Review: The Conjuring (Fantasia)

Last Updated on August 2, 2021

PLOT: Ed (Patrick Wilson) and Lorraine (Vera Farmiga) Warren are demonologists who are called upon to help a family that’s being terrorized by a demonic spirit. Oh yeah, and its “inspired by true events”. Umm hmm.


REVIEW: I’ve long been fascinated by Ed and Lorraine Warren. A couple of years ago, I had a job as an overnight operator at an AM radio station that used to run Coast to Coast AM with Art Bell every night. For those of you who don’t know the show, it’s all about paranormal phenomenon, and it’s got a huge cult following that’s so fierce that on nights when the satellite broke down and we had to air re-runs, I’d get flooded with calls by irate local listeners. Ed Warren passed away in 2006, but his wife Lorraine often appeared on the show to discuss the various cases they were involved in, including the infamous Amityville case.

I’m definitely skeptical about all the Warrens’ claims, although part of me believes that the devoutly religious Warrens actually believed what they were doing was God’s work. Last year, the Fantasia Film festival played an interesting doc called MY AMITYVILLE HORROR that took a skeptics look at their most famous case. The Warrens are back at Fantasia with THE CONJURING, but being a mainstream Hollywood horror film, it’s anything but skeptical about their claims.


Then again, I guess THE CONJURING would be a pretty boring movie if director James Wan didn’t thoroughly invest in the tall tales told by Ed and Lorraine. I have no idea how truthful THE CONJURING is (my bet- not much) but damn if it’s not a terrifically entertaining movie. Hauntings aren’t necessarily a new thing for Wan, having done INSIDIOUS (as well as the upcoming INSIDIOUS PART 2) but if that was a riff on POLTERGEIST, this is more THE AMITYVILLE HORROR by way of THE EXORCIST.


More than anything, it’s a love letter to character-driven, seventies horror. For a good half hour, Wan takes his time setting up both The Warrens and the family that’s being terrorized, The Perrons. A working class couple (Ron Livingston & Lili Taylor) heading a family of five children, all of them girls, The Perrons are instantly likable. Taylor especially hasn’t had a role this strong in a while, and towards the end much of the emotional investment the audience will feel in the story will center on her and her relationship with her kids.


However the real stars of the show are Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga as the Warrens. Wilson’s worked with Wan before (INSIDEOUS) and plays Ed Warren as a man of faith, who doesn’t personally have a connection to the supernatural, but firmly believes in it and approaches it both scientifically and religiously. Much of the film is told through the eyes of Lorraine Warren, who we’re told is a clairvoyant who’s haunted by each of their cases, but is nonetheless compelled to help those in need. Farmiga, who’s already one of the top actresses working today, is really establishing herself as a serious horror star, thanks to this and her work on BATES MOTEL. She approaches THE CONJURING the same way she would something like UP IN THE AIR or THE DEPARTED, and fully invests all of her (considerable) talents to make Lorraine Warren a character you’ll care about. She’s absolutely terrific in the part.


While INSIDIOUS was mostly scary due to its intensity rather than carnage, with THE CONJURING James Wan’s once again working with an R-rating, although it’s still pretty tame, and what little violence there is pretty far removed from the carnage of something like SAW. It’s not gratuitous (I think it could have squeezed by with a PG-13). THE CONJURING really does feel like the kind of horror movie that would have come out in the mid-seventies (the time period this takes place in, so expect lots of garish clothing), and backs up all of its scares with a compelling story, and a lot of technical skill, including a good musical score by Joseph Bishara and creepy photography by DP John Leonetti, who’s been working with Wan since DEAD SILENCE.

While I seriously doubt that the events that inspired THE CONJURING were in any way supernatural (although you never know-oooooooh), it can’t be denied that THE CONJURING is a pretty damn good horror movie, and refreshingly free of cheap scares. Hopefully audiences will flock to see this, as it’s a nice departure from the B-level, micro-budget horror movies we usually get. THE CONJURING is a real A-movie, and reminds me of a time when horror movies were taken seriously. Hopefully that time will come again.

8
Source: Arrow in the Head

About the Author

Chris Bumbray began his career with JoBlo as the resident film critic (and James Bond expert) way back in 2007, and he has stuck around ever since, being named editor-in-chief in 2021. A voting member of the CCA and a Rotten Tomatoes-approved critic, you can also catch Chris discussing pop culture regularly on CTV News Channel.