Summary

  • Rosemary's Baby's ending confirms her worst fears, making it one of the greatest horror movies ever.
  • The movie's iconic ending challenges viewers with chilling imagery and interpretable moments.
  • Rosemary's decision to embrace motherhood to the Antichrist highlights themes of feminism and control.

Rosemary’s Baby's ending helps to solidify it as one of the greatest horror movies of all time and leaves things on a chilling final note. Based on the novel by Ira Levin, Rosemary's Baby stars Mia Farrow as aspiring mother Rosemary Woodhouse who moves into an old Renaissance Revival-style apartment building in New York City called the Bramford with her gaslighting husband, Guy (John Cassavetes). After becoming pregnant, Rosemary grows suspicious of her neighbors and believes they have malicious intentions for her unborn baby, causing her to fight to regain control as everyone tells her it's all in her head.

Up until the horror movie's iconic ending, Rosemary seems like she could just be imagining the spooky goings-on at the Bramford — her theories are so far-fetched that it would make sense to debunk them. It's more likely her imagination is running wild than the truth that her apartment complex is full of high-society Satanists. Then, her theories are confirmed in one of the most chilling endings in movie history. However, from the Satanic chant to the demonic eyes to the unsettling look of love that Rosemary gives her baby, a lot of the movie’s ending is open to interpretation.

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What Happens In Rosemary’s Baby’s Ending

Rosemary Makes A Shocking Decision To Be A Mother To The Devil's Spawn

Rosemary looking down in Rosemary's baby

At the end of Rosemary’s Baby, the title character's paranoid suspicions are finally confirmed as she finds her neighbors’ coven worshiping her newborn baby under an upside-down cross, enthusiastically chanting, “Hail Satan! When Rosemary is giving birth, she’s restrained and sedated by coven members. Later, she regains consciousness, and she’s told that her baby was stillborn. However, she finds that her breast milk has been saved, so once again, she becomes suspicious that she’s been lied to.

Convinced her baby is still alive, Rosemary finds a hidden passageway into her neighbor’s apartment — the same passageway the coven used to infiltrate the room when she tried to lock them out. Rosemary goes through this passageway and finds her son, Adrian, lying in a bassinet draped in black, surrounded by eager Satan worshipers — including Guy — gathered to celebrate his birth.

When Rosemary takes a look inside the bassinet, she’s horrified by what she sees. Guy tells Rosemary that if she raises the child, she’ll be rewarded. She doesn’t have to become an official member of the Satan worshippers cult; she just has to be a loving mother to Adrian. She initially rejects the offer and spits in her husband’s face. However, when she hears the infant’s cries, her maternal instincts kick in, and she has a change of heart and decides to take in the child even knowing it is the antichrist.

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What Did The Coven Want With Rosemary’s Baby?

Rosemary Was Unwittingly Chose To Birth The Antichrist

The Satanist coven is so desperate to get their hands on Rosemary’s baby because he’s their malevolent deity, the Antichrist. The coven initially targeted recovering addict Terry Gionoffrio to carry the Antichrist, but after her death, at her own hands, they turned their sights to Rosemary.

Her nightmare about being attacked by a demonic presence was a real experience in which she was impregnated with the son of Satan. The birth of the Antichrist has global ramifications for the souls of humankind. In the Bible, the Antichrist is prophesied to oppose Jesus Christ and take his place prior to the Second Coming.

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What’s Wrong With Rosemary’s Baby’s Eyes?

The Newborn Baby Has The Devil's Eyes

Rosemary looking horrified in Rosemary's Baby

Rosemary asks the coven, “What have you done to his eyes?” and cult leader Roman Castevet (Sidney Blackmer) gleefully answers, “He has his father’s eyes.” The father isn’t Guy; it’s the Devil. Adrian has the same terrifying beady eyes seen in Biblical descriptions of Satan. The audience doesn’t see the baby, but Rosemary’s terror at the sight of his demonic eyes suggests the child is an inhuman monstrosity.

What viewers see in their minds when a frightened Rosemary peeks into the crib is undoubtedly much more horrifying than anything the filmmakers could show.

In the movie's unsettling ending, the look of the Antichrist is left to the audience’s imagination. What viewers see in their minds when a frightened Rosemary peeks into the crib is undoubtedly much more horrifying than anything the filmmakers could show.

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Rosemary Embraces Motherhood

Rosemary's Greatest Desire Comes True With A Dark Twist

Rosemary looks in the bassinet in Rosemary's Baby.

When Rosemary hears her baby crying, she decides to embrace her long-sought-after role as a mother in spite of the Satanic nature of her child. All Rosemary ever wanted was to be a mother, and Adrian’s birth allows her that. She’s been tricked and manipulated into serving the Prince of Darkness and paving the way for his invasion of Earth, but she’s finally gotten what she wants. Rosemary is so desperate to be a mother and care for a baby that she’ll even raise the Antichrist with all the love and nurture she’d show to any child.

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The Real Meaning Of Rosemary’s Baby’s Ending

Rosemary's Journey Is About Taking Power

Rosemary with a knife in Rosemary's Baby

Although its story deals heavily with themes of religion and the occult, Rosemary’s Baby is primarily about the uphill battle of feminism. Rosemary wants to take charge of her own life, but her husband and her doctor won’t let her make any decisions for herself. When she gets a haircut to reclaim some of the independence she feels slipping away, Guy says it “looks awful.”

When she gives in to the coven and raises the Antichrist as her own son, it’s certainly a dark and disturbing decision – but at least it’s one she makes for herself.

When she loses trust in her doctor, Guy won’t let her see another one. When she wakes up with scratches on her body, Guy casually insinuates that he assaulted her in her sleep — and that’s to cover up an even darker truth. Released at the beginning of the women’s liberation movement, five years before Roe v. Wade, Rosemary’s Baby’s plot is an extreme metaphor for the control of women’s bodies and the struggle for women to forge their own identity in an oppressive patriarchal society. It is part of what makes it one of the most influential horror movies of all time.

All of Rosemary’s decisions are made by men, including her husband. Like many women of her era, Rosemary wants to make her own decisions and is frustrated by her inability to do so. When she gives in to the coven and raises the Antichrist as her own son, it’s certainly a dark and disturbing decision – but at least it’s one she makes for herself.

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