Annabelle
Dir: John R. Leonetti
Starring: Annabelle Wallis, Ward
Horton, Alfre Woodard, and Tony Amendola
98
Minutes
The
mischievous smile that adorns the Annabelle doll supports what horror
films have exploited for years…dolls are creepy. The doll from “Magic”,
“Dead of Night”, The Twilight Zone episode “Living Doll”, and
“Poltergeist” are just a few of the figures that have spooked
audiences. “Annabelle” finds it’s influence from James Wan’s “The
Conjuring”, where the doll first made it’s appearance, however the compliments
are few for this uninspired and holiday exploited horror film.
Mia
(Annabelle Wallis) and John (Ward Horton) live an idyllic life in the
suburbs of Santa Monica. They go to church, have great neighbors, and are
expecting their first child. John is busy at medical school while Mia prepares
for their child at home. The couple gets in an argument one night and John
offers an early present to apologize, it’s a doll that completes Mia’s
extensive collection. The neighbor’s estranged daughter, who is a runaway,
returns violently home one night. Mia and John are attacked but saved by
authorities but not before the Annabelle doll becomes a conduit for a malevolent
force.
From
the beginning moments of “Annabelle” the distinct scare design seen in films
like “Insidious” and “The Conjuring” are present. Tension is a crucial element.
Whether it’s the score that rises and falls in volume coercing
anxiety or the sustainment of a scene at the peak of fear, everything is
purposely coordinated to make the audience uneasy. Even moments of relief
become red herrings for upcoming scares. It’s effective when done
properly. “Annabelle” has a few great setups, like a storage
room scene that composes a great shock and an extended elevator
gag that is surprisingly effective; the remainder of the film is a composition
of reused frights from scarier movies and one-dimensional
characters that aren’t given any opportunity to develop. It’s
unfortunate because the writers hint at some really interesting outlooks,
like an early scene of a news report that discusses
the prominence of cults in California or the incorporation of a demon
figure that steals every fearsome scene. While the first twenty minutes of the
film establishes a nice origin the remainder is problematic in
numerous ways, making the film ultimately feel like it was rushed for
a Halloween deadline.
Once
the family moves from the suburbs to a big city apartment, things get
interesting again. Allowing Mia the opportunity to display motherly
characteristics and adding the presence of a defenseless infant rejuvenates the
stumbling film for a moment. Annabelle Wallis does a good job here; the protective
qualities motherhood offers her character makes depicts her character as
resilient when it would be easy to consider her decisions foolish.
“Annabelle” is
not terrible but it is not particularly good either, however it does
offer enough forceful frights and recognizable setups to remind horror
fans that they should take one of the 31 nights of October to revisit the
source film “The Conjuring”.
Monte’s
Rating
2.00 out
of 5.00
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