 
  Popularity: 27 (history)
| Director: | James Wan | 
|---|---|
| Writer: | Chad Hayes, Carey Hayes | 
| Staring: | 
| Paranormal investigators Ed and Lorraine Warren work to help a family terrorized by a dark presence in their farmhouse. Forced to confront a powerful entity, the Warrens find themselves caught in the most terrifying case of their lives. | |
| Release Date: | Jul 18, 2013 | 
|---|---|
| Director: | James Wan | 
| Writer: | Chad Hayes, Carey Hayes | 
| Genres: | Horror, Thriller | 
| Keywords | sibling relationship, 1970s, cellar, exorcism, haunted house, rhode island, based on true story, possession, paranormal investigation, crucifix, ghost, disturbed, demonic, demonic spirit, demonology, psychic vision, malevolent spirit, dramatic, the conjuring universe, frightened | 
| Production Companies | New Line Cinema, The Safran Company, Evergreen Media Group | 
| Box Office | Revenue: $320,415,166 Budget: $13,000,000 | 
| Updates | Updated: Aug 11, 2025 Entered: Apr 13, 2024 | 
| Name | Character | 
|---|---|
| Patrick Wilson | Ed Warren | 
| Vera Farmiga | Lorraine Warren | 
| Lili Taylor | Carolyn Perron | 
| Ron Livingston | Roger Perron | 
| Mackenzie Foy | Cindy Perron | 
| Joey King | Christine Perron | 
| Hayley McFarland | Nancy Perron | 
| Shanley Caswell | Andrea Perron | 
| Kyla Deaver | April Perron | 
| Sterling Jerins | Judy Warren | 
| John Brotherton | Brad Hamilton | 
| Shannon Kook | Drew Thomas | 
| Joseph Bishara | Bathsheba Sherman | 
| Marion Guyot | Georgiana Moran | 
| Morganna Bridgers | Debbie | 
| Amy Tipton | Camilla | 
| Zach Pappas | Rick | 
| Rose Bachtel | Leah | 
| James D. Nelson | David | 
| Christof Veillon | Maurice Theriault | 
| Carmella Gioio | Sra. Walker | 
| Steve Coulter | Padre Gordon | 
| Ashley White | Estudante | 
| Kymoura Kennedy | Estudante #1 | 
| Sean Flynn | Estudante #2 | 
| George T. Zervos | Padre católico | 
| Desi Domo | Mulher suicida | 
| Nate Seman | Rory (uncredited) | 
| Lorraine Warren | Woman in Audience (uncredited) | 
| Arnell Powell | Reporter | 
| Tony Spera | Man in Audience (uncredited) | 
| Name | Job | 
|---|---|
| Kellie Roy | Casting | 
| Kristin M. Burke | Costume Design | 
| Geoffrey S. Grimsman | Art Direction | 
| Sophie Neudorfer | Set Decoration | 
| Eleanor Sabaduquia | Makeup Department Head | 
| Justin Raleigh | Makeup Effects | 
| Lindsey Suggs | Art Department Coordinator | 
| Tom Jones Jr. | Construction Coordinator | 
| Katrina Johnson | Sculptor | 
| Cate Hardman | Script Supervisor | 
| Steve Maslow | Sound Re-Recording Mixer | 
| Gregg Landaker | Sound Re-Recording Mixer | 
| Christopher V. Bromley | Unit Production Manager | 
| Dennis Alaniz | First Assistant Editor | 
| Jason Leib | Post Production Supervisor | 
| Joe Dzuban | Supervising Sound Editor, Sound Designer | 
| Bruce Tanis | Sound Effects Editor | 
| Joseph Tsai | Sound Effects Editor | 
| Lise Richardson | Music Editor | 
| Janet Ingram | Costume Supervisor | 
| Yeşim "Shimmy" Osman | Hair Department Head | 
| Kelly E. Marlow | Key Hair Stylist | 
| Eddie Bowlin | Rigging Gaffer | 
| David Beavis | Special Effects Supervisor | 
| Michael Tackett | Still Photographer | 
| Patricia Story | Unit Publicist | 
| Ty Church | Transportation Coordinator | 
| Mark McNeill | Transportation Captain | 
| Ray McIntyre Jr. | Visual Effects Supervisor | 
| Jerad Marantz | Concept Artist | 
| Christina Raye | Hairstylist | 
| Bernard Williams | Hairstylist | 
| Rick Pour | Key Makeup Artist | 
| Anthony Brooks | Makeup Artist | 
| Jorie Malan | Makeup Artist | 
| Kelly Golden | Special Effects Key Makeup Artist | 
| James D. Nelson | Assistant Property Master | 
| Henry Dando | Greensman | 
| Kevin Dick | Greensman | 
| Mitchell Martishius | Greensman | 
| Tim Pope | Set Buyer | 
| James Johnston | Set Dresser | 
| Sean Marlow | Set Dresser | 
| Freddy Phelps | Set Dresser | 
| George Winn III | Set Dresser | 
| Eric Brandon West | Set Dresser | 
| Michael Shapiro | Set Dresser | 
| Barbara Seinfeld | Standby Painter | 
| Charles Laughon | 24 Frame Playback | 
| Cristiano Palermi | Assistant Chief Lighting Technician | 
| Philip Dann | Best Boy Grip | 
| Scott R. Davis | Best Boy Grip | 
| Mark Gilmer | Digital Imaging Technician | 
| Tim Marshall | Chief Lighting Technician | 
| Scott Ronnow | First Assistant "A" Camera | 
| Dan Turek | First Assistant "B" Camera | 
| Dan Reilly | Key Grip | 
| Dennis Zoppe | Key Rigging Grip | 
| Kevin Huver | Second Assistant "A" Camera | 
| Roy Knauf | Second Assistant "B" Camera | 
| Scott Christopher Harmon | Rigging Grip | 
| J. Brad Watson | Key Costumer | 
| Jane Beck | Set Costumer | 
| Wayne Morse | Casting Associate | 
| Vanessa Neimeyer | Extras Casting | 
| Craig Fincannon | Local Casting | 
| Lisa Mae Fincannon | Local Casting | 
| Eric Gotthelf | ADR Mixer | 
| Thomas J. O'Connell | ADR Mixer | 
| Amy Felton | Assistant Sound Editor | 
| Chris Main | Boom Operator | 
| Elanor Rimassa | Cableman | 
| Justin Dzuban | Dialogue Editor | 
| Stefan Fraticelli | Foley Artist | 
| John Sievert | Foley Artist | 
| Trent Richmond | Foley Editor | 
| Ron Mellegers | Foley Mixer | 
| Randy Wilson | Foley Mixer | 
| Phil Lee | Sound Mix Technician | 
| Mark Purcell | Sound Mix Technician | 
| Stuart McCowan | Supervising ADR Editor, Supervising Dialogue Editor | 
| Albert Hedgepeth | Utility Sound | 
| Liz Calandrello | Assistant Editor | 
| Trudy Yee | Assistant Editor | 
| Mark Griffith | Digital Intermediate | 
| Bob Fredrickson | Digital Intermediate Editor | 
| Jeff Halsey | Digital Intermediate Producer | 
| Albert Cho | First Assistant Director | 
| Jeff Bilger | Second Assistant Director | 
| Brian Avery Galligan | Second Second Assistant Director | 
| Jordan Alphonso | Visual Effects | 
| Jacob Kebodeaux | Visual Effects | 
| Tammy Sutton | Visual Effects | 
| J. Thomas Wilson | Visual Effects | 
| Ursula Brauner | Animal Wrangler | 
| Alicia Rudd | Animal Wrangler | 
| Shawn Weber | Animal Wrangler | 
| Aaron Becker | Title Designer | 
| Eugene Woodbury | Marine Coordinator | 
| Peter McManus | Production Accountant | 
| Amber Axelton | Production Assistant | 
| Connor Hayes | Production Assistant | 
| Corey L. Howard | Production Assistant | 
| Erin Lambert | Production Assistant | 
| Tarin Squillante | Production Assistant | 
| Dylan Doornbos Hayes | Production Assistant | 
| Rachel S. Mangum | Production Assistant | 
| Ross Burchfield | Production Assistant | 
| Katherine E. Beyda | Production Executive | 
| Hope Demling | Production Secretary | 
| Ingrid Johanson | Production Office Coordinator | 
| Stephanie Fowler Adams | Studio Teacher | 
| Jayson Dumenigo | Stunts | 
| Tree O'Toole | Stunts | 
| Darrell B. Sheldon | "B" Camera Operator | 
| Bass Hampton | Location Manager | 
| Timothy O'Malley | Assistant Accountant | 
| Gayoung Kim | Assistant Accountant | 
| Sherry Kecskes | Assistant Accountant | 
| Erin Keith | Makeup Artist | 
| Robert Beck | Property Master | 
| Michael Hauck | Special Effects | 
| David Hill | Special Effects | 
| Michelle Lee Brown | Craft Service | 
| Robyn M. Brown | Craft Service | 
| John Fox | Storyboard Artist | 
| Chad Hayes | Screenplay | 
| Carey Hayes | Screenplay | 
| Julie Berghoff | Production Design | 
| Joseph Bishara | Original Music Composer | 
| Anne McCarthy | Casting | 
| Kirk M. Morri | Editor | 
| James Wan | Director | 
| Mark Meyers | Steadicam Operator | 
| John R. Leonetti | Director of Photography | 
| Daniel Laurie | Dialogue Editor | 
| Joel Kramer | Stunt Coordinator | 
| Norb Phillips | Stunt Coordinator | 
| John Gilbert | Stunts | 
| Joel Michael Kramer | Stunts | 
| Luci Romberg | Stunts | 
| Nancy Thurston | Stunts | 
| Carl Rudisill | Sound Mixer | 
| Stewart 'Polar Bear' Shaw | Leadman | 
| Lorraine Warren | Consulting Producer | 
| Tony Spera | Production Consultant | 
| Name | Title | 
|---|---|
| Tony DeRosa-Grund | Producer | 
| Rob Cowan | Producer | 
| Peter Safran | Producer | 
| Walter Hamada | Executive Producer | 
| Dave Neustadter | Executive Producer | 
| Organization | Category | Person | 
|---|
Popularity History
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| 2024 | 4 | 115 | 191 | 82 | 
| 2024 | 5 | 134 | 191 | 88 | 
| 2024 | 6 | 122 | 156 | 87 | 
| 2024 | 7 | 153 | 193 | 129 | 
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| 2024 | 9 | 120 | 172 | 84 | 
| 2024 | 10 | 123 | 228 | 83 | 
| 2024 | 11 | 129 | 233 | 85 | 
| 2024 | 12 | 106 | 134 | 82 | 
| 2025 | 1 | 123 | 160 | 95 | 
| 2025 | 2 | 117 | 174 | 26 | 
| 2025 | 3 | 39 | 151 | 3 | 
| 2025 | 4 | 26 | 33 | 18 | 
| 2025 | 5 | 31 | 41 | 18 | 
| 2025 | 6 | 24 | 33 | 20 | 
| 2025 | 7 | 21 | 24 | 18 | 
| 2025 | 8 | 28 | 51 | 22 | 
| 2025 | 9 | 79 | 114 | 42 | 
| 2025 | 10 | 32 | 40 | 26 | 
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| 2024 | 12 | 138 | 626 | 
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| 2024 | 10 | 134 | 294 | 
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| 2024 | 9 | 168 | 350 | 
| Year | Month | High | Avg | 
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | 8 | 267 | 434 | 
It's November 1st, 1971, I'm sitting here with Carolyn Perron, who with her family, has been experiencing supernatural occurrences. The key with The Conjuring is not that it has freshness on its side, as evidenced by the ream of horror fans arguing on internet sites about "nothing new on the tab ... le" , but while those fans will be going hungry for a very, very long time, The Conjuring does everything right for the splinter of horror it deals with. There's a lot to admire about a horror film that in this day and age stands tall and proud against the ream of remakes, sequels and teen friendly slashers that "haunt" the multiplexes with all too much frequency these days. Free of gore and sex, this was automatically going to alienate a good portion of the lustful members of the horror fan base, but for those who like their horror served with appetising scares and a cauldron of suspense, then this delivers plenty to your particular table. Forget the "based on a true story" tag, since it's kind of irrelevant in this new technological age, it's a selling gimmick that actually means "this story might be true and we might have played with it a bit". Regardless of hoax charges and embellishments, just buy into the premise, commit to it as a scary story in the same way as director James Wan has, for then the rewards are there for the compliant. Story essentially is based around an investigation in the early seventies by paranormal specialists Ed and Lorraine Warren, who aided the Perron family as they were victims of dreadful supernatural events at their Rhode Island home. Wan builds it deftly, letting us into the Perron families lives as they move into what they believe to be a dream home. Then things start to happen, but again Wan builds it in slow instances, creating a palpable sense of dread, his camera work intelligent. So when the big moments come they have maximum impact and have us also yearning for the Warren's to get involved. There is no over killing of the boo-jump scares, they are placed with care and marry up superbly with the mounting tension. Naturally all the cliché conventions of the haunted house movie are here, strange smells, creaky doors, ominous cellar and etc, yet these are supplemented with Wan's talented knack for a good scare and a very effective production design. From mysterious bruises and literal leg pulls – breath holding games of hide and seek – to bona fide pant soiling moments, The Conjuring is a lesson in sustained unease until the big finale is unleashed. The script is devoid of cheese and pointless filler, itself refreshing in a horror sub-genre that suffers often with these problems. Joseph Bishara's musical score is an absolute nerve shredder, and again it's a refreshing accompaniment because it doesn't resort to telegraphed shrieks to tell us to be afraid, it never overwhelms a scene. John Leonetti's cinematography has Gothic textures, both in the house and outside of the lakeside farmhouse, while the strong lead cast of Vera Farmiga, Patrick Wilson, Lili Taylor and Ron Livingston come up trumps for sure. Met with critical and box office success, The Conjuring justifies its reputation as a superb haunted house movie. 9/10
The Conjuring is a fairly classical horror/haunted house/exorcism movie. That was pretty much what I was hoping for. Slow and creepy build up to a final outburst and confrontation with an evil entity. This is a good movie although it is not really something new in terms of story. It is fairly imposs ... ible not to think about, and make comparisons with, The Amityville Horror when seeing this movie. I do not think it really deserves the glowing 9 or 10 star ratings that I have seen but it certainly do not merit those 1 or 2 star ones either. What were these people expecting? This is a solid effort of making a movie along the classical lines of supernatural possession. As I wrote, it is not really something new, but it is nice to see a new movie using this kind of story without just turning it into a CGI gore-feast. Sure, the movie also includes the traditional pitfalls that most horror movies apparently must have like people thinking it is a good idea to walk down into the dark and scary basement all alone in the middle of the night. One thing that irked me with the movie though was the idea of phantoms and performing exorcism being presented as kind of normal and accepted things. Of the movie would have played itself out 70 or so years earlier maybe but in the 1970′s? It just felt somewhat surreal to see this “ghosthunter” make presentations and talk to people like supernatural entities and the practice of exorcism was just things that happened. The we have the ending of course. Not that it was overly bad but christ, if you are going to do an exorcism then do it damn it. Do not stop the procedure and look lost every time something goes bump. Anyway, I was not sure whether I was going to be disappointed or pleased when sitting down to watch this movie. On the whole I was pleased. It was a nice to watch a movie that was going back to the traditional values in horror movie making and it was as well implemented as one could expect.
I'm a fan of Wan, and while I must say I believe that _The Conjuring_ is pretty severely overrated, it's also one of the best horror films to have hit the mainstream in the past few years. _Final rating:★★½ - Had a lot that appealed to me, didn’t quite work as a whole._ ...
Hadn't seen this in a while and watching it again in preparation for the third movie, found it to be well done. I'm not much for these supernatural horror movies but with James Wan's camera work, and the screen presence from Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga, makes it an entertaining flick. **3.75/5** ...
"Ed Warren" (Patrick Wilson) and his wife "Lorraine" (Vera Farmiga) are renowned paranormal investigators drafted in by the at-their-wits-end "Perron" family to their remote Rhode Island farmhouse that they are convinced is possessed. It doesn't take them long to realise that this whole area has bee ... n the scene of Satanic worship since time immemorial, and those lingering spirits have got it in for the new occupants of the house - and their five increasingly hysterical daughters. James Wan really does develop this story with an effective degree of menace and Ron Livingston and Lili Taylor work well together as the parents scared out of their pants by the goings-on in their dream home that is turning into a nightmare that perhaps even an exorcism won't resolve. Joseph Bishara presents us with an eerily effective musical accompaniment to this story and the acrobatic and prosthetic visual effects all contribute effectively to create a real sense of malevolence that, unusually for many in this genre - it has a degree of plausibility too. Big screen experience is better especially in a busy cinema, and well worth a watch.
<em>'The Conjuring'</em> is an extremely solid supernatural horror. I admit that I did find it less interesting as it went on, but even so I did comfortably enjoy seeing the progression of the story; I like that the plot doesn't majorly meander, each stage is clear. It doesn't rely on cheap jump ... scares either, which is something I was expecting it to utilise. The supernatural elements here are very well done, we don't see terribly much of the demons, at least early on, so any appearances are effective. The stuff with the kids/mum is convincing too. I was happy to see Vera Farmiga appear onscreen, I remember her fondly from 2011's <em>'Source Code'</em> and have wanted to see her in lead roles since - she's excellent in this. Patrick Wilson and Lili Taylor are also notable performers, while Joey King has one particularly great scene. I'd class this as more creepy than scary, admittedly I seldom find movies scary (just the way my brain is wired with fiction). I can obviously still sense when something is unsettling though, anything with kids being possessed does the job in that regard. How this franchise has ten features and I hadn't even seen one is a mystery to me. Better late than never, hopefully this strong first entry is a sign of things to come.