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The Conjuring: Last Rites review: Can the series deliver one last scare?

By Eric November 22, 2025

**The Conjuring: Last Rites – A Final Bow for the Paranormal Power Couple**

After more than a decade of spine-chilling tales, the Conjuring universe bids farewell with its ninth and seemingly final installment, *The Conjuring: Last Rites*. Directed by Michael Chaves, who previously helmed *The Conjuring 3: The Devil Made Me Do It* and *The Nun II*, this film revisits the well-trodden paths of paranormal investigators Ed and Lorraine Warren, portrayed by Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga. Drawing inspiration from the alleged haunting of the Smurl family in the late 1980s, *Last Rites* reintroduces audiences to the familiar blend of jump scares and eerie encounters that have defined the franchise since its inception in 2013. While the film is packed with fan service, including cameos and nods to previous entries, some critics argue that it may have sacrificed genuine scares for nostalgia and reverence towards the Warrens.

The narrative unfolds across two parallel storylines: the Smurl family’s terrifying experiences in West Pittston, Pennsylvania, and the personal struggles of Lorraine and their daughter Judy, who grapples with her own psychic abilities. The film opens with a sequence set in 1964, where a young Lorraine, played by Madison Lawlor, faces a demonic presence that triggers a series of harrowing events. However, much of *Last Rites* is devoted to the Warrens’ domestic life, filled with saccharine moments that some viewers may find tedious. This focus on their family dynamics, including a lengthy barbecue scene and a meet-the-parents moment with Judy’s boyfriend, detracts from the suspenseful investigations that fans have come to expect. Critics note that while Wilson and Farmiga deliver strong performances, the film’s excessive admiration for the Warrens may detract from the horror elements that initially captivated audiences.

Despite its shortcomings, *The Conjuring: Last Rites* does not shy away from delivering the franchise’s signature scares. The film adheres to the established “three stages of demonic activity”—infestation, oppression, and possession—showcasing a variety of terrifying encounters that will resonate with fans. Chaves effectively employs classic horror techniques, including effective jump scares and atmospheric cinematography, to evoke the dread that has become synonymous with the series. However, while the film successfully checks off familiar Conjuring tropes—such as cursed objects and eerie sound design—it struggles to innovate or provide a truly memorable farewell for its beloved characters. Ultimately, *Last Rites* serves as a nostalgic trip into the Warrens’ world, offering a blend of scares and sentimental moments, making it worth a watch for longtime fans eager to revisit this iconic duo one last time. The film is currently available for streaming on HBO Max, allowing audiences to relive the chilling legacy of Ed and Lorraine Warren.

The Conjuring universe has quite literally administered its
Last Rites
, the ninth and (apparently) final installment in the
religious horror
franchise. It’s been 12 years since James Wan scared the Valak out of audiences with the first film, when Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga first took on
controversial real-life paranormal investigators Ed and Lorraine Warren

With director Michael Chaves (
The Conjuring 3: The Devil Made Me Do It
,
The Nun II
) at the helm, and a storyline based on the alleged demonic haunting of the Smurl family in the late ’80s,
The Conjuring: Last Rites
intentionally plays to every trick in the Conjuring book.
Fan service in horror franchises comes with the territory
, and
Last Rites
‘ cup runneth over with series cameos, familiar production design, and characteristic jump scares aplenty.

SEE ALSO:

Fact vs. fiction: ‘The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It’

However, it’s the film’s reverence for the real Ed and Lorraine Warren and the Conjuring universe at large that could be its undoing. With the majority of the film spent delivering referential nods and unbridled adulation for its leading duo, we’re left waiting long stretches for what we came for: one hell of a final scare.
What is
The Conjuring: Last Rites
about?

A young Lorraine and Ed Warren (Madison Lawlor and Orion Smith).

Credit: Giles Keyte

The Conjuring: Last Rites
plunges us back into familiar territory. Like
The Conjuring 2
, there are parallel hauntings afoot: the alleged demonic disturbance of the Smurl family in West Pittston, Pennsylvania in the late ’80s, and chilling visions experienced by the clairvoyant Lorraine Warren (Farmiga) and her now-grown daughter Judy (Mia Tomlinson), who is attempting to silence her burgeoning psychic powers.
To open the film, we’re sent back to 1964, where a young Lorraine and Ed (Madison Lawlor and Orion Smith) investigate a spooky storeroom full of clocks (sure!), where a creepy mirror adorned with wooden angels screams “do not touch.” Disregarding this of course, Lorraine’s contact with said mirror propels one of the film’s most disturbing sequences, in which our paranormal communicator is sent into early labour in the company of a demonic presence. As if giving birth wasn’t intense enough,
Last Rites
plunges Lorraine into an experience of terrifying vulnerability. From here, however,
Last Rites
spends an outlandish amount of time on the Warrens’ family life, in a saccharine montage of Judy’s childhood, carousels, and running through flower fields, all the way up to their demon-shunning retirement in Connecticut.

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It’s this overt admiration for the Warrens that feels extremely stretched out in
Last Rites
,
despite the couple’s real-life controversies
. From the film’s beginning to end, Wilson and Farmiga’s Ed and Lorraine are portrayed as reluctant heroes of paranormal valiance and fiercely pious and devoted family members. The film spends almost half its run time following the Warrens in their barbecue-throwing, post-investigation era bliss and through a particularly tedious meet-the-parents sequence with Judy’s boyfriend, Tony (Ben Hardy). Whatever you think of the real Warrens, Wilson and Farmiga have long imbued the screen Warrens with overwhelming credibility; Farmiga has always channelled Lorraine with understated believability, and Wilson’s commitment to Ed’s character is the only thing that makes a scene where characters need to move a mirror genuinely compelling.

Judy (Mia Tomlinson) has inherited her mother Lorraine’s (Vera Farmiga) cursed talents.

Credit: Giles Keyte

For those tapping their watch for the Warrens to get back to investigating, there’s the other storyline, described by the series’ signature bright yellow Courier New font declaring the subsequent events as “based on a true story” and loosely adapted from the Warrens’ reported haunting cases — following the Perron family of Rhode Island in 1971 (
The Conjuring
), the Amityville murders and the “Enfield Poltergeist” case in the late ’70s (
The Conjuring 2)
,
the murder trial of Arne Cheyenne Johnson (
The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It
).
  This time, it’s a notorious case from 1986 in Pennsylvania, where we’re introduced to characters based on the real Janet and Jack Smurl (played by Rebecca Calder and Elliot Cowan), who claimed that their family was plagued by a demonic presence.
And it’s this storyline that sees the film slotting into classic Conjuring style.
The Conjuring: Last Rites
is a Conjuring movie by the numbers.

Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga take a final bow as Ed and Lorraine Warren.

Credit: Giles Keyte

Director Michael Chaves is well-versed in the Conjuring universe, having directed the third
Conjuring
film as well as
the sequel to
The Nun
and the thinly connected
The Curse of La Llorona
. However, despite its solid scares, the film feels somewhat trapped in fan service, ticking off signature
Conjuring
boxes and delivering two passable but undeniably well-soundtracked (hell yes, The Cult) storylines at once.
Everything you’d expect from a
Conjuring
film is here. Real footage of the Warrens spliced with that of Wilson and Farmiga. Eerie music boxes and cursed dolls from yesteryear. A happy family being terrorised in the night, often by way of their favourite games or in a creepy-ass basement. A family dog who makes the audience nervous for its safety. Menacing notes scrawled with the words “Miss me?”
There’s a copious amount of references to previous Conjuring films in
Last Rites
, including
The Nun
and
Annabelle
movies. Fans might delight in hearing Ed warn his guests yet again not to touch anything in the basement of the Warrens’ Connecticut home where cursed objects like the Annabelle doll dwell — the film even has Wilson repeat his lines from the first
Conjuring
movie: “Nothing’s a toy, not even the toys.” And as for the cameos? Just wait to see for yourself (though seeing Officer Brad Hamilton rocking his bite mark from
The Conjuring
in a barbecue scene is a frankly hilarious heads-up).
But the real Conjuring style comes out in the scares — of which there are many.
The Conjuring: Last Rites
delivers on jump scares.

Uh, Judy? You OK?

Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures

Never fear,
Conjuring
-style scares are present in both storylines, with the Smurls beset by more than bumps in the night in Pennsylvania, and poor Lorraine unable to order linguini or do the dishes in Connecticut without being interrupted by a malicious presence.
Last Rites
‘ parallel narratives follow the Warrens’ constantly cited “three stages of demonic activity” to the letter: “infestation, oppression, and possession,” from those early ghostly whisperings to the dreaded takeover, with ample scares along the way.
The Conjuring universe, established by Wan’s brilliant 2013 original, has become synonymous with that classic horror weapon of the misdirected jump scare. Cameras pan back and forth building up dread with fake-outs. Characters are consistently forced to use torches with limited lighting. Audiences frantically search for faces in dark corners, plunge their fingers into their ears, and wait for the drop. Though without as much unexpected innovation as the original (but with Wan in a producing role),
Last Rites
is brimming with these jump scares, with Eli Born’s audacious cinematography, nail-biting sound design by Harry Cohen, a particularly effective scene involving a phone cord disappearing into a pantry, and savvy use of VHS footage for solid creeps.
Last Rites
feels like a Conjuring film in every sense of the franchise, but it’s slightly disappointing the film doesn’t pull out all the stops to bid adieu to Wilson and Farmiga’s now iconic characters. Fan service, it has in spades. But truly memorable scares and compelling storylines that push the Conjuring series as far as it could go? Less so. However, if you want to take one more trip into the Warrens’ basement of cursed curiosities, it’s worth a watch, for old terrifying time’s sake.
The Conjuring: Last Rites
is streaming on HBO Max.

UPDATE: Nov. 20, 2025, 4:43 p.m.
This review was first published on Sept. 5, 2025. It has been updated to reflect its streaming availability.

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