It lacks originality and adopts recycling

“The Conjuring 3” .. The series goes from scary to absurd

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What are the filmmaker's tools for communicating information?

Dialogue and this is the weakest tool that this movie uses, or the performance of the characters (their reactions) and these are the most used (Vera Farmiga's scene looking at the devil Falak in The Conjuring 2), or the image, which is the most expressive, and the best example is the last scene of The Shining movie.

Horror films differ according to the visions of the directors.

The Conjuring series drew on the ideas of Australian James Wan in its first two parts.

Wan led the horror film renaissance in the past decade with the films Insidious and The Conjuring and later moved into the superhero world for Warner Bros. Studios, the same studio that produces him the horror films.

He has a new horror movie End of Summer.

Today, The Conjuring series returns with The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It again with its two characters, but without Wan.

And when the original director is absent, the series descends to the level of recycling ideas as the viewer yawns.

"The Conjuring" is a series that has turned into a world of sub-movies whose directors drew their ideas from Wan.

Here's Michael Chiefs, the director of one of those spinoffs, The Curse of Lalorna, who takes Wan's place and drops to rock bottom.

We are in the 21st century and cinematic worlds have become a “fashion.” Every successful movie is transformed by the studio into a cinematic world, and it is not satisfied with just a series.

Believe it or not, this film is the eighth in the world of "The Conjuring", which was launched in 2013, and includes the first two films of this name, and the films "Annabelle", "The Nun" and "The Curse of Lalorna", all of which made fantastic profits against modest budgets.

Adapted from real events and suspicious cases of married couple Ed, Lorraine and Lauren, two investigators in the cases of demonic piracy in the United States in the seventies and eighties.

You don't need to watch the previous movies to understand what's going on here, and the truth is that this is the hardest to understand given the transformation of an already simple story into a complex chaos, in addition to poor visual special effects.

The events take place in 1981, and begins with a clip copied from the famous 1973 horror classic The Exorcist. We see the couple, Warren (Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga), dressed in late '70s clothes and hairstyles, teaming up with a priest to perform an exorcism on a child named David Gladtzel (Julian Hillard) who The devil manipulates his body in clips, all borrowed from the movie mentioned at the beginning of this paragraph.

High winds blowing inside the house we don't know how!

The battle drags on, and Ed suffers a heart attack.

The malicious entity exits from David and enters the body of Arnie (Roarry O'Connor), a friend of David's sister.

Actually, Arnie, this is a good man who invited the entity into his body to save the baby David!

Several months later, Arnie becomes tired, pale, and out of his mind, and kills his homeowner with 22 stab wounds.

The police find him walking on the side of the road covered in blood and repeating: I think I killed someone.

Ed and Lorraine, Arnie's defense attorney, convinces in court to plead not guilty to demonic possession, or the Devil made him kill.

This is the real part of the story.

In 1981, Arnie was tried for the murder of the owner of the house, and when Satan blamed him, the court did not believe him and he was charged with first degree murder.

We did not spoil anything, as the story is there for those who want to read it away from the movie.

The film is not about the trial, but about the investigation of the couple in a complex case of witchcraft and witchcraft that plunges them into a world with special laws related to evil spirits, then the film returns to Arnie in prison to see his boring nightmares.

There is a cliched sub-story about the spark of love that occurred between Ed and Lauren in 1959 and made them marry, and the fact that this cliched part is there to serve as a clip at the end of the film entitled: Love Defeats Satan!

And of course, there are clips of Ed fainting while chasing the devil because of his angina pectoris.

Even if this part humanizes the character and highlights his weakness, the entire movie has nothing to do with humanism, otherwise how a corpse rises from its death and runs towards Ed to kill him in a scene that strips the film of logic from the severity of its absurdity.

The movie is ridiculous and not scary, boring and not interesting, and Wilson and Farmiga know this and do their best to save him, but they can't, because the director is weak, the script is weaker, the special effects are poor, and he borrows everything from previous films and does not have an iota of originality.

about the movie

■ Lauren Warren died two years ago at the age of 92, and Warner Studios hired her as a production consultant for all parts of the series.

■ Julian Hillard is the third child to appear in “The Conjuring” after appearing in the Netflix series “The Hunting of Hill House.” He was preceded by Lulu Wilson (Annabelle: Creation 2017) and McKenna Grace (Annabelle Comes Home 2019). The three played the roles of the Crane brothers in That series.

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• The entire film has nothing to do with humanity, otherwise how can a corpse rise from its death in a scene that strips the film of logic from its severity.

• The movie is ridiculous and not scary, boring and not interesting, because the director is weak, the script is weaker, and the special effects are poor.

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