Annabelle Comes Home
J**S
"The best, most creepy and intelligently crafted Annabelle in the film series!"
Most of the modern, sprawling Horror franchises don't come with the sort of feel for longevity, widespread popularity, and popular culture infusion as do so many others within more approachable, more family-friendly institutions (Marvel and Star Wars). Back in the day, Freddy and Jason were on the tip of every tongue and flooded theaters with new entries almost by the month, it seemed, but Horror's evolution away from franchise slashers eventually gave way to gore-fests (Saw) and now supernaturally bent Chillers like Annabelle Comes Home, the sixth film within the larger "Conjuring" universe that began with 2013's well received The Conjuring. The franchise has admirably hung on with generally good quality, if not a bit narratively thin, movies that continue to build and bank on light scares and tepid and recycled atmosphere, still a welcome reprieve from the baseless bloodletting of years past but offering only marginal scares to make up for the lack of crimson.Ed (Patrick Wilson) and Lorraine (Vera Farmiga) Warren are in possession of the "Annabelle" doll, a vessel that is said to be "a beacon for other spirits." It is locked away in their house behind glass, lock, key, and regular blessings and prayers, a safe space from which the doll cannot escape or wield its horrific powers. But when the couple leaves home for an overnight work trip, their daughter Judy (Mckenna Grace) is left with her trustworthy babysitter Mary Ellen (Madison Iseman). Judy is unpopular at school -- she and her family have been stigmatized -- and Mary Ellen takes it upon herself to bring a bit of birthday joy to Judy's life. But when Mary Ellen's friend Daniela (Katie Sarife) makes herself at home at the Warren house with an agenda to key in on the couple's connection to the supernatural and reconnect with her late father, she inadvertently sets in motion a series of horrific events when she frees Annabelle from her confines, putting everyone at great risk.The movie's focus gradually shifts from Ed and Lorraine to Judy and Mary Ellen and ultimately, and most interestingly to Daniela, a teenage girl whose father tragically died in a car accident and with whom she has been trying to communicate. She hopes that by mere presence in the Warren house she will have better luck, and when she stumbles upon the artifact room, she comes to realize that there's more to the spirit world than peaceful reconnection with the dearly departed. The movie is both slowly paced and narratively unrewarding as it powers through the motions, as things transition from perfectly normal to paranormally intense. The story maneuvers through effective, but unimaginative, atmosphere but does find hearty engagement in the final few minutes as various demons and other supernatural riffraff enter the picture, but is it enough to save a movie that feels made by rote and from spare parts and recycled concepts? Not really.Annabelle Comes Home plays like a quickly developed movie with minimal dramatic reward. The story unfolds gradually with drawn-out scenes of low-light exploration with the payoff often being a jump scare rather than something of substance. Make no mistake it's well made -- the production design is perfectly implemented and executed, the cast is up to the challenge of acting the parts with appropriate trepidation and fear, and the atmosphere, as stale as it may be, is baseline effective as a complimentary piece of the larger whole that explores some of the lore within the larger universe -- but franchise veterans shouldn't expect to find a movie that reworks convention. The movie is all too comfortable in the universe and satisfied to simply repurpose genre standards. It's not particularly scary, there's little emotional attachment to anyone or anything going on, and one cannot escape the feeling that the movie was made not to tell a necessary story but rather to capitalize on the latest genre fad.Annabelle Comes Home was shot on digital. It exhibits a fair bit of noise, noise that is dense enough to take notice but not often appearing to obvious and intrusive levels. The picture is in good working order. Clarity is excellent and definition is tight. Considering period attire, facial textures, and details around the Warren home, the picture appears fully and intimately detailed across its assortment of visuals. Perhaps most rewarding are the clothes; Daniela's sweater is of particular note for its tangible, tactical, dense and highly detailed fabric. Colors are a little warm to give the movie that period contrast, but there's certainly no lack of zest and intensity to the palette, particularly when considering more punchy clothes against the warm wooden accents around the house. Skin tones are spot-on with alterations only by external influencers. Black levels, critical to the movie's most atmospheric moments, raise no alarms. This is a quality presentation from Warner Brothers; it's hard to imagine a UHD delivering significant alterations.Annabelle Comes Home earns a capable Dolby Atmos soundtrack that is defined by long stretches of sonic banality and punctuated by intense full-stage output during the movie's scare scenes, with emphasis on the final few minutes. The subwoofer engages with prolific depth and intensity on several occasions, first when Daniela calls out to spirits to unlock a door in the Warren's home and certainly in the final act when the stage becomes a demonic playground of sonic terror. A symphony of ringing bells at the 78 minute mark is a sonic highlight, a full stage engaging moment that demonstrates the track's prowess beyond its throatiest elements. Mild atmosphere in school and around the house are well integrated. Music ranges from extremely large to soft and light, finding good clarity and stage placement at both extremes and throughout the middle, too. Dialogue is clear and well prioritized as it presents from a natural front-center location.Annabelle Comes Home contains several featurettes and some deleted scenes.Behind the Scenes (1080p): A three-part feature.Part 1: The Ferryman/Demon (5:18): Alexander Ward portrays two of the film's most terrifying characters. The piece looks in-depth into crafting the prosthetics and Ward's performances within.Part 2: The Bloody Bride (2:57): Natalia Safran's bloody character explored in quick detail.Part 3: The Werewolf (3:07): Crafting the werewolf scene.The Artifact Room and the Occult (1080p, 5:07): A tour through the film's most important set piece with focus on a few specific artifacts.The Light and the Love (1080p, 4:26): A look at the juxtaposition between Ed and Lorraine's love life and the darkness that surrounds their line of work.Deleted Scenes (1080p, 11:28 total runtime): Included are Roller Skate, Kitchen, Birthday Cake, Daniela and the Bride, Search for Annabelle, Alternative Ending, and Talk About the Werewolf.
V**H
Amazing
Nice product, worth buying.
S**R
Best Release!!
One of the Best movie of "The Conjuring"/Annabelle Series. Glad that,all popular Indian languages is included in the disc. Picture n Sound quality is Awesome.
A**.
v good
vgood
A**R
Peace of life :)
Thanks mr. Excel ji
G**A
Totally waste.
Too boreing.......Bakwaas....waste of time...
A**A
My rating is 2.5/5
Okay so this was not at all expected from the conjuring and annabelle franchise after the horrible nun movie. But i won't deny the fact here that i actually felt it to be better than the previous-'annabelle creation'. This one is filmed on a low budget,the whole has been filmed in one house(garden+inside of the house) and what's amusing here is that lorraine and ed warren were only for name say on the film. Like the first ten minutes and then they come at last to celebrate their daughter's birthday. This has really pissed me off.So this movie is about how annabelle could cause havoic if its taken out of its box into the house and yeah there's a cgi created wolf in the garden who is ravenous of guitar guy. See the movie and u'll come to know about it.(The review of movie ends here don't bother to read on if u are satisfied by bluray pricing)Meanwhile prices for new titles should be decreased that's all i can say but who cares, its gonna augment like anything in near future but i still want target buyers to buy it anyway.Thanks for reading
D**L
Boaring movie
My rating is movie 1/5Bluray quality 5/5Total waste of time .…..
B**A
Good
Good
J**Y
Annabelle
Great disc.
L**N
Llegó dañado el Slipcover
Llegó rápido pero el Slipcover resultó dañado no sé si así lo hayan mandado o no tuvieron cuidado en el trasporte hay que checar eso tío Amazon fuera de eso todo bienAudio en inglés francés y españolSubtítulos en inglés francés y español
A**Y
Favorite In The Series
When I first saw the preview for Annabelle Comes Home, I wasn't sure if I was going to like it. In the preview we see a young woman sneak into the artifacts room (where Annabelle is kept). It was at this point, I thought, anyone that dumb deserves every bad thing that happens to them. That usually makes for a bad movie because if you don't care about the people in it, it's hard to care about anything bad that happens to them. That being said, that specific character turns out to have a backstory. I felt for her and I completely understand why she did what she did.The main character (aside from Annabelle), Mckenna Grace, who plays the Warren's young daughter was brilliant in her role. She's amazing in everything I've seen her in. But here, she's able to emote so well with silent melancholy looks. The older "teen" actresses were well played too. I found this movie to have a good amount of suspense and creepiness. Even some humor that I wasn't expecting.I thought the first firm was kinda slow, I liked it but slow. The second was interesting and I liked it more. Annabelle Comes Home hit the nail on the head. However, I would love to see the next film push the boundaries a little more. A little more gore, a little more evilness.Overall, I think this is a great horror movie for families with younger teens and even old guys like me that love to watch horror movies late at night and alone in the dark.
J**R
An entertaining horror flick but only a middle-of-the-road contribution to The Conjuring Universe.
Overall a fun popcorn flick that falls somewhere between Annabelle (for which I didn’t really care) and Annabelle: Creation (which was loads of fun). I have criticisms, but not really any major complaints. My only disappointment rests in direct comparisons to The Conjuring (2013), The Conjuring 2 (2016) and Annabelle: Creation (2017).With Ed (Patrick Wilson) and Lorraine Warren (Vera Farmiga) returning as main characters, this feels almost as much like The Conjuring 2.5 than an Annabelle film. And with how randomly tropey the supernatural entities and their actions have become, it measures a bit shy of being worthy of either. But hold on, I’m not saying it’s a bad movie—just not a great franchise installment.Babysitting for Ed and Lorraine’s daughter Judy (Mckenna Grace), Mary Ellen (Madison Iseman) and her nosey friend Daniela (Katie Sarife) end up freeing Annabelle’s demon to unleash her evil influence on those unlucky enough to be nearby. At first it’s just a little startling. But eventually we get some good atmosphere and scares.A wolfen beast attacks from the annoyingly thick and abundant mist, a murderous spectral bride terrifies the household, empty rocking chairs rock on their own, spirits pace out of focus in the background, evil animated shadows, oddly prophetic TVs, and then there’s the Ferryman... that dude is creepy! This Annabelle doll is, of course, also incredibly creepy. Influenced by a demon and serving as a beacon for lost spirits, Annabelle is a magnet of malady. Seeing her under the sheets of the bed (with you in it) was a joyous shock.First-time director Gary Dauberman (writer; Annabelle: Creation, It, Swamp Thing) seems to have tried to capture the more varied and flavorful threats of The Conjuring 2 (2016). The demon Valek, the Cooked Man; both were well-storied additions to that 2016 sequel. Yet here our varied additions’ introductions held less gravity, and their subsequent sightings less impactful (beyond the excellent jump scares). But make no mistake. I may criticism, but this becomes a rollercoaster of dreadful frights and engaging jumps. It’s just that… remember when the shadowy silhouette of the dog transmuted into the Crooked Man? That will stick with me! Nothing really from this film will... at least, not too much.Overall a fun popcorn flick. I have criticisms, but not really any major complaints. My only disappointment rests in comparisons to The Conjuring (2013), The Conjuring 2 (2016) and Annabelle: Creation (2017).
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