Peter Safran, one of the chief architects of the Conjuring franchise, is hesitant to share the nickname that the creators used behind the scenes to refer to The Conjuring: Last Rites, the final movie in the Warrens’ big-screen saga. Mainly, he’s aware of the images it will…well, conjure for a general audience.
“When we were developing the movie, we always called it Conjuring: Endgame because it was a culmination of a great story that audiences had been with,” he says during a conversation for Entertainment Weekly‘s first-look cover story.
“I’m not saying that our movie is the same as the Avengers: Endgame run of movies,” he emphasizes, “but there was something about building an audience through this storytelling mechanism, through Ed and Lorraine Warren. Knowing that Last Rites was going to be the last one made us put a lot into it to make sure that it was an incredibly satisfying experience and a really emotional experience.”
Giles Keyte/Warner Bros.
Vera Farmiga and Patrick Wilson in ‘The Conjuring: Last Rites’
It’s funny to think about in hindsight because, as both Safran and Last Rites director Michael Chaves note, there was a brief time when they considered making the movie an Avengers-level event — meaning, an assembly of all the past demonic entities Ed (Patrick Wilson) and Lorraine Warren (Vera Farmiga) ever fought.
“We toyed with the idea,” Safran confirms.
“Even as we were developing it, we were throwing a bunch of ideas out: ‘How shamelessly big can we make it?’ ‘How epic can we make it?’ ‘Is this the culmination of all the demons coming to face them?'” says Chaves, who previously helmed The Curse of La Llorona (2019), The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It (2021), and The Nun II (2023). “Even though we entertained that idea for a minute, we stepped away. I felt strongly that the biggest, most emotional story we could tell was the most personal story.”
The Conjuring: Last Rites will pick up five years after the events of The Devil Made Me Do It in 1986, when Ed and Lorraine come out of retirement to investigate the Smurl family haunting. Rebecca Calder (Wrath of Man) and Elliot Cowan (Foundation) portray Janet and Jack Smurl; Kíla Lord Cassidy (Heather), Beau Gadsdon (Dawn), Tilly Walker (Carin), and Molly Cartwright (Shannon) play their daughters. Peter Wight (Grandpa Smurl) and Kate Fahy (Grandma Smurl) play the grandparents on Jack’s side.
Giles Keyte/Warner Bros.
Patrick Wilson as Ed Warren and Vera Farmiga as Lorraine Warren in ‘The Conjuring: Last Rites’
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The case will also heavily involve Judy Warren (Mia Tomlinson), Ed and Lorraine’s daughter, who is now in her 20s and dating her future husband, Tony Spera (Ben Hardy). “Lorraine’s got this full-bar Wi-Fi of clairvoyance, and there’s a bar or two that start popping up for Judy,” Farmiga tells EW. “She’s obviously inherited this spiritual sensitivity and, of course, it deepens Lorraine’s concerns, not just as a mother, but as someone who really understands the burden of those sensibilities.”
There will still be some familiar faces from past Conjurings popping up in Last Rites. “Without any spoilers, we took the opportunity to maybe bring back some fan favorites,” Safran teases. “You can watch this movie never having seen a Conjuring movie and have a totally satisfying viewing experience, but if you’re a little bit more of a dedicated Conjuring fan, there’s a lot in this for you that maybe a more casual viewer wouldn’t necessarily pick out.”
The Conjuring: Last Rites opens in theaters Sept. 5. Learn more about what’s to come in EW’s cover story.
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