The Conjuring: Last Rites (2025) Review – 9th Film in the Franchise Delivers Heart, Horror, and a Few Yawns

The Conjuring: Last Rites lands in theaters for one last spell of chills, nostalgia, and emotional closure, marking a dignified, if divided, finale for Ed and Lorraine Warren.

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Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], September 5: They say all things must pass—even demonic terror, apparently. The Conjuring: Last Rites storms into cinemas on September 5, 2025, to usher out Ed and Lorraine Warren in a finale that’s as much about spooky thrills as it is about sending our favorite paranormal duo off with dignity… and possibly a touch of sleepiness.

 A Finale Drenched in Nostalgia and Warmth

  • Boldly stepping into the ring as the ninth—and purportedly final—instalment of the Conjuring Universe, the film reunites Vera Farmiga and Patrick Wilson as Ed and Lorraine Warren.

  • Fans across social platforms have been breathlessly applauding it as the “terrifying final chapter” and “perfect swan song”

  • Critics, too, laud its emotional resonance—emphasising the chemistry of its stars and the sentimental heft that elevates it beyond a mere collection of jump-scares. Even the climax—from early reviews—is described as “tense and unsettling…and…warm and inspiring”

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Visuals & Atmosphere: Chills with a Side of Eighties

  • Michael Chaves expertly serves mood over mania: there’s an abundance of chilling imagery (that haunted mirror, anyone?) against the backdrop of retro 1980s décor and a suitably unnerving score.

  • At its creepiest, the film delivers haunting visuals that cling to you—and yes, there’s a wedding-dress-mirror moment that’s earned its own place in horror lore.

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The Emotional Core: When the Horror Meets Heart

  • This is as much an emotional closure as a horror finale—family bonds, legacy, and faith take the stage alongside the supernatural.

  • Audience reactions brim with sentiment. Some confessed they “cried (multiple times)”—in a horror movie, no less Rotten Tomatoes.

  • Judy, the Warrens’ daughter, strides into the spotlight with surprising gravitas—critics note her presence feels essential, even star-making.

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The Slow Burn That Sometimes Walks

  • Not all are convinced this send-off sets the screen alight. A louder whisper emerges: “Move along, folks, nothing inventive to see here”

  • Pacing is a common gripe: some say you’re stuck in the bleachers as the film drags, procrastinating before delivering on its full horror potential.

  • One critic was not shy: “Even the demons look bored,” declaring the film “dead on arrival” and complaining about its use of tired tropes.

What Worked (and What Didn’t)

Highlights

  • Visual artistry earns A-pluses—from spooky low-light photography to design fit for a horror coffee-table book.

  • Judy’s performance leaves critics wowed; the Warrens remain the emotional anchors.

  • Some horror set pieces land with theatrical elegance—particularly a blade-wielding farmer sequence that inspired “nervous laughter” in theatres.

Conjuring Last Rites

Shortcomings

  • The script is often called undercooked. Many lament that the Smurl family is underwritten, the narrative is disjointed, and the pacing is uneven.

  • Critics observe that callbacks and fan service feel more like crutches than creative reinvigoration.

  • Rotten Tomatoes voice echoes the sentiment: “routine scares” and “predictable finale” dilute the film’s final impact.

Real Fear, Real Story

  • Based on horrors supposedly plaguing the Smurl family in Pennsylvania during the 1980s, this installment draws on real-life fear—not the supernatural, but the sensationalized legend that followed.

  • The movie frames its story around one of the Warrens’ most notorious—some would say questionable—investigations, lending an air of authenticity to the fiction.

Final Thoughts: A Ghostly Goodbye That May Haunt You—or Bore You

  • So, is The Conjuring: Last Rites the franchise’s farewell tour done right, or did it fizzle with polite applause? The answer is… both.

  • On the plus side: stellar performances, atmospheric chills, and a heartfelt curtain call. On the minus: sluggish momentum, scriptic snags, and over-familiar tropes.

  • If you’ve loved the universe since the first creak of that farmhouse door, this finale will likely feel satisfying—even if a little padded. If you’re craving fresh, fear-based gasoline… well, hope you brought a cushion to sit through the slow start.

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