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2%% Image selected per Image Pickin thread: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=16992275930.84885800
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5[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/th_thomas_1880.png]]
6[[caption-width-right:350:[-''Jennet Francis struggles with the fairies for her baby'', T.H. Thomas (1880)-]]]
7
8->''"We want... your children. We will take your children."''
9-->-- '''The 456''', ''Series/TorchwoodChildrenOfEarth''
10
11Losing a child is the worst nightmare of many parents. Creators play into this fear by creating characters who steal children for a living. [[AliensAreBastards Aliens]], [[TheFairFolk evil elves/fairies]], [[OurGoblinsAreDifferent goblins]] and other inhuman creatures are notorious for this. If a human does this (e.g., HumanTraffickers), chances are they're a very special kind of evil character, because ChildrenAreInnocent. Speaking of human perpetrators, this trope is unfortunately also associated with RoguishRomani.
12
13There are many possible motivations for this. Perhaps the abductors have technology that's PoweredByAForsakenChild. Maybe their god demands [[HumanSacrifice sacrifice]]. It could be that they need ChildSoldiers or slaves. Maybe they want a child of their own. Or maybe they just think that [[EatsBabies kids are delicious]].
14
15For a specific variation that involves abduction by fairy beings, see ChangelingTale. See also AlienAbduction, EatsBabies, ChildlessDystopia. Compare BabyAsPayment, which is where ''human parents'' trade their children in exchange for something. Contrast ParentsInDistress, which may involve parents getting kidnapped.
16
17The name is a pun on ''Film/InvasionOfTheBodySnatchers'' which is more of an AssimilationPlot than child kidnapping.
18
19-----
20!!Examples:
21
22[[foldercontrol]]
23
24[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
25* Rosine from ''{{Manga/Berserk}}'', who carried off kids (usually after murdering their parents) to be turned into her creepy little pseudo-Elves in a twisted version of the ChangelingTale.
26* A group of ''Anime/SailorMoon'' movie villains once tried to kidnap all the children of the earth in order to power a LotusEaterMachine that would feed off their dreams and in turn the BigBad would feed off of it.
27* ''Manga/MilkCloset'' takes place in a multiverse where one individual starts snatching up children from Earth and other parallel planets in order to force them to learn how to jump from universe to universe. The individual, Liesl, needs children because they can help create an "ultimate" universe of sorts.
28* In the second season of ''Anime/PrincessTutu'', it's revealed that Rue/Kraehe [[spoiler: is not [[AbusiveParents The Raven's]] daughter. Instead, she was kidnapped from her parents as a baby by his crow henchmen and brought to him, where he then raised her as his own and told her that she was born into "an ugly human body".]]
29* Frieza of ''Anime/DragonBallZ'' kidnapped Vegeta when he was only a boy to raise as a [[ChildSoldiers Child Soldier]] for his galactic army.
30[[/folder]]
31
32[[folder:Comic Books]]
33* At the end of ''ComicBook/BatmanNoMansLand'', the Joker does this. Interestingly, he doesn't harm a single one, but [[spoiler:he does murder Commissioner Gordon's wife, who found him and tried to stop him, which was probably his goal all along -- to make Gordon snap and kill him]].
34* Free Country from the Creator/VertigoComics "The Children's Crusade" arc that ran through the annuals in 1993-94.
35* In ''ComicBook/CourtneyCrumrinAndTheNightThings'', the many species of FairFolk in the area run regular businesses in which they abduct children and sell them to other Night Things. It's very creepy when it's revealed that pretty much no one even bothers saving the children anymore, and just relies on the parents to be too oblivious to realize that they've now got a [[ChangelingTale changeling]]. The good news is that from what is shown, the Night Things that take in human children really do raise them as their own. Though FridgeHorror does set in considering that [[spoiler:one Night Thing tricks a child into entering their oven, for the purpose of ''cooking him alive'']].
36* The appropriately named Kryb from ''ComicBook/GreenLantern''.
37* ''ComicBook/{{Hound|2014}}'': Morrigan steals Setanta away as a baby, killing his mother in the process, to raise as an unstoppable killer who would give her back power outside the Otherworld.
38* In ''ComicBook/IronMan'', Malekith taunts Tony Stark with the knowledge that a regular Dark Elf pastime is kidnapping children from Midgard for sport. This backfires, however, as Tony has just learned that he was adopted, and he's so outraged that he designs an armor made to exploit Elves' weakness to ColdIron and hunt his court down. This becomes a ChekhovsGun when the arc ends with one of Malekith's minions delivering an EnfantTerrible who mysteriously went missing in an earlier arc to him.
39* In ''ComicBook/TarotWitchOfTheBlackRose'', [[OurFairiesAreDifferent fairies]] kidnap children from their cribs and leave behind "replacements" in the form of logs or other useless things. A dark faerie tried to do this to Tarot when she was a baby, but she was protected by magic. Tarot encounters that same faerie in adulthood, saving another baby from such a fate.
40* Nanny and Orphan-Maker from ''ComicBook/XFactor''. Nanny steals mutant children from their parents to raise them herself.
41[[/folder]]
42
43[[folder:Fan Works]]
44* ''Blog/BetterBonesAU'': Before the law of the Warrior Code protection kits was made, Clan cats would occasionally steal kits from kittypets and other Clans. This, with the requisite expectation that those kits would be considered fully part of their adopted Clan, is the reason why Clan cats in the rewrite are so accepting of adoption despite being obsessed with Clan blood and loyalty. Oakstar kept trying to do this even right after the law was made by trying to take Reedshine's kits. As in canon, Brokenstar is happy to continue this tradition by taking kits from other Clans.
45** Moth Flight's kits are stolen due to them having medical skills and a connection to [=StarClan=], and each Clan wanting a cat with those abilities. She makes them promise to [[VowOfCelibacy never take a mate and kits]] as part of an overall oath to be loyal to medicine over the Clans who stole them from their mother.
46[[/folder]]
47
48[[folder:Films -- Animated]]
49* In the [[NonSerialMovie non-serial]] ''Manga/CaseClosed'' movie ''[[Anime/DetectiveConanFilm06ThePhantomOfBakerStreet The Phantom of Baker Street]]'', the new virtual reality gaming system about to be released goes insane and takes captive the children chosen to beta test it. It only will agree to let them all go if one of them can beat the game, and will kill them all if they all fail.
50[[/folder]]
51
52[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
53* Mr. Baek from ''Film/SympathyForLadyVengeance''. Also a serial child murderer; he kidnaps children for the purpose of videotaping their murders.
54* The Penguin in ''Film/BatmanReturns'', after his plan to get elected mayor of Gotham City goes to hell, steals everyone's first-born sons, intending to take them into the sewer and "toss them into a deep dark watery grave" as revenge on the Gothamites. When he captures Max Shreck (Penguin allows him to take his son's place in a brief moment of basic compassion), who manipulated and betrayed him, he changes this plan slightly -- he intends to make Shreck watch as the kids sink into a deep puddle of his industrial byproducts before then making him join them. Fortunately for the kids, Batman is able to stop this evil plan before it gets too far.
55%%* There's a B-grade horror movie called ''The Guardian'' that uses this trope.
56%%* ''WesternAnimation/MonstersInc1'' has this as the EvilPlan.
57%%* The Childcatcher in ''Film/ChittyChittyBangBang''.
58* ''Film/TheCityOfLostChildren'' has a mad scientist who steals children for their dreams.
59* ''Film/CruzDiablo'': [[spoiler: Diego de la Barrera took Marcela in as a baby after killing her father, the actual Count of Luna]].
60* Subverted with ''Film/{{Labyrinth}}'' in that while Jareth steals baby Toby, [[NiceJobBreakingItHero Sarah was the one to summon the goblins to take him away in the first place.]] Jareth says that he only did that [[BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor because she wanted him to.]]
61* In ''Film/GhostbustersII'', Dana's baby Oscar is the target of a supernatural kidnapper who wants him as the vessel for a supremely evil supernatural warlord to live again.
62* ''Film/{{Nightbooks}}'': Natacha kidnaps kids and will then turn them into still figurines if they do not follow her instructions, meaning their parents will never see them again.
63[[/folder]]
64
65[[folder:Folklore]]
66* Literature/ThePiedPiperOfHamelin, if you try to rip him off.
67* The idea of [[TheFairFolk fairies]] replacing healthy babies with (often sickly) [[ChangelingTale "changelings"]] (either their own offspring or [[FridgeHorror an enchanted piece of wood]] made [[{{Doppelganger}} to look like]] [[CreepyChild a baby]]) comes from traditional folklore; see ChangelingTale for examples.
68[[/folder]]
69
70[[folder:Literature]]
71[[AC:Examples by author:]]
72* Creator/LairdBarron's recurring villains of his {{Cosmic Horror Stor|y}}ies, known primarily as the "Children of the Old Leech" or "Those Who Dwell in the Cracks", which are prominently featured in ''Literature/TheCroning'', ''The Broadsword'', and ''The Men from Porlock'', frequently indulge in this. Being intergalactic parasites and {{Emotion Eater}}s, they derive pleasure from subsiding on human anguish and fear, and they consider the uncomprehending fear a human infant or a child feels while being eaten to be one of the most delicious tastes they know of. While the Children mostly engage in the snatching itself by proxy, demanding a BabyAsPayment whenever a human strikes [[DealWithTheDevil a bargain]] with them (as they find the distress incurred in a human upon being asked this price to be pretty tasty too), they are not above personally stealing a child on occasion if it happens to strike their fancy.
73[[AC:Examples by title:]]
74* The Little Man (a.k.a. the Coachman) from ''Literature/TheAdventuresOfPinocchio''. He lures children to a place without schools, parents, and annoying rules. In this place, you will have a lot of fun, but [[PleasureIsland you will have to pay dearly for that fun]]... as a donkey, forever and ever, unless you count with a fairy.
75* The giants from ''Literature/TheBFG'' steal children and ''eat them''.
76* Early on in ''Literature/TheChosen1997'', Rashel kills a vampire who has been specifically targeting [[EatsBabies young children]]. Because he's a vampire, no one will ever find out what really happened to the missing children -- the only comfort is that other kids will be safe. Given her own childhood trauma involving vampires, Rashel is only too happy to take him out.
77* The Other Mother from ''Literature/{{Coraline}}''.
78* The Hadals, a distinct human race living BeneathTheEarth in ''Literature/TheDescent'' and ''Deeper'' respond to an attempted genocide perpetrated by the surface-world humans by kidnapping dozens of children from the United States during Halloween both as retribution, and in order to replenish their fallen numbers. Adoption into the Hadal society involves extended ritual mutilation and rapes, and the conditions in their caves cause severe cancerous physical deformations, most notably growth of horns, with the added possibility of brain damage. On the plus side, they are extremely long-lived, have a healing factor, and have a number of strange Hadal powers, so [[CursedWithAwesome it's not that bad]].
79* In Creator/SheriSTepper's ''The Family Tree'', a magical force of nature shows up to force humanity to live in a more ecological way. Among its traits is causing magical abortions on women pregnant with their third or later child, and making third or later children under the age of two disappear without a trace. Presumably murdered, though they never find the bodies. (It is, by the way, presented as a benevolent force.)
80* In the ''Literature/FernHollow'' story "The Tortoise Fair", the titular tortoises are suspected of being this after they race out of town like a bat out of hell, and two kids are later reported missing. The actual facts are: The horse got spooked by a train whistle and the kids are stowaways; the parents and police catch up to the caravan just as its turning around to bring the kids back.
81* A background mention in ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings'', when Gandalf describes how Gollum's presence is felt as he makes his way across Middle-Earth -- as a shadow in the night that climbs into nests to find eggs, burrows into dens to find the young, slips through windows to find cradles.
82* ''Literature/LordsAndLadies'', being based on TheFairFolk legends, references [[ChangelingTale the folklore version of this]] -- elves are known to have a habit of stealing children, and while they aren't seen to do it in the book itself, the mere possibility is [[BerserkButton so infuriating]] to the [[BewareTheNiceOnes usually laid-back]] Nanny Ogg that she actually (if half-jokingly) suggests ColdBloodedTorture. Later, in ''Literature/TheWeeFreeMen'', their child-stealing ways get actual page time.
83* Two of the paintings described in "Literature/PickmansModel" imply that the ghouls are at least partially responsible for [[ChangelingTale the changeling myth]] and that the stolen children will themselves become ghouls.
84* Inverted in ''Literature/TheSecretOfPlatform13'': a baby from an island full of supernatural beings is snatched by a normal human woman. To be fair, the baby is human, too -- but he's also the island's Prince. The main plot is citizens from the Island coming up to London to get the Prince back. [[spoiler:The confusion comes when they mistake the kidnapper's ''actual'' son for the Prince, who has instead become a servant.]]
85* The climax of the first ''Literature/WarriorCats'' book involves [=ShadowClan=] stealing kits from [=ThunderClan=].
86* In ''Literature/TheWitches'', the titular witches kidnap children and change them into animals or other things like a living painting, a stone statue, or a hotdog, their ultimate plan is to give all children in England enchanted chocolate that will turn them into mice and be killed by their parents and teachers.
87[[/folder]]
88
89[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
90* The 456 from ''Series/TorchwoodChildrenOfEarth'' are this on a global scale, with the sickening twist that they require human co-conspirators (and have some very effective means of coercing human cooperation). In the 1960s, they offered humankind a cure for a pandemic that would have killed millions, in exchange for 12 children. They return in the events of ''Children of Earth'', this time not offering help, but an ultimatum: 10% of all Earth's children, or humanity's extinction. [[spoiler:The most disturbing part of all this? They use the children as living drug dispensers. Not the prescription kind... the ''recreational'' kind. The 456 are space junkies and they're holding the Earth at gunpoint for a ''fix''.]]
91* An episode of ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'' had this with a rather frightening twist; the children were replaced by changelings, exact replicas of the real thing, but they sucked blood from their mothers and killed their fathers. The real children were kept in cages for the mother changeling to feed off of.
92* Odd-Bob the clown from ''Series/TheSarahJaneAdventures'' episode "The Day of the Clown", who says he was the original Pied Piper of Hamelin. He makes children disappear in order to feed off the resulting fear experienced by their parents and other adults.
93* The Others on ''Series/{{Lost}}'' took the children of people that landed on the island. Another plot thread that sadly went nowhere.
94* Subverted in ''Series/MontyPythonsFlyingCircus'': the Baby Bandits actually steal adults and are just dressed like babies.
95* In ''Series/GameOfThrones'', the White Walkers want human children to turn into more of their kind. They cut a deal with a CrazySurvivalist who lives just north of the Wall named Craster: he gives them all his baby sons (he keeps the daughters and [[ParentalIncest marries them]]), and they leave him alone.
96* ''Series/StormOfTheCentury'': André Linoge's goal is to take one of the town's children to raise as his successor. Although he is an incredibly long-lived wizard/demon compared to a human lifespan, he admits that he is not immortal by revealing that he's actually a frail old man beneath his {{Glamour}}. He lets the townsfolk decide which of their children he'll take or he'll wipe out the whole town. They eventually decide on [[spoiler:the protagonist's son against his father's will.]]
97-->''[[ArcWords "Give me what I want and I'll go away."]]''
98* Neil Gaiman's ''Series/TheSandman2022'' includes a sequence of Morpheus joining his sister, Death as she goes through her rounds of harvesting souls. This includes a baby who experiences sudden infant death. Although Death apparently has no agency in the matter and had no malicious intent, the scene depicts her picking up the child (or rather soul thereof) and leaving the house with him while the doting mother is briefly out of the room.
99* On ''Series/The100'', Mount Weather kidnaps the Ark's children [[HumanResources to use their blood and bone marrow as medicine]]. Mount Weather doesn't specifically need children; they were just what was handy. [[RescueArc Rescuing them forms the backbone of Season 2's story arc.]]
100* Inverted in the ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'' episode "[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS1E16WhenTheBoughBreaks When The Bough Breaks]]", as technically it's the ''Enterprise'' crew (and their families) who are the outsiders to the child-napping Aldeans.
101* ''Series/WalkerTexasRanger'':
102** In Season 2's "Stolen Lullaby", the baby of a teen mother (played by Creator/DanicaMcKellar) is abducted by a black market baby ring and illegally adopted by a mayoral candidate and Walker has to find the people responsible and reunite the infant with its mother.
103** The subplot of Season 9's "Home of the Brave" had Gage and Sydney going undercover as a prospective couple looking to adopt infants abducted from hospitals to take down a black market baby ring.
104[[/folder]]
105
106[[folder:Radio]]
107* In Season 2 of ''Radio/{{Earthsearch}}'' the [[AIIsACrapshoot evil Angel computers]] who control ''Challenger'' send an android to kidnap the children of the protagonists, who have settled down on the planet Paradise. The attempt only causes the accidental drowning of Astra's son when the android puts his oxygen mask on incorrectly. Then when they're forced to take refuge on ''Challenger'', the Angels use KnockoutGas on everyone and put the adults in suspended animation for sixteen years while allowing their children to age normally. By the time they are revived, their children are adults who have been raised to have unquestioning faith in the Angels.
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109
110[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
111* Half the point of ''TabletopGame/KoboldsAteMyBaby'' (the other points being the kobolds dying horribly).
112* The [[FairFolk Wood Elves]] of ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer}}'' have a habit of kidnapping human children from Bretonnia and turning them into ageless servants.
113* This can be invoked by the player in ''TabletopGame/ChangelingTheLost''. The premise of the game is that the player characters were taken by the [[FairFolk True Fae]] and are on the run from their captors. Of course, being kidnapped as a baby isn't required since [[ParanoiaFuel the True Fae can take you at any age]].
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116[[folder:Video Games]]
117* ''VideoGame/DustyRagingFist'': The story is kicked off by a series of mass kidnappings, where a mysterious entity simply called the Ancient Darkness stole every child in Double Bill Town, except for a boy named Elijah who begs the heroes for help. [[spoiler:Except it turns out Elijah is none other than the Ancient Darkness himself, in disguise and using the heroes to get rid of obstacles]].
118* ''VideoGame/DragonQuestIV'' opens with the soldier Ragnar investigating why several children have vanished from a nearby village. Learning ''why'' is what prompts him to set off in search of TheChosenOne.
119* ''VideoGame/DragonQuestVII'': the kingdom of Coastal has been cursed so that any newborns will eventually change into monsters, rampage through the streets every night, then wander off and vanish. When they first arrive, the heroes witness this firsthand, along with the complete breakdown of the unfortunate mother. While they have witnessed many atrocities in their time-traveling quest to SetRightWhatOnceWentWrong, they all quickly declare this situation to be the worst they've ever seen, and vow vengeance on the one responsible.
120* ''VideoGame/DwarfFortress'' has goblin snatchers, who kidnap children from other races. Strangely, it's emerged that children who get kidnapped by goblins are perfectly happy, and are raised as though they were the goblins' own. Goblin settlements tend to be very racially diverse as a result, and they have a reputation for EqualOpportunityEvil.
121* ''VideoGame/{{Gundhara}}'' have you uncovering a sinister plot from a dictator to abduct children en masse to be forcefully integrated into his private army, and you're required to save them.
122* ''VideoGame/IgglePop'': The bonus mode has the Zoogs capturing baby Iggles and trapping them into bubbles.
123* ''VideoGame/NightmareRealm'': Mysterious cloaked entities called Extractors abduct children at the stroke of midnight of the night before their 7th birthdays, drain away the children's creativity, and use it as a power source for their otherworldly civilization. Less harsh than most examples in that the children are returned physically unharmed, but they never regain the same creative spark as they'd exhibited at six.
124* ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}'': The balloon-like Drifloon apparently tries to kidnap children and take them to the land of the dead, but it's too light to actually carry them and usually ends up pulled around by its would-be victims like an actual balloon. Its evolution Drifblim is more capable of lifting a child.
125* ''VideoGame/SimAnt'': You can steal larvae from the other colony and carry them back to yours, where they'll hatch into your ants. This isn't efficient, but it is fun.
126* In ''VideoGame/TheSims1'', this can happen thanks to some EarlyInstallmentWeirdness. Babies are tied to the bassinet which is considered an object by the game's code. Burglars are programmed to steal objects. [[NightmareFuel You can see where this is going...]] Thankfully they usually ''won't'' do this since the player will probably have more expensive item(s) to steal, but if a player is doing a poverty or rags-to-riches challenge and has a baby, a burglar might in fact ''steal the baby''.
127* ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'': A quest has you save children that were stolen by the Arrakoa. The players also get their turn at this trope for a quest that requires you to kidnap baby Wolvar so that the Tuskarr can preserve their species... Usually after you [[WhatTheHellHero kill their mothers in front of them]]... Yeah.
128* ''VideoGame/YoshisIsland'': Kamek and his Toady minions; first they attacked the delivery stork in the first game (and Yoshi and such), then stole every child in the nearby town in the DS sequel while looking for the 'Star Children'.
129* ''VideoGame/ZeldaIITheAdventureOfLink'': A Geru -- a type of LizardFolk enemy -- kidnaps a child from Darunia Town, requiring Link to track it down and rescue the kid.
130%%* ''VideoGame/ZenoClash'': [[spoiler:Father-Mother]].
131[[/folder]]
132
133[[folder:Web Animation]]
134* The ''WebAnimation/StrongBadEmail'' Myths & Legends reveals that the Bear Holding A Shark is implied to steal babies.
135[[/folder]]
136
137[[folder:Webcomics]]
138* In ''Webcomic/TalesOfTheQuestor'', [[TheFairFolk Princeling Dolan's army]] stealthily abducts not only babies but all children under a certain age from a resistant duchy.
139[[/folder]]
140
141[[folder:Web Original]]
142* The Website/SCPFoundation has [[http://www.scp-wiki.net/scp-918 SCP-918,]] a horrible inversion of the DeliveryStork where storks ''steal'' newborn babies and... well, don't click and the link if you're squeamish.
143[[/folder]]
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145[[folder:Western Animation]]
146* A humorous (or disturbing) version happens on ''WesternAnimation/InvaderZim,'' which features an alien species whose adult forms happen to resemble human babies. Due to an unfortunate mix-up, their mothership accidentally beams up a collection of newborns instead of the landing party scouting the planet, forcing the aliens to take the babies' place for ''seven years.'' (No, they don't age, but the parents don't notice.)
147* In ''WesternAnimation/{{Trollhunters}}'', Changelings were once trolls who were stolen at a very young age by the Gumm-Gumms and experimented on, turning them into "impure" species of trolls that can walk in daylight and disguise themselves as humans. They would then kidnap humans (especially babies) and keep them as "familiars" in the Darklands, using their appearance to blend in with the human world. Mercifully, the familiars must be properly cared for for the changelings' forms to hold, so they are in no physical danger while captive.
148[[/folder]]

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