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MISKATONIC: Stranger Danger - Child Abduction in the Horror Film

EVENT POSTPONED NOW 22/11: The Miskatonic Institute of Horror Studies presents Stranger Danger: Child Abduction in the Horror Film with Robert Dee

[ID: a blurry photograph of a man in a car with his window down. He has a sinister look on his face. We cannot see what he is looking at. At the bottom of the image, in white writing text reads ‘Don’t Talk to Strangers’]

EVENT POSTPONED: NOW 22ND NOVEMBER

Doors: 6.30pm [talk starts promptly at 7pm]

Tickets: £8

On the door: £12

Semester pass for all Miskatonic events at The Horse Hospital available here

Please note that this event is restricted to over 18s only.


From Lang’s M to Derrickson’s The Black Phone, the spectre of the child murdering stranger has long haunted cinema. Aside from adult concerns for child safety, scenes of ‘stranger danger’ in horror and related media reignite repressed magical thinking and our childhood fears of the dangerous adult Other. Unlike mature adults, these abductors (or Danger Strangers) - The Child Catcher, Pennywise the Clown, Rose the Hat, The Grabber - are more akin to grown-up children, possessing supernatural talents and/or childlike characteristics that act as magical lures to entrap their victims, making them all the more unsettling.

In this lecture Robert Dee will present a loose structural model that represents 13 recurring stages in child abduction scenes, with examples from a number of films. As a filmmaker Dee’s focus is on formal aspects so we will be digging down into visual subtext and cinematic storytelling devices to see how meaning and tension are created on screen.

Form here the investigation will broaden out to look at both Freud’s essay on the uncanny and the Jungian concept of the puer aeterna, touching on the Trickster archetype and Pan, relating these ideas to the character of the Danger Stranger and what it means to us as spectators.

Following this we will investigate the language of Stranger Danger in a wider context by examining preventative public information films from the UK and US, Victorian cautionary tales and fairy tales. We will also look at how the irrationality of satanic panics and the scapegoating of minorities play into stranger danger narratives.

The lecture will conclude with a presentation of Robert Dee’s most recent horror short, The Watcher, which was built on his research and the 13 stage model he developed.


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