The
Conjuring: ****/*****, or 7/10
James
Wan merrily continues to reinvigorate the horror genre to great
effect in this spooky possession type scary flick. Though
'reinvigorate' may be said too much, as The Conjuring is
driven by trite but true scare effects that have literally been
employed thousands of times already. Nevertheless, Wan makes them
work as if there's still a sense of novelty to them. Supposedly based
on true events – with the end credits providing the necessary
pictures to back up that statement – The Conjuring follows
the married Warren couple specialized in demonology and paranormal
investigations, which is confronted by the most shocking case of
their already illustrious career. The Perron family recently moved to
an old provincial house on Rhode Island, where they have been plagued
by bizarre occurrences ever since their arrival, which swiftly seem
to take increasingly aggressive turns. Doors slam shut on their own
accord, unexplained sounds are heard everywhere, the dog died a
mysterious death (even though it never even dared to enter the house)
and their daughters are harassed and assaulted by unseen assailants
all night long. With the balanced help of both hard science and
religious ritualism, the Warrens discover the presence of several
ghosts of folks that have died horrible deaths in the house over time
(some of them actually sympathetic), the cause of which is a satanic
presence with an appetite for child murder that won't let go of the
Perrons until the blood of their girls has been shed. To put an end
to this terror the Warrens must call on all their experience and lots
of luck to get everyone involved, including themselves and their own
kid, out of this gruesome mess alive. Naturally the evil spirit won't
make it so easy for them. A synopsis like this reads like a
repetition of narrative elements and age old horror themes that have
been done to death. It cannot be denied that it is just that, and so
are the effects Wan utilizes to scare the bejesus out of his
audience. Surprisingly, it all works great nonetheless. Maybe it's
his sense of timing (there's many a moment of small shocks followed
by silence, which itself is shattered by a big shock), his careful
employment of efficient, mood setting lighting and editing
techniques, or maybe it's the convincing performances delivered by
his cast, with Vera Farmiga and Patrick Wilson making ghostbusting
exorcists feel plausible and compelling. It's probably the whole.
Despite this movie's failure to come up with wholly new concepts to
the horror genre, instead embracing all the clichés people have come
to associate withe the genre, The Conjuring proves a genuine
scarefest from beginning to end, guaranteed to oblige both regular
viewers out for an evening of thrills and die-hard horror lovers who
gave up on Hollywood's tactics ages ago. Hopefully this movie will
stay a standalone film, instead of soon being the victim of rapid
enfranchisement as happened all too easily to Wan's Saw – to
detrimental plot effects, though unfortunately not so much in terms
of box office– which currently also seems to be the case with
Insidious, to which Wan just released a sequel as well (it's a
fruitful year for him apparently). The Conjuring is a good
old-fashioned horror film which brings to mind all the similarly
themed classics of old (though of course not getting anywhere near
the shock level of, say, The Exorcist), but shouldn't be
exploited ad infinitum as some of Wan's other movies have been, for
its own benefit. You can only be reminded of how creepy a door can be
so many times before the feeling of dread is getting stale.
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