Review: ‘The Conjuring: Last Rites,’ starring Vera Farmiga, Patrick Wilson, Mia Tomlinson and Ben Hardy

September 12, 2025

by Carla Hay

Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga in “The Conjuring: Last Rites” (Photo courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures)

“The Conjuring: Last Rites”

Directed by Michael Chaves

Culture Representation: Taking place in Pennsylvania and in Connecticut, in 1964 and in 1986, the horror film “The Conjuring: Last Rites” (loosely based on true events) features a predominantly white cast of characters (with a few African Americans) representing the working-class and middle-class.

Culture Clash: Paranormal investigator spouses Ed Warren and Lorraine Warren and their daughter Judy Warren get involved in a case of a haunted mirror that is a conduit for an evil spirit. 

Culture Audience: “The Conjuring: Last Rites” will appeal primarily to people who are fans of the movie’s headliners, “The Conjuring” franchise, and formulaic horror movies that bungle key aspects of the storytelling.

Kila Lord Cassidy in “The Conjuring: Last Rites” (Photo courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures)

“The Conjuring: Last Rites” is a jumbled horror movie that has too many plot holes and too many over-used clichés. This bland story (about a haunted mirror and demon possession) is a mix of dull family scenes and unimaginative terror scenes. Although “The Conjuring” movies are loosely based on the real case files of Connecticut-based paranormal investigator spouses Ed Warren and Lorraine Warren, everything in “The Conjuring: Last Rites” not only looks fictional but it also looks like sloppily made fiction.

Directed by Michael Chaves, “The Conjuring: Last Rites” was written by Ian Goldberg, David Leslie Johnson-McGoldrick and Richard Naing. “The Conjuring: Last Rites” is the fourth movie in “The Conjuring” movie series that began with 2013’s “The Conjuring” and continued with 2016’s “The Conjuring 2” and 2021’s “The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It.” Ed Warren (played by Patrick Wilson) and Lorraine Warren (played by Vera Farmiga) are the main characters in all four of these movies.

In real life, Ed Warren died in 2006, at the age of 80. Lorraine Warren died in 2019, at the age of 92. The Warrens were controversial among skeptics, but the couple also had a large fan base of believers. As depicted in “The Conjuring” movies, the Warrens kept many artifacts that they believed are cursed. These items were locked up in a room in their house in Monroe, Connecticut, and were eventually put on display in the Warren Occult Museum, which has been permanently closed since 2019.

“The Conjuring: Last Rites” begins in 1964, when young spouses Ed (played by Orion Smith) and Lorraine (played by Madison Lawlor) have arrived at a house in an unnamed U.S. city. Ed and Lorraine are at the house to interview a woman named Victoria Grainger (played by Paula Lindblom), who says that her father was found hanging from a noose in his shop. Victoria is convinced that her father was murdered by something evil that lives their house.

Lorraine is about eight or nine months pregnant during this investigation. She goes upstairs and sees a tall mirror with goblin-like creatures carved at the top of the frame. Lorraine says to the mirror, “My name is Lorraine Warren, and I can feel your spirit.” And when a pregnant woman is in a demon possession horror movie, you know what that means.

As soon Lorraine announces herself and says she can feel the spirit in the room, the mirror cracks, and she clutches her abdomen in pain. Lorraine goes into labor. Ed frantically drives Lorraine to a hospital, where Lorraine gives birth to a girl who appears to be stillborn.

Lorraine and Ed are emotionally devastated, as Lorraine holds the baby and prays out loud intensely by repeating: “Please bring her back.” Within a few moments, the baby starts breathing again. Lorraine and Ed think it’s a miracle. They name their baby Judy.

“The Conjuring: Last Rites” then fast-forwards to 1986. In the city of West Pittson, Pennsylvania, the Smurl family is celebrating the Catholic Church confirmation of daughter Heather Smurl (played by Kila Lord Cassidy), who’s about 15 or 16 years old. After the confirmation ceremony, the family heads back to the family home for a celebration dinner.

The other members of the Smurl family who are at this dinner are Heather’s parents Jack Smurl (played by Elliot Cowan) and Janet Smurl (played by Rebecca Calder); Heather’s sister Dawn Smurl (played by Beau Gadson), who’s about 13 or 14; Heather’s fraternal twin sisters Carin Smurl (played by Tilly Walker) and Shannon Smurl (played by Molly Cartwright), who are about 9 or 10 years old; and two of Heather’s grandparents (played by Peter Wight and Kate Fahy). who do not have names in the movie.

The grandparents have given Heather a gift that the grandparents said they found at a swap meet. It’s a tall mirror that has goblin-like creatures carved at the top of the frame. The mirror is also cracked. The family dog immediately starts barking at the mirror. And you know what that means.

What isn’t as easy to explain is why anyone would give a child such a creepy-looking and damaged mirror as a gift. Don’t expect this movie to explain why. It’s one of the many lapses in logic in “The Conjuring: Last Rites,” which retreads the horror movie stereotype of a demon that targets teenage girls or young women.

Not long after the mirror is in the Smurl home, strange things start to happen. A ceiling falls partially down on Heather and injures her. Carin and Shannon have a crawling baby doll that seems to be able to move from room to room by itself.

Heather and Dawn eventually believe that the mirror is cursed. And so, they both take the mirror to be thrown out with the rest of the family’s garbage. A garbage truck is shown taking the mirror and the other garbage away. Inside the garbage truck, the mirror is shown being crushed by a garbage compactor. Remember that when the mirror is seen again uncrushed in a crucial part of the story.

Even though the mirror is out of the Smurl house, strange things still happen to the Smurl family, such as Dawn vomiting blood in the kitchen sink and finding shards of glass in her mouth. The Smurl parents eventually go to the media with their story, but they experience ridicule from many people in the community. The Smurls eventually enlist the help of a Catholic priest named Father Gordon (played by Steve Coulter), who knows Ed and Lorraine. The character of Father Gordon was also in the previous three “Conjuring” movies.

After the haunting in the Smurl family home begins, the movie shows a caption announcing that the Smurl family case is the last case the Warrens investigated because the case devastated the Warrens. But it takes an awfully long time in the movie before the Warrens go to the Smurl house to investigate. The Warrens and the Smurls don’t actually meet each other until the movie is more than halfway over.

An overly long stretch of “The Conjuring: Last Rites” is about drama in the Warren family in the family’s home city of Monroe, Connecticut. Judy (played by Mia Tomlinson), who is now 22, has fallen in love with a former police officer named Tony Spera (played by Ben Hardy), who is currently unemployed. Tony loves Judy too, but he knows his unemployment status doesn’t make him an ideal boyfriend.

When Judy introduces Tony to her parents at a Warren family barbecue party, Ed predictably doesn’t approve of Tony, who tries hard to get Ed to like him. Lorraine is more understanding and more accepting of Tony. Ed and Lorraine are semi-retired from paranormal investigating and have been giving speaking appearances at places like college campuses, where they have poorly attended lectures. Most of the people who show up are skeptics or seem bored.

A scene from Judy’s childhood shows that Lorraine found out that Judy has psychic abilities that are similar to Lorraine’s. And you know what that means: adult Judy wants to become a paranormal investigator too, but her parents are very reluctant to have her join the family business. Judy hears about the Smurls and decides to go to West Pittson to investigate on her own. You can easily figure out what happens during the rest of the film.

Throughout “The Conjuring: Last Rites,” certain people have nightmares or visions of a decrepit elderly woman and a man in overalls with a bloody axe. The movie explains who these people are in a rushed and disjointed way. The same goes for the revelations about the demon and what the demon wants.

The movie’s biggest plot hole has to do with the mirror. After the mirror was hauled away and crushed in the garbage truck, the mirror ends up in the attic of the Smurl house in the same condition it was in before the mirror was hauled away and crushed in the garbage truck. The movie gives an idiotic reason for why the mirror has reverted back to its original form and has somehow magically transported itself back into the Smurl house without anyone noticing until the inevitable showdown scene. Ed makes a nonsense comment by saying that evil has a way of doing unexplainable things, and that’s why the mirror found its way back to the Smurl house.

The jump scares in “The Conjuring: Last Rites” have all been seen and done before in other horror films. And there’s a lot of inconsistency in the plot and in the action scenes. For example, during the movie’s big showdown scene, someone gets a serious leg injury where skin is ripped apart and there’s a lot of blood. And yet, by the end of this scene, this person is standing up and moving as if the injury doesn’t exist.

Of all the cast members in “The Conjuring: Last Rites,” Farmiga makes the most effort to be convincing in her role. The other performances in the movie are adequate. Several characters from previous “Conjuring” movies make cameo appearances in “The Conjuring: Last Rites,” including police officer Brad Hamilton, played John Brotherton.

Benjamin Wallfisch’s haunting music score is very effective and is one of the highlights of this otherwise lackluster horror movie. However, the best performances and score music in the world still wouldn’t be able to overcome the movie’s poorly constructed plot that falls short of being truly innovative or terrifying. The movie’s visual effects are fairly standard for a major-studio horror movie.

“The Conjuring” franchise is set to include a spinoff TV series (debuting on HBO Max sometime in 2026), and it remains to be seen what direction the franchise will take with this TV series. Anyone who knows anything about blockbuster horror movie franchises should not believe the hype that “The Conjuring: Last Rites” is the last “Conjuring” movie. But when it comes to creativity, unless “The Conjuring” franchise can redeem itself with a better movie, a more accurate title for “The Conjuring: Last Rites” is “The Conjuring: Last Legs.”

Warner Bros. Pictures released “The Conjuring: Last Rites” in U.S. cinemas on September 5, 2025.

Review: ‘The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It,’ starring Vera Farmiga and Patrick Wilson

June 1, 2021

by Carla Hay

Vera Farmiga and Patrick Wilson in “The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It” (Photo by Ben Rothstein/Warner Bros. Pictures)

“The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It”

Directed by Michael Chaves

Culture Representation: Taking place in Connecticut and Massachusetts in 1981, the horror sequel “The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It” features a predominantly white cast of characters (with a few African Americans, Asians and Hispanics) representing the working-class and middle-class.

Culture Clash: A husband and a wife, who are well-known demonologists/paranormal investigators, get involved in a murder case to try to prove that the defendant was possessed by an evil spirit when he committed the murder. 

Culture Audience: Besides appealing to the obvious target audience of people who are fans of “The Conjuring” franchise, “The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It” will appeal to people who are interested in horror movies that blend the supernatural with real-life legal drama.

Vera Farmiga, Ruairi O’Connor, Vince Pisani, Sarah Catherine Hook and Patrick Wilson in “The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It” (Photo courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures)

How much people might enjoy “The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It” will depend on how much they can tolerate “The Conjuring” universe taking a “Law & Order”-like turn in this particular sequel. That’s because demonologist/paranormal investigator spouses Ed Warren (played by Patrick Wilson) and Lorraine Wilson (played by Vera Farmiga) go beyond the typical haunted house/exorcism storylines of previous “The Conjuring” movies and get involved in a murder case to the point where the Warrens are investigating crime scenes like detectives and giving legal advice like attorneys.

It has the potential to make “The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It” a convoluted mess. But somehow, it all works out to be a satisfying horror thriller that makes up for its predictability with good performances, some terrifying visual effects and overall suspenseful pacing. The movie also has some unexpected touches of humor and romance that take some of the edge off this grim and gruesome story.

Directed by Michael Chaves and written by David Leslie Johnson-McGoldrick, “The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It” (also known as “The Conjuring 3”) is inspired by a true story from the case files of the real-life Ed and Lorraine Warren. The case was about Arne Cheyenne Johnson, who stabbed his 40-year-old landlord to death in Brookfield, Connecticut, in 1981, when Johnson was 19 years old. Johnson admitted to the stabbing but pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder.

His defense? The devil made him do it. Johnson claimed that during the stabbing, he had been possessed by the devil, which entered his body a few months before, during an exorcism of an 11-year-old boy named David Glatzel, who happened to be the younger brother of Arne’s girlfriend Debbie Glatzel. It was the first known U.S. murder case where demonic possession was used as a defense argument.

In real life, the Warrens got involved in the case because they were at this exorcism that was the catalyst for this tragic turn of events. And the Warrens ended up testifying on behalf of Johnson. (The trial doesn’t happen until toward the end of the movie.)

“The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It” begins with an effectively horrifying re-enactment of the exorcism of David Glatzel (played by Julian Hilliard), which takes place in the movie at the Glatzel home on July 18, 1981. In the movie, David is 8 years old, not 11. Ed and Lorraine Warren are at the exorcism, along with Arne (played by Ruairi O’Connor) and Arne’s live-in girlfriend Debbie (played by Sarah Catherine Hook), who have a very loyal and loving relationship.

Arne and Debbie are both in their late teens and live in another house in Brookfield. Also at the exorcism are David and Debbie’s father Carl Glatzel (played by Paul Wilson); David and Debbie’s mother Judy Glatzel (played by Charlene Amoia); and the Warrens’ videographer/assistant Drew Thomas (played by Shannon Kook), who is filming this exorcism.

When the movie begins, it’s implied that the exorcism has been going on for hours, with David showing ebbs and flows in his demonic possession. At one point, David has reached such a state of exhaustion that Arne takes David up to David’s bedroom to tuck the boy into bed. Arne is depicted as a mild-mannered and polite person.

Arne tells David, “You’re one brave kid. I was a little runt growing up, so I know what it’s like to be picked on, but that was nothing compared to what you’re going through.” David says, “I don’t feel very brave.” Arne replies, “Being brave doesn’t mean you’re not scared. It means you’re scared, but you’re hanging in there. I won’t let anything happen to you. I promise.”

David then says, “Arne when are you going to ask my sister to marry you?” Arne replies with a slightly embarrassed tone, “I don’t know what you’re talking about.” Despite this friendly banter, there’s a lingering sense of danger in the air. Arne looks outside David’s bedroom window and sees that a priest has arrived by taxi.

The priest is Father Gordon (played by Steve Coulter), who will be the official exorcist for David. Whatever evil spirits are around seem to know that a clergy person is there, because all hell breaks loose soon after the arrival of Father Gordon. David starts attacking like a demon child, beginning with stabbing his father in the leg. He goes through various contortions. And the inside of the house begins to look like a full-force tornado with swirling gusts of evil.

During this chaos, possessed David attacks Ed, who is knocked down on the ground. Arne sees that the demon won’t leave David’s body, so Arne grabs the possessed child and shouts at the demon: “Leave him alone and take me!” And not long after that, David calms down, but Arne won’t be the same. And neither will Ed, because he’s had a heart attack during this exorcism.

It’s a powerful way to begin the movie, which grabs viewers’ attention from this opening sequence and keeps this heightened level of tension throughout the film. David seems to be “cured,” but Arne starts having nightmarish visions. There’s a sinister-looking woman (played by Eugenie Bondurant) who keeps appearing in the visions, with a clear intent to harm Arne. For example, the first time that she attacks Arne, she starts to strangle him, but he’s able to stop it when he comes out of his trance.

At first, Arne doesn’t tell anyone about his visions because he doesn’t want people to think that he’s crazy. But then, things happen to the point where he can no longer keep it a secret that strange things have been happening to him. It’s eventually revealed in the movie who this evil-looking woman is and her ultimate malicious intent.

Ed’s heart attack lands him in a hospital emergency room. He’s eventually released, but he has to use a wheelchair for a good deal of the story. Over time (this movie takes place over a six-month period, from May to November 1981), Ed doesn’t need the wheelchair anymore, but he has to use a cane. “The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It” includes a flashback to May 1981, when the Glatzels moved into the home that appears to be where the family first encountered the demon, which attacked David in a memorable scene involving a water bed.

Meanwhile, Arne and Debbie are trying to get their lives back to normal. Arne works for a tree service company, and Debbie works for Brookfield Boarding Kennels, a pet service company that’s located inside a two-story house. Debbie and Arne live in the house rent-free as part of her job. It’s a house that’s filled with barking dogs kept in cages when they’re inside.

In a conversation that takes place after the exorcism, Arne suggests to Debbie that they move away from Brookfield. He also drops hints that they should eventually get married. Debbie seems reluctant to move away from Brookfield because she and Arne can’t really afford to move yet and she doesn’t want to live too far away from her family. However, she tells Arne that she’ll think about it.

The owner of Brookfield Boarding Kennels is a creepy drunk named Bruno Salz (played by Ronnie Gene Blevins), who has an underpaid Debbie doing most of the work. She’s very responsible and caring in her job, where she’s essentially the manager and bookkeeper for the business. And that’s another reason why Debbie doesn’t really want to move: She’s afraid that the dogs won’t be taken care of very well if flaky Bruno is left in charge of the kennel.

Bruno has been pestering Arne to repair Bruno’s broken stereo in the house’s living room. And one day, when the stereo is repaired, Bruno decides to crank up the music and have an impromptu party with Debbie, Arne and plenty of alcohol. Bruno plays Blondie’s “Call Me” full blast on the stereo and starts dancing with an uncomfortable-looking Debbie. (“Call Me” will be featured in another part of the movie too.)

Suddenly, Arne seems to be losing touch with reality. And this is where he’s supposed to be possessed by the demon. There’s an almost psychedelic nightmare that’s depicted on screen. And by the end, it’s revealed that Bruno was stabbed to death by Arne. (The stabbing is never shown on screen.) The murder in the movie takes place in September 1981, but in real life, the murder happened on February 16, 1981. It was the first murder in Brookfield’s history.

In a daze, Arne walks down a deserted road, with blood on his hands and clothes. A police officer (played by Chris Greene) in a patrol car stops to ask Arne what’s going on. And that’s when Arne says, “I think I hurt someone.” Arne is arrested for Bruno’s murder. And guess who’s coming back to Brookfield to investigate?

Fans of mystery solving will appreciate the added storyline of Ed and Lorraine Warren doing a lot of detective-like investigating, as the Warrens dig deep to find out the origins of this evil spirit that seems to have taken possession of Arne. In the movie, the demon isn’t inside of Arne all of the time. Arne is placed in the psychiatric ward in the local jail, and he’s a fairly passive prisoner most of the time. But there are moments when the demon comes back to haunt and possibly harm Arne.

In the movie, the Warrens are depicted as being the ones to convince Arne’s defense attorney Meryl (played by Ashley LeConte Campbell) to use demonic possession as a defense argument for Arne. It’s an unprecedented legal strategy that Meryl is convinced won’t work, until Ed and Lorraine show the attorney what they found in their demonologist research over the years. Debbie and the rest of the Glatzel family fully believe that Arne was possessed when he killed Bruno, so the Glatzels are supportive of Arne before and during the trial.

The Warrens take it upon themselves to help gather evidence for this case, but they also want to see if they can get rid of this demonic spirit that they believe exists. The Warrens’ investigation leads them to Danvers, Massachusetts, where they find out how the mysterious case of two teenage girls who were best friends is somehow connected to Arne’s case.

The teenagers are named Katie Lincoln (played by Andrea Andrade) and Jessica Louise Strong (played by Ingrid Bisu), who went missing in May 1981. Katie was found murdered, while Jessica is still missing. The Warrens also track down a former priest whose last name is Kastner (played by John Noble), who might have some answers about this particular demon.

Along the way, Ed and Lorraine also get help from a jail priest named Father Newman (played by Vince Pisani) and a police detective in Danvers named Sergeant Clay (played by Keith Arthur Bolden), who is skeptical at first about helping the Warrens. But then, things happen that change Sergeant Clay’s mind. The movie has a few far-fetched things in the story, such as Sergeant Clay being willing to share his case files with Ed and Lorraine, when in reality that’s a serious breach of police protocol.

And some of the horror scenes are over-the-top with visual effects happening in a very “only in a movie” way, instead of depicting what the real exorcisms probably looked like. The amount of body contortions alone would break bones and put someone in a hospital. But elaborate scare spectacles are what people who watch horror movies like this expect to see.

“The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It” delivers in a way that’s effectively chilling but not as disturbing as 1973’s “The Exorcist,” the gold standard for exorcism movies. However, “The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It” is a vast improvement over director Chaves’ feature-film directorial debut: the bland 2019 horror flick “The Curse of La Llorona.” Because of Arne’s murder trial, there’s a lot more at stake than the usual attempts to rid a person or a house of an evil spirit.

“The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It” is also helped by a suitably convincing production design (by Jennifer Spence), which involves a lot of dusty, dark and unsettling places. And it’s easy to see why the movie changed the seasonal time period to the late summer/early autumn, instead of winter, because cinematographer Michael Burgess effectively uses a lot of autumn-like brown and gold for the exterior shots to contrast with the black and gray of the biggest horror scenes in the film. “The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It” would have looked like a very different movie if it took place in the winter.

Viewers will also see little bit more backstory to Ed and Lorraine’s relationship. In brief romantic flashback scenes, it’s shown how the couple met: Thirty years prior, when Ed and Lorraine were both 17 years old, Lorraine (played by Megan Ashley Brown) went with some friends to a movie theater, where Ed (played by Mitchell Hoog) was working as an usher. It was attraction at first sight, and they began dating shortly afterward.

The movie doesn’t have these scenes as filler. Lorraine is reminiscing about this courtship because of Ed’s near-death scare with his heart attack. It’s caused her to reflect on their longtime relationship. And it’s made the couple appreciate their marriage and partnership even more.

But the movie also has a few touches of comic relief, by showing some of the personal dynamics between this longtime married couple. There are some subtle references to the gender roles that were and still are expected of couples who work together. In “The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It,” Lorraine has to take charge of much of the literal physical legwork in the investigation because of Ed’s recovery from his heart attack.

In a scene where Ed and Lorraine want to investigate a cellar in the Glatzel house, Ed (who is using a cane) realistically won’t be able to crawl around in the cellar. However, Ed tells Lorraine, who tends to dress like a prim and proper schoolteacher: “Honey, let me handle it. You’re going to ruin your dress if you go in there … Be careful.” With an “I can handle it” expression on her face, Lorraine calmly says, “Just hold my purse,” as she hands her purse to Ed. It’s a very realistic and hilarious moment that says it all about how women are often underestimated by men.

The film also shows Ed’s frustration at not being able to physically move around in the way that he’s been used to for all of his life. His anxiety isn’t portrayed in a heavy-handed way, but it’s a nod to the lifestyle adjustments that people who’ve been able-bodied have to go through when they find themselves disabled, even if it’s a temporary disabled condition. Ed does some griping about it, but not in a way that’s too self-pitying.

In a scene where Ed and Lorraine leave a courthouse after a preliminary hearing for Arne, observant viewers will notice that Ed needs to be carried in his wheelchair down the courtroom steps. It’s because the story takes place nine years before the Americans With Disabilities Act made it federal law in 1990 for buildings to provide reasonable access for disabled people. Nowadays, a courtroom building with outdoor steps, such as the building depicted in the movie, is also supposed to have ramps for people who use wheelchairs or walkers.

Since the first “The Conjuring” movie was released in 2013, Farmiga and Wilson have settled into these roles with a charming familiarity. Lorraine is the more level-headed and articulate one in this couple, while Ed (and his East Coast dialect slang) is the more approachable and down-to-earth spouse. Farmiga and Wilson are believable as a couple with a very deep love and respect for each other.

The rest of the cast members are perfectly fine in their roles, but the characters that are new to “The Conjuring” franchise for this movie were clearly written as only for this movie. The character of Arne is a little on the generic side, but O’Connor does an admirable job of conveying Arne’s inner turmoil. Bondurant’s role as the mystery woman who’s been plaguing Arne definitely brings a menacing aura to the movie, but she hardly says anything, so her presence is literally more muted than it needs to be.

Make no mistake: Ed and Lorraine Warren are the main characters for viewers to be the most invested in emotionally. In “The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It,” Lorraine’s psychic abilities are a major part of the story. People might have mixed feelings about how these psychic visions are depicted in the movie and how much of this real-life case was embellished into a Hollywood version.

But just like the rest of the story, “The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It” isn’t about trying to explain a lot of things that can’t be explained by scientific facts. Whether or not viewers believe that demonic spirits exist, “The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It” succeeds in providing plenty of memorable horror that makes it a worthy part of “The Conjuring” universe.

Warner Bros. Pictures will release “The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It” in U.S. cinemas and on HBO Max on June 4, 2021. The movie was released in the United Kingdom on May 26, 2021.

Copyright 2017-2026 Culture Mix
CULTURE MIX