The Conjuring 2 Finds Light in the Darkness

The Conjuring 2 Finds Light in the Darkness June 14, 2016

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To understand the underlying message of The Conjuring 2, you just have to look at its calendar.

The trials of the Hodgson family take place during London’s drippy, dark December. The days are growing shorter, the nights colder. And the things that go bump in the night at the Hodgson’s north London home are becoming ever more bold. Christmas spirit? More like Christmas spirits. Given the ghoulies that 11-year-old Janet Hodgson (Madison Wolfe) is dealing with, the girl would tell you that Scrooge got off lucky.

It’s fitting that The Conjuring 2—a new creepy classic of a ghost story—would take place at Christmastime. Even before Charles Dickens penned A Christmas Carol, ghost stories were as much a part of the season as presents and Figgie pudding. Indeed, even in pre-Christian times, the year’s darkest days of December were seen as times of heightened supernatural activity—a time when the ghostly Wild Hunt ran across the skies of northern Europe and the undead were more likely to walk.

Yes, December’s days are gloomy indeed.

Ed and Lorraine Warren (Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga), the demonologists sent to evaluate the Hodgson house, arrive in London on Dec. 21, the shortest day of the year. Life for the Hodgsons has grown correspondingly bleak before their arrival. Janet and sister Margaret no longer sleep in their bedroom—the apparent supernatural center of the house. Indeed, the room has been chained and padlocked shut. Inside, furniture lies scattered and broken. Crosses hang from the walls, in the vain hope that the symbol might keep the darkness at bay.

Instead, things seem to get worse over the next few days. Janet seems to slip ever deeper into the throes of whatever hopes to control her. The home grows more chaotic. And that, in some ways, is not the worst of it: Some wonder whether Janet is making the whole thing up, or whether the Hodgsons are perpetrating some sort of creative hoax. Even Lorraine Warren, the medium who typically can sense the stirring of even a ghost mouse, can’t feel anything beyond the family’s own fear.

Other experts speculate that the Hodgsons aren’t the only ones potentially making things up. Doubting parapsychologist Anita Gregory wonders aloud what is worse—demons or those who prey on people’s belief in them.

“The demons,” Lorraine says. “The demons are worse.”

“I’m not scared of the dark,” my 4-year-old son once told a family friend. “It’s the things in the darkness that I worry about.” Fear and horror thrive in darkness. In almost every great, classic horror story, there’s a sense that the night might never end. That the day might never come.

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