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Annabelle: Creation

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Wikipedia article




'Annabelle: Creation' is a 2017 American supernatural horror film directed by David F. Sandberg, written by Gary Dauberman and produced by Peter Safran and James Wan. It is a prequel to 2014's 'Annabelle' and the fourth installment in the Conjuring Universe franchise. The film stars Stephanie Sigman, Talitha Bateman, Anthony LaPaglia, and Miranda Otto, and depicts the haunted Annabelle doll's origin.

In October 2015, it was confirmed that an 'Annabelle' sequel was in development; it was later revealed that the film would be a prequel rather than a sequel. 'Lights Out' director David F. Sandberg replaced Leonetti as director, with Dauberman returning to write the script and Safran and Wan returning to produce. Principal photography began on June 27, 2016, in Los Angeles, California, and concluded on August 15, 2016.

'Annabelle: Creation' premiered at the LA Film Festival on June 19, 2017, and was theatrically released in the United States on August 11, 2017. The film grossed over $306million worldwide and received generally positive reviews from critics, who noted it as an improvement over its predecessor. A sequel, 'Annabelle Comes Home', was released on June 26, 2019.

Plot



A dollmaker named Samuel Mullins and his wife Esther grieve for the loss of their seven-year-old daughter Annabelle, nicknamed "Bee", who dies when she accidentally steps in front of a car.

Twelve years later, the Mullins open their home to provide shelter for Sister Charlotte and six girls left homeless by the closing of their orphanage. Despite having been warned to avoid Bee's locked bedroom, Janice, a young orphan disabled by polio, discovers a note saying "Find me" and sneaks into the room, which has mysteriously become unlocked. She finds a key for Bee's closet and opens it, where she sees an eerie porcelain doll. This unwittingly releases a powerful demon that begins to terrorize the girls.

One night, the demon, taking Bee's form, appears to Janice, saying that it wants her soul. Although she attempts to get away using a stairlift, the demon recalls the stairlift and hurls her violently down to the ground floor, leaving her severely injured and confined to a wheelchair. Janice's best friend Linda is tormented by the demon. One morning, the demon, posing as Sister Charlotte, wheels Janice into the old barn, where, in the form of Bee, it attacks and possesses her after throwing up black bile directly into Janice's mouth. Linda notices changes in Janice's behavior and tells Samuel that Janice snuck into Bee's room and found the doll. Samuel trusts Linda. Janice, who can now walk, transforms into the demon and brutally kills Samuel who follows her while holding a crucifix, forcing him to drop it. Outside, Sister Charlotte hears his screams and is horrified to find him dead.

Linda takes Janice's doll and throws it into the well. A strange noise comes from the well and she is almost dragged into it, but Sister Charlotte saves her. Alarmed, Sister Charlotte speaks with the disfigured Esther, who is confined to her bedroom. Esther explains that after Bee's death, they prayed to whatever entity would grant their wish to see their daughter again. An unknown entity answered their prayer and though they briefly saw Bee's spirit, the entity convinced them to transfer its essence into one of Samuel's crafted dolls. They happily agreed but soon realized they had attracted a demon looking for a human host. One night, Esther saw Bee's spirit transforming into the demon, which then gouged out her eye. Enlisting the help of priests to bless the house, they locked the doll in Bee's closet. Esther and Samuel opened their house as a shelter to repent for their actions, but Esther now regrets it since this has provided an opportunity for the demon to look for a human host.

The demon murders Esther and attacks Sister Charlotte. The orphans leave the house, but Linda is trapped and hides in Bee's room as the possessed Janice tries to stab her. Sister Charlotte locks Janice and the doll inside the closet. The next day, police arrive to search the house and find only the doll, which they remove as evidence. Sister Charlotte, Linda, and the orphans are escorted away by officers, while Janice escapes through a hole in the closet wall and relocates to an orphanage in Santa Monica. Still possessed, she becomes reclusive and calls herself Annabelle. Pete and Sharon Higgins soon adopt Annabelle.

Twelve years later, after making devil worship, a grown-up Annabelle returns home and murders her adoptive parents, awakening Mia Form, who warns John about Sharon Higgins's screams.

Cast



(left) and Lulu Wilson (right) discuss 'Annabelle: Creation' in 2017

* Stephanie Sigman as Sister Charlotte, the mother figure to the orphans.

* Talitha Bateman as Janice, one of younger orphans who is disabled due to suffering from polio prior to the events of the film

** Tree O'Toole as adult Janice / Annabelle Higgins

* Lulu Wilson as Linda, Janice's best friend, who tries to help her feel better about her polio

* Anthony LaPaglia as Samuel Mullins, Bee's father and Esther's husband

* Miranda Otto as Esther Mullins, Bee's mother and Samuel's wife

** Alicia Vela-Bailey as evil Esther Mullins

* Grace Fulton as Carol, one of the older orphans who likes to tease Linda and Janice

* Philippa Coulthard as Nancy, Carol's best friend

* Samara Lee as Annabelle "Bee" Mullins, Samuel and Esther's deceased daughter, who dies in a car accident

* Tayler Buck as Kate

* Lou Lou Safran as Tierney

* Mark Bramhall as Father Massey

* Adam Bartley as Officer Fuller

* Lotta Losten as the adoption agent

* Joseph Bishara as Annabelle Demon

** Fred Tatasciore as the voice of Demon

* Brian Howe as Pete Higgins

* Kerry O'Malley as Sharon Higgins

* Brad Greenquist as Victor Palmeri

Additionally, Annabelle Wallis and Ward Horton appear in archive footage from 'Annabelle' as Mia and John Form, respectively, and Bonnie Aarons reprises her role from 'The Conjuring 2' as the demon nun Valak in an uncredited appearance.

Production



Development

In October 2015, it was confirmed that an 'Annabelle' sequel was in development. David F. Sandberg replaced 'Annabelle's John R. Leonetti as the sequel's director in March 2016. He has described himself as a fan of the franchise, especially the first one, since they were "more of a classic, old-school horror movie in many ways." James Wan and New Line Cinema approached Sandberg to helm the sequel during the post-production on 'Lights Out', after they were impressed by the early cuts of the film. Sandberg and Wan had met each other during production of 'Lights Out', as the movie was produced by Wan's Atomic Monster Productions. Sandberg did not want to direct another formulaic horror sequel, but after reading the script and realising how it deviated from the first film, he agreed to direct it. He was attracted to it as it was a standalone film, as a result of which he had more creative freedom. The fact that it was a period piece made it more appealing to him. The first film's screenwriter, Gary Dauberman, returned to write the script, with Peter Safran and James Wan returning to produce. In March 2017, Sandberg revealed the film would be a prequel to the original 'Annabelle' film, and titled 'Annabelle: Creation'.

Sandberg drew references from the look of the 1963 psychological horror film 'The Haunting', due to its use of CinemaScope cinematography, and cited the score of 'The Shining' to be the biggest inspiration for the film's chilling music. He also borrowed inspiration from the "old school" feel of 'The Conjuring'. He decided he would rely upon tension and suspense, as opposed to jump scares. Unlike his debut film 'Lights Out', in which he meticulously crafted each scene beforehand, Sandberg had a different approach to 'Annabelle: Creation'. With 'Annabelle' he "was inspired by the set and moment" and so did not prepare with extensive storyboards or diagrams, instead relying on the mantra, "We'll figure it out on set together. We'll make it work."

Sandberg softened some of Annabelle's features to make her more believable as a child's toy, having the cheeks filled-out and fixing her overbite. He found shooting with the doll challenging since the object was immobile, and he needed to use other objectssuch as a sheetto make her move around. Father Robert was a consultant on the film.

Casting

and David F. Sandberg discuss 'Annabelle: Creation' in 2017

In June 2016, Talitha Bateman, Miranda Otto, and Stephanie Sigman were cast to star in the film. Bateman and fellow child actresses Lulu Wilson and Samara Lee had all seen 'The Exorcist', and Samara was named after Samara Morgan from 'The Ring', so despite working on a horror movie, none of the young actresses were disturbed by the film's subject, although some of them did state that they were unsettled by the doll. They said that they did not feel tension or fear throughout production, and Sandberg remarked that the only challenge in working with them was restrictions in terms of hours on the setsuch as they cannot work after midnight and work overtimesince they were under age. Bateman was one of the actresses that James Wan had considered for the role of Janet in 'The Conjuring 2'. However, the part eventually went to Madison Wolfe. Since the script demanded a group of children, they brought Bateman in to audition, having been impressed by her screen tests previously. Her brother, Gabriel Bateman, starred in Sandberg's 'Lights Out'. Wilson auditioned for the role of Linda because she wanted to play a horror protagonist, having played an antagonist in 'Ouija: Origin of Evil'. 'Creation' marks her third time starring in a horror film, following 'Deliver Us from Evil' and 'Ouija'.

Anthony LaPaglia agreed to star in the film after his 14-year-old daughter overheard him talking on the phone about the movie, and responded enthusiastically to her father taking the role. He has described his character as "a mysterious, quiet-yet-gruff man who is mourning both the loss of his daughter and the medical degeneration of his wife. The young orphans who move into the now-dilapidated house fear him." To get into character, he did not mingle with the young actresses very much on set. He would intentionally distance himself from them so that during filming they would naturally not like him very much.

Filming

Principal photography began on June 27, 2016, in Los Angeles, California, at the Warner Bros. Studios, Burbank lot, and concluded on August 15, 2016. The film received California film and television tax credits in the amount of $2.4million after spending $17.4million in the state. Sandberg decided to use Steadicam and tracking shots, because of the film's period setting, and he wanted to maintain the "old school" feel of the first two 'The Conjuring' films. According to Sandberg, he does not believe in ghosts or demonic entities, saying, "I haven't experienced anything in life that would lead me to believe they exist". Sandberg reported that actress Stephanie Sigman, who played Sister Charlotte, was "a little bit freaked out by that doll" and, after hearing that a priest had blessed the set of 'The Conjuring 2', requested the same ritual be performed for this film.

Contest



My Annabelle Creation

In July 2017, Warner Bros. Pictures, in conjunction with James Wan, announced the "My Annabelle Creation" competition as promotion for the then-upcoming film 'Annabelle: Creation'. Participants of the competition were to shoot a short film which would "feel like (it) could exist within the established 'Conjuring' world", with the winning films' directors winning a trip to Los Angeles to meet with David F. Sandberg, the director of 'Annabelle: Creation', and a New Line Cinema's executive. The entry deadline was July 27, 2017, with five separate competition winners being selected from the United States, the United Kingdom, Mexico, Sweden and Colombia.

'The Nurse' (2017)



The winner from the United States competition was Julian Terry for his short film 'The Nurse'. Just under 2 minutes in length and filmed over four days, the film revolves around a bandaged and temporarily blind girl named Emily (Aria Walters) who attempts to elude the eponymous Demon Nurse (Hannah Palazzi).

'The Confession' (2017)



The winner from the United Kingdom competition was Liam Banks for his short film 'The Confession'. Just over 2 minutes in length and filmed over one week, the film revolves around a psychologically-damaged young woman (Esmee Matthews), who after witnessing the deaths of her friends (Charlie Clarke and Jess Messenger), confides in a priest (Earnest Vernon) regarding her terrifying encounters with supernatural entities, only to realize she never escaped.

'What's Wrong With Mom?' (2017)



The winner from the Mexico competition was Ral Bribiesca for his short film 'What's Wrong With Mom?'. Exactly 2 minutes in length and filmed in a single take, the film revolves around a father (Fabin Hurtado) and daughter (Carina Pmenes) as they're praying to God to exorcise the mother (Perla Corona) of the "Marifer", a teleporting demon possessing her.

'Blund's Lullaby' (2017)



The winner from the Sweden competition was Amanda Nilsson and Magda Lindblom for their short film 'Blund's Lullaby'. Just over 2 minutes in length, the film was inspired by the nordic version of the Sandman, known as John Blund.

'Innocent Souls' (2017)



The winner from the Colombia competition was Alejandro Lpez for his short film (Spanish: 'Almas Inocentes').

Music



On November 23, 2016, Benjamin Wallfisch was hired to compose the music for the film. WaterTower Music released the soundtrack album on August 4, 2017.

Release



The film was originally set for release on May 19, 2017, but was pushed back to August 11, 2017, to avoid competition with 'Alien: Covenant'. The film premiered at the Los Angeles Film Festival on June 19, 2017.

Home media

The film was released on Digital HD on October 17, 2017, and on Blu-ray and DVD on October 24, 2017.In May 31, 2022 was released alongside with another The Conjuring Universe movies in Blu-ray, excluding The Curse of Llorona.

Reception



Box office

'Annabelle: Creation' grossed $102.1million in the United States and Canada and $204.4million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $306.5million, against a production budget of $15million. With its release, it pushed 'The Conjuring' franchise past the $1billion threshold, making it only the third horror series to cross that mark, after the 'Alien' franchise and 'Resident Evil' series. 'Deadline Hollywood' calculated the film made a net profit of $108.7million, when factoring together all expenses and revenues.

In North America, the film was released alongside 'The Nut Job 2: Nutty by Nature' and 'The Glass Castle', and was projected to gross around $30million from 3,502 theaters in its opening weekend. The film grossed $4million from its Thursday night previews, the highest of 'The Conjuring' series and double the original 'Annabelle's $2.1million. It went on to open to $35million. In its second weekend, the film dropped 55.7% to earn another $15.5million, which was a smaller second-weekend drop than 'Annabelle' (57%) and 'The Conjuring 2' (63%), and the best second-weekend hold of the franchise since the initial 'Conjuring' film (46%).

Outside North America, the film was released to positive reception from international audiences, which is reflected in its box office performance. It broke several opening records for the horror genre as well as for the studio and came in ahead of 'The Conjuring' and 'Annabelle' in many markets. The week prior to its domestic release, the film debuted in Italy at number one, with $1.1million. It earned $35.4million on its opening weekend from 39 markets, almost on par with its domestic debut and marking the second-biggest international opening in the franchise, behind only 'The Conjuring 2'. Overall, the film was number two at the international box office after 'Wolf Warrior 2'. The film expanded to 56 markets in its sophomore weekend, adding a handful of major markets and thereby topping the worldwide chart for the first time with an estimated $42million.

It recorded the highest opening weekend in the franchise in 26 markets and the biggest launch for a horror film of all time in Sweden, Poland, Portugal, India, Malaysia ($2.2million), the UAE ($1.1million) and Vietnam. The top openings came from Mexico ($8million), Korea ($6.7million), and India ($9.8million). In South Korea, the film grossed $1.2million from Thursday previews. Despite its South Korean release falling during diplomatic tensions, it ultimately opened there with $6.7million, as the number-one foreign release and the third-highest-grossing movie overall behind local films 'A Taxi Driver' and 'Midnight Runners'.

Critical response

On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 71% based on 189 reviews, with an average rating of 6.2/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "'Annabelle: Creation' adds another strong chapter to the 'Conjuring' franchiseand offers further proof that freaky-looking dolls remain reliably terrifying." Metacritic, another review aggregator, assigned the film a weighted average score of 62 out of 100, based on 29 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B" on an A+ to F scale, the same score earned by the first 'Annabelle' film, while those at PostTrak gave it an average 4 out of 5 stars and a 56% "definite recommend".

Justin Lowe of 'The Hollywood Reporter' called it "wickedly terrifying," and said it was "closer in tone and old-school psychological fright tactics to the original film than either 'The Conjuring 2' or 'Annabelle'." Peter Debruge of 'Variety', while criticising the plot, said the film nevertheless "manages to conjure some effective scares," and that "this effective yet empty-headed horror movie goes to show how eager audiences are to be scared, and how even an unsightly doll can do the trick when the spirit is willing." Similarly, Chris Hewitt of 'Empire' felt that while the "movie can't hold a flickering candle to the James Wandirected entries in the series... it's got plenty of decent shocks, and the odd genuine surprise, up its sleeve". However, Emily Yoshida of 'Vulture' wrote that "'Annabelle: Creation's countless sequences of foreboding silencehands reaching for doorknobs, our heroines shuddering in the dark, waiting for their demonic tormentor to attackoffer nothing to really latch on to, no larger reason to care that's not purely technical". Chris Nashawaty of 'Entertainment Weekly' gave the film a "C" grade, calling it "a mishmash of clichs and nonsense" and writing that "none of this will seem new to horror fans".

Accolades



==Sequel==

In April 2018, Warner Bros. announced July 3, 2019, as the release date for an untitled new film in 'The Conjuring' franchise. Later that month, it was announced that the film would be a third 'Annabelle' film, with Gary Dauberman signed on to write and direct, in his directorial debut. James Wan and Peter Safran co-produced the project. In May 2019, the film's release date was changed to June 26, 2019.

Notes



References




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