USA TODAY US Edition

Creepy ‘Conjuring 2’: Delightful­ly demonic

Its skill at chills is enough to make your skin crawl

- BRIAN TRUITT

When there’s something strange in your neighborho­od, who ya gonna call? Ed and Lorraine Warren, obviously.

Played again by Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga, the real-life 1970s ghostbuste­rs head to the British Isles in the horror sequel

The Conjuring 2 ( out of eeeE four; rated R; in theaters Friday). And after a trip to the action-film genre with Furious 7, director James Wan returns to the franchise with a freakier follow-up featuring creepy kids, villains who’ll keep you up at night and camerawork that puts moviegoers in a state of impending dread.

The opening sequence revisits the infamous Amityville haunting in 1976, and after Lorraine encounters a demonic nun during a séance, she proclaims, “This is the closest to hell as I ever want to get.” Well, it gets worse for her and her spouse — a year later, and with Lorraine wanting to pull back from their paranormal activity, they’re called to London to investigat­e why 11-year-old Janet Hodgson (Madison Wolfe) suddenly has the voice of a 72-yearold dead guy.

Wan ingeniousl­y uses snippets of the children’s ditty This Old

Man in the background as struggling single mom Peggy Hodgson (Frances O’Connor) and her young brood are driven mad by beds violently shaking at night, weird shadows coming from the pop-heartthrob posters of yesteryear (one of the girls really digs David Soul), toy fire trucks randomly rolling down the hallway and the beat-up chair that seems to have a mind of its own.

A good bit of dark humor is mined for laughs in these moments, and Wan infuses some sweetness to break up the mood as well. There are some overly hokey elements — Wilson strapping on a guitar to sing Elvis to some English children almost makes it seem as if you’re watching Blue Hawaii instead of a Con-

juring movie. And in a film of more than two hours, some of those lighter moments derail the tautness of the storytelli­ng.

Wolfe gives a great and eerie performanc­e as the haunted kid who’s either possessed or pulling a hoax. It’s hard not to think of Linda Blair in The Exorcist when it comes to these kinds of roles, but Wolfe does the pea-soup brigade proud.

While Wilson is solid as the goodhearte­d Ed, Farmiga is Wan’s true standout — her Lorraine really gets put through the wring- er as she deals with the constant presence of a terrifying supernatur­al force, and Farmiga sells every gasp.

Like other masters of horror — your Stephen Kings and John Carpenters — Wan wisely takes beloved things and turns them against his players. The aforementi­oned ghastly nun and a room full of crucifixes turning upside down attack characters’ faith and offer a visceral depiction of good vs. evil.

Also, similar to what he did with the doll Annabelle in 2013’s first Conjuring (and the toy’s 2014 spinoff movie), the filmmaker introduces an innocent-looking zoetrope, which then spawns the Crooked Man. If that sinister sister doesn’t give you the heebiejeeb­ies, this wicked stringbean with a ghoulish maw of sharp chompers will.

Wan leans into the real history of the 1977 Enfield poltergeis­t legend, too, though it’s not as if he needs any extra inspiratio­n for his frightfest. When it comes to horror, the man pulls no punches or screams.

 ?? COURTESY OF WARNER BROS. PICTURES ?? There just might be something seriously wrong with young Janet (Madison Wolfe) in The Conjuring 2.
COURTESY OF WARNER BROS. PICTURES There just might be something seriously wrong with young Janet (Madison Wolfe) in The Conjuring 2.

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