The 2013 horror film The Conjuring launched a massive cinematic universe by blending classic haunted-house tropes with the "true story" of paranormal investigators Ed and Lorraine Warren The Real-Life Perron Family Haunting The film is based on the 1971 haunting of the Perron family in Harrisville, Rhode Island. All That's Interesting
Wan deliberately channels 1970s horror masters (Friedkin, Hooper, Carpenter). Key techniques include: The Conjuring
The film’s opening text—“Based on the true case files of the Warrens”—did heavy lifting. Whether one believes in the supernatural or views the Warrens’ case files with skepticism, the framing device provided a layer of terror that pure fiction struggles to replicate. It grounded the absurdity of ghosts in the mundane, suggesting that evil could fester in a dusty attic or a basement crawlspace in Anytown, USA. The 2013 horror film The Conjuring launched a
The narrative unfolds in three acts: (1) the slow accumulation of subtle hauntings (clapping hands, moving furniture), (2) the Warrens’ investigation and discovery of a witch’s curse, and (3) the climactic exorcism. Wan avoids immediate gratification; the first death does not occur until the final act. Instead, tension derives from the family’s entrapment and the Warrens’ ethical dilemma—knowing when to fight and when to flee. Whether one believes in the supernatural or views