suffocating sense of emptiness—but instead it feels like the filmmakers shot it between actual farm chores.
There’s no tension, no pacing, just a relentless descent into madness that plays like an extended PSA from Hell: “This is your brain on rural isolation.”
Direction: When Two Heads Are Worse Than One
Lars Jacobson and Amar Kaleka co-directed this masterpiece of maternal despair, and their dual vision results in a film that looks like it was edited by a committee of sleep-deprived ghosts. Every scene feels about five seconds too long, as if the movie itself can’t decide whether to keep going or mercifully stop.
The use of handheld camera work is meant to evoke chaos and intimacy, but it just looks like someone filmed the world’s worst home video. The lighting choices are straight out of “Creepy Basement 101,” and the color grading suggests someone spilled milk on the final print.
It’s the kind of film that makes you nostalgic for professional standards.
Psychological Horror or Just Psychological?
The movie claims to be a “psychological horror,” but there’s very little psychology and even less horror. Postpartum depression—a serious, complex mental illness—is treated here like a supernatural infection, turning a struggling mother into a knife-wielding banshee. There’s no nuance, no exploration of guilt or trauma—just the cinematic equivalent of shouting “Moms be crazy!” and calling it a day.
It’s exploitative, tasteless, and bizarrely lazy. Instead of delving into the tragic realities of postpartum psychosis, Baby Blues uses it as a flimsy excuse for bloodshed. Imagine Bambi if the mother came back and hunted the deer.
Even the film’s supposed message—“madness can happen anywhere”—gets buried under a pile of corpses and cheap shocks. The movie’s handling of mental illness is so crude that it could double as propaganda for mandatory lobotomies.
Gore and Special Effects: Dollar Store Disturbing
The kills are brutal, yes, but not in a good way. There’s no artistry here, just a relentless series of splats, smacks, and “what the hell was that?” reaction shots. The baby’s death is mercifully off-screen, but the rest of the film makes up for it by showing every shovel swing, every strangulation, and every ounce of blood as though subtlety were a sin.
The special effects look like they were done using ketchup and crushed tomatoes from the craft services table. Even the fake blood seems exhausted.
The result isn’t shocking or scary—it’s numbing. By the halfway mark, you’re not horrified; you’re just waiting for everyone to die so you can go back to your life.
The Ending: Rock-a-Bye Sanity
When the film ends, it doesn’t so much conclude as give up. The father’s announcement that the mother is “coming home” plays like the world’s worst Hallmark moment. Then we see her, pregnant again, singing lullabies to herself in a hospital room that doubles as a cry for help.
It’s a final middle finger to logic, closure, and the human condition.
The filmmakers seem to think they’ve crafted something haunting—an endless cycle of madness and motherhood—but what they’ve actually made is a 100-minute argument for sterilization.
Final Verdict: The Real Horror Is That Someone Greenlit This
Baby Blues isn’t a movie; it’s a nervous breakdown with a soundtrack. It’s bleak, exploitative, and about as subtle as a sledgehammer to the face. It takes one of the most tragic true crimes in American history and turns it into a grindhouse melodrama with the emotional sensitivity of a tax audit.
If you’re looking for a horror movie that explores the darkness of the human mind, try Hereditary. If you’re looking for a movie that makes you question the value of art, therapy, and motherhood, Baby Blues is your gal.
Grade: F (for Farmhouse, Feticide, and Filmmaking Failure)
Baby Blues is proof that horror doesn’t have to make sense—but it should, at the very least, respect its subject matter. This one doesn’t. It’s not scary, it’s not smart, and it’s definitely not something you’ll want to rock your baby to sleep after watching.
