Notable Cast: Patrick Wilson, Vera Farmiga, Frances O’Connor,
Madison Wolfe, Simon McBurney, Franka Potente, Laruen Esposito, Patrick
McAuley, Benjamin Haigh, Maria Doyle Kennedy, Simon Delaney, Shannon Kook,
Sterling Jerins, Bob Adrian, Abhi Sinha, Bonnie Aarons, Javier Botet
James Wan remains the king of modern mainstream horror. We
should all just admit it now. He takes low budget horror and makes it
financially viable with Saw and Insidious. He takes cliché elements and
throw back style and gives it the strength to compete against summer
blockbusters with his last horror film, The
Conjuring. So it’s no wonder that The
Conjuring 2 put a dent into the June box office. He accomplishes these
kinds of things as a director by going back to basics and not into the realm of
popcorn film making that horror so readily focuses on. He focuses on story and
on atmosphere. That’s why The Conjuring 2
works so well. Sure, the critics might call it a disappointment because it
doesn’t quite reach the heights of the first one, but The Conjuring 2 is better than I expected. In fact, I feel it’s
only a smidgen weaker than the original one and matches it in a lot of ways.
No, this film is not “original” as I have seen so many reviews claim, but it’s
a film that crafts a balance with execution and heart worth seeing.
Ed and Lorraine Warren (Patrick Wilson, Vera Farminga) have
been in the game of investigating demonic forces for quite some time now and
their latest case, looking into the events of the Amityville horror, has left
Lorraine a little wary. However, a single mother and her four kids in England
are on the verge of experiencing a true horror. A horror that has reached out
across the ocean to the Warren’s already.
"I need to buy all the crosses in your store. Home improvement project, actually." |
As a horror film, The Conjuring 2 is also quite successful and it’s easy to give Wan a lot of credit for it. This film has a dripping atmosphere and the film layers in more demonic villains to give it a slightly more robust antagonist network for the Warrens and the family to battle. There are some serious jump scares for those looking for that kind of horror, but it’s the atmospheric tension and dread that really works on the nerves. Wan has a knack for building up sequences that spook audiences and The Conjuring 2 features a handful of memorable pieces that are both horrific and artful. In particular, a sequence where Ed Warren is interviewing the young girl who is possessed by a spirit – who just happens to be sitting out of focus on the right – is something sublime and insanely effective. Another one features a toy fire truck and another one features a TV remote that mysteriously disappears. At times the increased amount of demonic villains can be slightly too much for an audience to handle. There were whispers of confusion concerning the smaller role for the Crooked Man and how he connected to the main antagonist the creepy Nun and some friends of mine didn’t quite get why the Nun appears when the Warrens are investigating the Amityville incident in the opening, but neither of those things really seemed to affect my understanding or enjoyment of what The Conjuring 2 had to offer. Wan details his films and layers them to the point of saturation, so like the original I foresee this film actually growing better with repeated viewings.
This is usually when the word "counseling" will be used in your marriage. |
I do sincerely hope we get a Crooked Man spin off. If
anything, that apparition was underused in the film and featured a creepy and
fun design worthy of its own film.
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