


As a result of the tainted blood mixture, everyone else in the cult dies a gruesome, body-exploding-into-dust death-except for Bee, who didn’t drink the blood. Unfortunately, the ritual called for “the blood of the innocent,” and as it turns out, Cole is no longer innocent, having had sex with Phoebe. Melanie collects everyone’s blood, and everyone drinks from it. Melanie, the new cult leader, performs some kind of satanic ritual at a place called Pirate’s Cove. What is The Babysitter: Killer Queen ending, explained?ĭon’t worry: Samara Weaving does come back, for a big scene at the end of The Babysitter: Killer Queen. Now that you’re all caught up, let’s get into The Babysitter 2 ending. So Cole teams up with a new girl at his school named Phoebe (Jenna Ortega), who, despite rumors, seems to be the only one around who hasn’t murdered someone. All of the ex-members of the cult (Hana Mae Lee, Robbie Amell, Andrew Bachelor, and Bella Thorne) are back, apparently not dead. But-triple spoiler alert-it turns out Melanie is in the murder cult, too. Cole hopes to forget his troubles when his crush Melanie (Emily Alyn Lind) convinces him to ditch school for a lakehouse getaway with her and friends. It doesn’t help that his parents (Ken Marino and Leslie Bibb) don’t believe the whole murder cult thing even happened and want to send him to a psychiatric hospital. Even though he knows his old babysitter is the leader of the murder cult, he kind of misses her. In case you clicked on this article before watching the movie, here’s a quick summary: Cole (Judah Lewis) is now a junior in high school, and he’s not dealing with his 12-year-old self’s trauma very well. Double spoiler alert: Though she wasn’t listed in the film’s credits prior to release, Weaving does show up in The Babysitter 2… but not until the very end of the movie. Because, spoiler alert, there is a mid-credits scene at the end of The Babysitter that revealed Samara Weaving‘s character, a murderous babysitter named Bee, was not, in fact, dead. If you watched to the end of the credits of the 2017 horror-comedy The Babysitter, you probably weren’t surprised that director McG made a sequel, The Babysitter: Killer Queen, which premiered on Netflix today. You probably knew that before you clicked, but still. Warning: This article contains major The Babysitter: Killer Queen spoilers.
