Annabelle (film)

Annabelle

Theatrical release poster
Directed by John R. Leonetti
Produced by
Written by Gary Dauberman
Starring
Music by Joseph Bishara
Cinematography James Kniest
Edited by Tom Elkins
Production
company
Distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures
Release dates
  • October 3, 2014 (United States)
Running time
99 minutes[1]
Country United States
Language English
Budget $6.5 million[2]
Box office $255.3 million[2]

Annabelle is a 2014 American supernatural psychological horror film directed by John R. Leonetti, produced by James Wan, and written by Gary Dauberman. It is both a prequel to and spin-off of The Conjuring and was inspired by a story of a doll named Annabelle told by Ed and Lorraine Warren.[3] The film stars Annabelle Wallis, Ward Horton, and Alfre Woodard. The film was released worldwide on October 3, 2014.[4]

Annabelle premiered at the TCL Chinese Theatre in Hollywood, Los Angeles, United States, on September 29, 2014.[5] The film received mixed reviews upon release; nevertheless, it grossed over $255 million against its $6.5 million production budget, making it one of the highest grossing horror films of all time.

Plot

The film starts with the same opening scene from The Conjuring. In 1970, in which two young women and a young man are telling Ed and Lorraine Warren about their experiences with a doll called Annabelle which, they believe, is haunted.

In 1969, John and Mia Form live in Santa Monica and are expecting their first child. John gives her a doll that she has been trying to find. Mia loves it and puts it with the rest of her doll collection. At night, Mia hears a murder occurring at their neighbors', the Higgins. When Mia returns home and calls the police as her husband told her to do, she is attacked by a woman holding the doll and a male accomplice. John and the police arrive and kill the man while the woman kills herself. She leaves a bloody symbol drawn on the wall and a drop of her blood falls on the face of the doll in her arms. A news report shows that the assailants were Annabelle Higgins and her boyfriend. They had murdered her parents and are said to have been part of the Disciples of the Ram, a satanic cult, in which they worship a demon with horns.

Since Annabelle was holding the doll while dying, Mia asks John to throw it away. Later, after a fire caused by the doll, Mia trips over furniture escaping from the fire and goes into labor, Mia gives birth to a healthy baby girl named Leah. The family moves into a new apartment, in Pasadena. Mia unpacks her dolls and finds the one which they had thought discarded. More strange activity plagues Mia and her new baby. She contacts the detective, who informs her of Annabelle and her boyfriend's history in a cult that seeks to summon a demon by claiming a soul. Mia goes to a bookstore run by a woman named Evelyn and determines from a book that the presence haunting her wants Leah's soul. Evelyn tells Mia that she had a daughter named Ruby that was around Mia's age when she died in a car accident caused by Evelyn. She was so distraught and guilt-ridden that she attempted suicide. However, she claims to have heard Ruby's voice telling her it wasn't her time.

The couple contacts their church's priest, Father Perez, who tries to take the doll with him to church. Annabelle's ghost attacks him with the horned demon creature worshiped by the satanic cult, and then the doll disappears. Perez warns John that it was indeed Annabelle's spirit that caused his injuries, and that he felt how much the demon wanted Mia's soul. John rushes to warn Mia. During another attack, Annabelle appears to levitate, but Mia sees the demon holding Annabelle in the air, manipulating its actions. Meanwhile, the demonic presence pushes Evelyn out of the apartment and taunts Mia while taking her baby. Mia attempts to kill Annabelle and asks him if there is another way, and it says that she can offer him her soul. John and Evelyn break open the door to find Mia ready to jump out the window with Annabelle in her hands. John saves Mia; Evelyn takes hold of Annabelle and decides to make the sacrifice, knowing this is the way she can atone for Ruby's death. She jumps out of the window and is shown at the bottom of the apartment building, dead next to Annabelle. Leah is then found safe and sound in her crib. The camera focuses back to Evelyn's body but this time, the Annabelle doll has disappeared.

Six months later, the Forms have moved on and have not seen Annabelle since then. Elsewhere, the mother of one of the girls in the opening scene purchases Annabelle as a gift for her child. The ending text states that the real Annabelle doll resides in a case in Ed and Lorraine Warren's museum and that it is blessed by a priest twice a month to keep the public safe from the evil that the doll possesses.

The final shot shows the camera linger on the Annabelle doll, as if it were to make a move before the screen cuts to black.

Cast

Production

On November 8, 2013, a spin-off film of The Conjuring, featuring Annabelle the Doll from the film, was announced to be in development by Warner Bros. and New Line Cinema. It is based on "the supposedly factual exploits of ghost-hunters Ed and Lorraine Warren".[10] With Peter Safran and James Wan producing, John R. Leonetti directed the film from a script written by Gary Dauberman.[3]

Casting

On January 15, 2014, news confirmed that Annabelle Wallis and Ward Horton would play the leads of the film.[6] Two more actors, Eric Ladin and Brian Howe, joined the film in late January before award-winning veteran Alfre Woodard also joined the cast.[7][9]

Filming

Principal photography began on January 27, 2014, at The Book Shop in Covina.[7][11][12][13] On February 25, 2014, filming continued at an apartment in South Normandie Avenue of Los Angeles County where the 55-member crew shot for several days.[14]

Director Leonetti and producer Safran told reporters that the Annabelle set was "haunted" and that they thought "supernatural phenomena" had occurred there.[15]

Music

On April 24, 2014, Joseph Bishara was hired to compose the music for the film.[16] WaterTower Music released the soundtrack album on September 30, 2014.[17]

Reception

Box office

Annabelle earned $84,273,813 in North America and $171,000,000 in other territories for a worldwide total of $255,273,813.

North America

In the U.S. and Canada, Annabelle is the fourteenth highest-grossing horror/supernatural film.[18] Early critics and box office trackers projected that Annabelle could gross around $25 - $27 million in its opening weekend. However, estimates declined shortly after to a range between $20 and $22 million.[19][20][21][22][23] Annabelle was released on October 3, 2014, in 3,185 theatres in North America.[24] Annabelle topped the box office in its opening day earning $15.4 million (including its $2.1 million midnight previews).[25][19][26] In its traditional three-day opening the film debuted at #2 at the box office with $37,134,255, at an average of $11,659 per theater from 3,185 theaters after a neck-and-neck competition against Gone Girl which earned $37.5 million. The two releases were separated by $378,854.[27] Its opening weekend gross is the eleventh highest in October and the biggest for a horror genre film of 2014, surpassing The Purge: Anarchy '​s $28.9 million opening. Dan Fellman, president of domestic distribution at Warner Bros., said about the opening box office performance, "we had a wonderful campaign for the film and a good date"; she added "being a spinoff of The Conjuring set it up really well and we just hit the right note."[28] It is the second time that an October weekend has produced two $30 million or more debuts; the first was in 2008: High School Musical 3 ($42 million) and Saw V ($31 million).[29] According to Rentrak, the opening weekend crowd was evenly split between female with 51% and under 25 years with 54%. The film closed down its theatrical run on December 18, 2014 and earned a total of $84,273,813 becoming the thirty-fifth highest grossing movie of 2014 in the US.[30]

Other territories

The film was released in Russia on September 26, 2014, a week prior to its wide release and earned $2.1 million on its opening weekend, debuting at No. 3 at the Russian box office.[31][32] Overseas in its opening weekend the film earned $23.6 million from nearly 3,300 screen and 39 foreign markets for a first-weekend worldwide total of $60.8 million.[33][34][35]

High openings of Annabelle internationally were reported in France ($3.4 million), Brazil ($3 million), the UK ($3.1 million), Argentina ($1.2 million), Spain ($1.45 million) and Germany ($1.14 million). In India Annabelle debuted at #2 behind Bollywood blockbuster Bang Bang! and collected $1.3 million.[36][36] It set an all time opening record for a horror film in Peru with $1.34 million which is also Warner Bros. second biggest opening weekend of all time there overall.[37] In Mexico, the film earned $10.9 million (including previews) on its opening weekend and broke the record for the biggest debut ever for a horror movie and the best 2D opening. Its opening weekend gross is also the third-biggest opening overall of 2014 behind Maleficent and Transformers: Age of Extinction there. In total the film took 59% of the total market share.[38]

As of October 13, 2014, Annabelle has become the highest-grossing horror film in the Philippines, earning over ₱121.33 million. The film surpassed Insidious: Chapter 2 '​s record (₱113 million), doing so after 12 days of release.[39] The film has also become the highest-grossing horror movie in Lebanon after staying atop the box office for two weekends.[40]

Critical response

Annabelle received mixed reviews from film critics, majority of which felt the film inferior to its forerunner.[41] The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reports a 29% approval rating based on 117 reviews, with a rating average of 4.4 out of 10. The site's consensus is: "Annabelle borrows unabashedly from better horror films, content to leave viewers with a string of cheap jolts that build on fear pretty well, but were far more effective in The Conjuring",[42] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 47 out of 100, based on 37 critics, indicating "mixed or average". [43] CinemaScore gave the film a positive review with a B+ grade on a scale of A to F, in contrast to The Conjuring '​s A-.

Frank Scheck of The Hollywood Reporter gave a mixed review, criticizing the film for its cheap production and screenplay, but was positive towards the performances of the cast and saying, "the film is ultimately so scary and formulaic that you won't forget it."[44]

Scott Foundas of Variety gave the film a positive review, calling the film "inspired" but periodically cheap. He added "a cut-rate spinoff from James Wan's superlative haunted-house hit The Conjuring that (partly) makes up in crude shock effects for what it lacks in craft, atmosphere and just about every other department. Designed mainly as a starring vehicle for the eponymous, creepy-as-hell doll (who easily outclasses her human co-stars), this WB/New Line quickie is the thirst of die-hard genre fans and is by the far the best horror movie of the year".[45]

Pete Hammond of Deadline gave the film a positive review and said that the scary doll show has left him pining for Chucky in Child's Play. He further added, "Annabelle may still draw horror fans in this Halloween month, and they will be quaking over the scares in this film."[46] Annabelle was also titled "scariest movie of the year" by Time magazine.

Sequel

Fellman told The Washington Post that the studio was considering a film series based on the film. A sequel is currently in the works.[47]

References

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External links