Annabelle: Creation (2017)
Story overview
Annabelle: Creation is a 2017 horror film directed by David F. Sandberg. Set several years after a doll maker and his wife lose their young daughter, they open their home to a nun and several orphaned girls. The story follows as the group becomes targeted by Annabelle, a possessed doll created by the grieving father, leading to supernatural terror and suspense.
Parent Guide
Intense supernatural horror film with disturbing themes and imagery. Recommended for mature audiences only.
Content breakdown
Supernatural violence including characters being attacked, dragged, and harmed by a possessed doll. Perilous situations with characters in life-threatening danger. Some blood and injury shown.
Frequent jump scares, creepy doll imagery, supernatural manifestations, and disturbing scenes involving possession and death. Themes of child loss and grief are central and emotionally heavy.
Minimal strong language. Some mild exclamations and tense dialogue.
No sexual content or nudity present.
No substance use shown.
High emotional intensity due to themes of child loss, grief, supernatural terror, and constant suspense. May be distressing for sensitive viewers.
Parent tips
This R-rated horror film contains intense supernatural horror, jump scares, and disturbing imagery. Not suitable for young children. Recommended for mature teens 17+ with parental guidance. Discuss themes of grief, loss, and supernatural beliefs with older viewers.
Parent chat guide
Parent follow-up questions
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- What did you find most frightening in the movie, and why?
- How did the doll maker's grief contribute to the story's events?
- What safety measures could the characters have taken?
- How does this film compare to other horror movies you've seen?
🎭 Story Kernel
At its core, 'Annabelle: Creation' is a chilling exploration of parental grief weaponized. The Mullins family's tragedy—the death of their daughter Bee—isn't just backstory; it's the engine of the horror. Samuel Mullins, in a Faustian bargain born of unbearable sorrow, invites a demonic entity to mimic his daughter's soul, believing it will reunite him with her. This act transforms their home from a sanctuary of memory into a prison of malevolent artifice. The film posits that the most terrifying hauntings aren't random, but are born from specific, catastrophic emotional wounds. The orphan girls, particularly Janice and Linda, become new vessels for this unresolved, parasitic sorrow, making the horror a perverse inheritance of trauma.
🎬 Visual Aesthetics
Director David F. Sandberg employs a masterclass in slow-burn, analog horror aesthetics. The camera lingers in wide, static shots of the cavernous farmhouse, emphasizing the characters' vulnerability within its oppressive space. The color palette is dominated by dusty ambers and deep shadows, evoking a forgotten, sun-bleached photograph where evil has settled into the grain. Movement is key: the horror often advances through incremental, mechanical motion—the slow turn of a doll's head, the creep of a wheelchair, the methodical unfurling of a scarecrow's arm. This contrasts starkly with the girls' frantic energy, creating a terrifying sense of a predator operating on a different, more patient timeline. The film's scares are architectural, using the house's geography—the dumbwaiter, the hidden room, the long hallway—as a trap-laden chessboard.
🔍 Details & Easter Eggs
💡 Behind the Scenes
The film is a prequel to 2014's 'Annabelle,' explaining the doll's origin. Director David F. Sandberg transitioned from directing the acclaimed short horror film 'Lights Out' to this feature. The young actress Talitha Bateman, who plays Janice, had to perform many of her physically demanding scenes while actually wearing a leg brace to simulate polio, adding a layer of method realism to her performance. The iconic Annabelle doll used is a custom-made porcelain doll, different from the Raggedy Ann doll of the original film, designed to look more sinister and antique for this period setting.
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Trailer
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