Deadly Dolly Begin Again (Annabelle: Creation, 2017)

Annabelle_Creation_PosterWhen they announced Annabelle: Creation, I really thought it was a complete start over, ignoring the previously released film which was…not as successful.  Since Annabelle was a prequel to the Conjuring (of a sorts) I had not expected a prequel to the prequel.  But Annabelle: Creation is connected to it’s predecessor.

Opening in 1943, we meet Doll maker Samuel Mullins and his wife Esther.  They adore their young daughter Bee.  When she is killed in a tragic accident they are broken hearted.  The film jumps ahead twelve years and the Mullins have opened their home up to a Nun and several orphan girls.  Samuel still seems a broken man, and explains his wife is unable to get around much, due to an accident years before.  There is one rule given by Samuel, to avoid a certain room.

But curiosity gets the best of young Janice, who opens the door to discover a doll sitting in a chair. This soon results in all sorts of strange events, sitings and soon Janice claims to be seeing the ghost of Bee.  Things escalate into a frightening fight for survival by the young girls and their nun.

Annabelle: Creation is a marked improvement for this part of the Conjuring Universe.  The rural setting creates an eerie sense of isolation that has a lot of impact.  There are plenty of jumps and legit scares in the film.  The demon tied to the doll is a classic demon you might see in a cathedral painting, which is fitting with the Christianity themed spirituality.  The Mullins are a tragic couple who we discover were so overcome in their grief, they allowed darker spiritual forces into their home and paid a terrifying price.

Deadly Dolly (Annabelle, 2014)

Annabelle_PosterAnnabelle was a creepy doll introduced in James Wan’s the Conjuring. Based on a case file from Ed and Lorraine Warren, Annabelle is a doll possessed of a demon.  The Warrens have her locked in a glass case to this day.  Now, the film made some changes.  The real Annabelle doll is a Raggedy Ann doll.  Wan opted for an old fashioned hand made porcelain doll look, and it is very, very creepy.

The doll proved popular with audiences and the producers decided to move forward with an “origin” story for Annabelle. Mia and John are expectant parents. John surprises Mia with the Annabelle doll, a doll she has been looking for for a long time.

One night they face a home invasion by satanists.  In a violent confrontation, both invaders are killed.  Soon, there are mysterious happenings and new mother Mia finds herself having frightening visions. John gets rid of the doll right before they move, but when unpacking in the new apartment, they find Annabelle in a box.

With help from both their local priest and  a psychic, the couple try and rid themselves of the doll and it’s demon. The film lacks Wan’s touch, and while the Annabelle doll looks as creepy as ever, the stakes never feel all that high.  This is in spite of the fact that we are dealing with evil trying to tear apart a family.  Without the anchors of Ed and Lorraine Warren, the film feels lost.

Home Repairs (The Conjuring, 2013)

the_Conjuring_PosterEd and Lorraine Warren are semi-famous paranormal investigators.  They are devout Catholics and very serious about their work.  But they were most prominent in the 70’s and 80’s. Ed actually passed away in 2006, but his wife has carried on their work.  They were one of many investigators of the home of Amityville Horror fame.  James Wan thought their work would make for an interesting horror film.

The Conjuring is based on the case of the Perron Family.  They moved into a home in Rhode Island, only to find themselves facing something very dark.  The Warrens come in to investigate and discover the family is being tormented by a demonic force, specifically the spirit of a long dead witch.  Lorraine has visions of the dead, while Ed and his crew of investigators observe the house.

The Conjuring is very moody and stylized.  You feel compassion for this family in the grips of true horror.  The Warrens are kind and gentle with the family, but firm with the spirits of the house.  Of course, the film versions of Ed and Lorraine are a bit more glamorous, played by Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga.  And frankly, they seem a little less…unhinged, than the real Ed and Lorraine do in some of the video footage I have seen.

The atmosphere is truly creepy, with many scares throughout the film.  But the reason it is so effective in it’s tension is how engaging all the performers are.  Wan has produced a solid thriller with the Conjuring.  It is interesting to see Wan move from the gore soaked slasher territory of Saw to the more spiritual based (and largely traditional) approach to horror. While the visuals are modern, they manage to evoke the old school haunted house horror films of a bygone era.

This House Is Not Cleansed (The Conjuring 2, 2016)

conjuring_2_poster2013’s the Conjuring was not the first attempt to bring Ed and Lorraine Warren’s adventures to the screen.  Catholic ghost hunters and demonologists, Ed was a former cop and Lorraine proclaims to be clairvoyant.  Their work began in the early 50s and by the time Ed Warren passed in 2006, they claimed to have investigated over 10,000 cases. the 1991 TV movie the Haunted was based on one case, as was the 2009 Haunting in Connecticut.  James Wan brought us 2013’s the Conjuring.  An unnerving and powerful thriller following the Warrens as they try and help a family be free of a demonic presence.

It was a surprise hit, and I suspect part of the surprise is that people did not expect it to be both engaging and hopeful.  Wan made his name with the first Saw.  Saw was a rather bleak film, where people were forced to endure torture to survive and gain a better appreciation of life.  While the message was “don’t squander the gift of life”, the series proceeded to fight that very message after Wan moved on.  The Conjuring introduced us to Ed and Lorraine Warren (Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga),  a dedicated Christian couple determine to save the Perron family from the demonic.

The Conjuring 2 looks at a couple cases that made the Warrens famous in the 70’s.  It begins with their investigation of the house at the center of the Amityville Horror.  Their experience while investigating (in which Lorraine wanders the step through the eyes of Ronnie Defeo, Jr, who murdered his family) causes Lorraine to question if maybe they have knocked on the doors of hell once to often, are they pressing their luck?  She asks Ed about stopping.  Ed is more hesitant, not because he does not love or respect Lorraine, but he is still certain she has her visions for a reason.

Meanwhile, we are also following the Hodgsen family in Enfield North London.  Peggy’s husband has walked out, leaving her to care for their four children.  11 year old Janet starts to hear a voice, but then it progress, she awakens in other parts of the house.  There is pounding on the walls, things start to move, and most frighteningly, the spirit seems to have started to speak through young Janet.  The Warrens are brought in by the Catholic Church to determine of this is a hoax, or a true case of demonic activity.

Unlike many horror entries, the Conjuring Films are not about waiting for people to avoid death.  Instead, they focus on the hope and faith of the Warrens to help the families.  They want to bring safety and redemption to the Hodgsen family.  They find that young Janet is desperate to be believed.  She has been abandoned by friends, cut off from her sibling by the time they have arrived.  Both Ed and Lorraine connect with Janet by telling her how hard it was when they first saw spirits.  One of the first things Ed calls for is bringing the family together (the other kids were not staying in the house with Janet and her mother).    Ed buys Elvis records for the kids, because it was something they all loved to listened to before their dad left.  When the record player does not work, they all sit in the living room and Ed leads them in a round of of I Can’t Helping Falling in Love…when the children and their mother join in singing, the song becomes more than a simple love song.  It becomes a song of dedication to each other.  To stand together.

It ends up being greater terror than they could have anticipated, but the Warrens cannot turn away from this family, even when it appears that, just maybe, they are being taken.

Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga are engaging as the Warrens.  The chemistry is there, and their love and compassion for others pours from the performances.  I do not know if the film versions of the Warrens are accurate to the real life Warrens, but I tell you this, I really like the Warrens in these films.  But they are not the only performances of note.  Madison Wolf is compelling and heartbreaking.  Her fear makes you want to do whatever you can to protect this kind hearted child from whatever evil is attacking her.  Simon McBurney’s Maurice Grosse starts out seeming like your typical researcher excited by the potential for himself.  But you find he is genuinely concerned for Janet and has very personal reasons for wanting to prove the existence of an afterlife.

Wan, along with screen writers Carey and Chad Hayes, have given us a story where everyone is likeable.  You do not have characters that you want to see get their comeuppance, because there is not need for that.  This is the battle of good versus evil on a higher reality.

Wan shows himself a master at thrills , building tension and delivering startled jumps.  People will often complain about Jump Scares, but that is really more because they are often used cheaply.  Wan delivers on the promises.  Few things are as creepy as a child’s toy playing on it’s own.  And there is a sequence that uses that very effectively.  Outside of two moments where the Crooked Man is an obvious computer generation, the spirits are creepy and unnerving, providing powerful menace.

Wan and his crew have given us a second very effective story.  It is chilling, yet full of hope and even love.  The Warrens are a charming couple, the family sympathetic.  Good horror is hard to do, good uplifting horror can be near impossible.  But the Conjuring 2 pulls it off.

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