Jump to content

The babysitter and the man upstairs: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
OOODDD (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Line 13: Line 13:
*The number of children varies in different versions; sometimes one, other times, two or three. Also the children rarely survive in the story, having been murdered by the man before he called the babysitter.
*The number of children varies in different versions; sometimes one, other times, two or three. Also the children rarely survive in the story, having been murdered by the man before he called the babysitter.


*Sometimes the killer is described to have a weapon in the story like an axe or a sharp knife while in other versions the killer just has something to tie the people in the house down with. Also, the killer is (sometimes) described to be covered in blood; in darker versions he tore the children apart with his bare hands.
*Sometimes the killer is described to have a weapon in the story like an axe or a sharp knife while in other versions the killer just has something to tie the people in the house down with. Also, the killer is (sometimes) described to be covered in blood; in darker versions he tore the children apart with his bare hands.then the bitch gets killed blah blah blah


*In most versions of the story, the sitter calls the police and they put a tracer on the line. In some versions of the story they arrive just in time to save the sitter (and sometimes the children), but in others they are too late. Another element is that in some forms of the tale, no call is ever made and the child/children are just heard crying or whimpering in sheer terror.
*In most versions of the story, the sitter calls the police and they put a tracer on the line. In some versions of the story they arrive just in time to save the sitter (and sometimes the children), but in others they are too late. Another element is that in some forms of the tale, no call is ever made and the child/children are just heard crying or whimpering in sheer terror.

Revision as of 14:28, 19 October 2011

The Babysitter and the Man Upstairs is an urban legend that dates back to at least the 1960s about a teenage girl babysitting children while being telephoned by a mysterious man who continually asks her to "check the children".[1] It has been adapted for several movies, including Black Christmas, When a Stranger Calls, When a Stranger Calls Back, Foster's Release, The Sitter, and Amusement. It has also been covered in the television programs Freaky Stories and Mostly True Stories: Urban Legends Revealed.[2][3]

The legend

A teenage girl is babysitting at night. The children have been put to bed upstairs and the babysitter is downstairs, busying herself with homework. The phone rings, and she hears at the end of the line either silence, a strange voice laughing, or heavy breathing. She at first dismisses the calls as a practical joke, but as she prepares to hang up, a sinister voice asks her to "check the children." When she asks who it is, the caller hangs up. Rather than checking on the children, the teenager decides to ignore the call and goes back to her reading. The stranger calls back several times, each time becoming more aggressive.

Eventually the girl becomes worried and calls the police, who ask her to wait for the man to call again, and they will trace the call. When he calls again, she manages to keep him talking for a few minutes, and when the police call back, they tell her that the call is coming from a second line inside the house, and to get out immediately, as they have already sent some officers over.

As she runs to the door she sees a man with a bloody axe running down the stairs, and just manages to avoid his blow. She runs outside into the waiting arms of police, who quickly kill the man. They then search upstairs and find out that he had already killed the children. He was waiting on the girl coming upstairs, as she was his next target.

Notable variations

  • In some tellings,[4] the babysitter does not receive any phone calls but is disturbed by a hideous clown doll. During the night, the babysitter repeatedly leaves the room and returns, and the clown always seems to be in a different position than before. The babysitter calls her employers asking for her permission to remove the doll from the bedroom, and the mother tells her they do not have a clown doll. This version has made its way into the annals of internet "creepypasta." This is most likely a version inspired by the movie Poltergeist. The film Amusement also includes a babysitter troubled by a sinister clown doll.
  • The number of children varies in different versions; sometimes one, other times, two or three. Also the children rarely survive in the story, having been murdered by the man before he called the babysitter.
  • Sometimes the killer is described to have a weapon in the story like an axe or a sharp knife while in other versions the killer just has something to tie the people in the house down with. Also, the killer is (sometimes) described to be covered in blood; in darker versions he tore the children apart with his bare hands.then the bitch gets killed blah blah blah
  • In most versions of the story, the sitter calls the police and they put a tracer on the line. In some versions of the story they arrive just in time to save the sitter (and sometimes the children), but in others they are too late. Another element is that in some forms of the tale, no call is ever made and the child/children are just heard crying or whimpering in sheer terror.

References

  1. ^ Forman-Brunell, Miriam (2009). Babysitter: An American History. New York University Press. p. 133. ISBN 081472759X.
  2. ^ Gillian Bennett, Paul Smith (2007), Urban legends, p. 50
  3. ^ Gillian Bennett, Paul Smith, Contemporary legend
  4. ^ "Statue". Urban Legends Reference Pages. Retrieved 28 November 2009.