

The Weeping Woman, as the spirit’s known, drowned her children back in the 1600s and has since been doomed to wander the Los Angeles landscape claiming other people’s kids to quell her grief. When it was first teased at San Diego Comic-Con last year, it felt familiar: Here was a haunted family who crosses paths with a raging malevolent spirit. The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It hits theaters and HBO Max on June 4.Since its release in April, The Curse of La Llorona, a Michael Chaves–directed horror film based on Mexican folklore, has pulled in more than $120 million around the world. The Devil Made Me Do It makes some loose references (mostly in the form of Easter eggs and set dressing) to the other films, but otherwise stands entirely on its own.
#Conjuring timeline movie
If you're just looking for a spooky movie to enjoy and don't want to worry about the demon-filled continuity web, that's more than okay. The Curse of La Llorona briefly nods to Annabelle as a character that exists out in the shared universe, but is otherwise disconnected. Meanwhile, The Nun's solo film is directly connected to The Conjuring 2 and also includes a retcon/Easter egg to one of the earlier scenes of The Conjuring. Meanwhile, Annabelle Comes Home's only direct timestamps are the age of the Warren's daughter, Judy, and the references to the events of the first Conjuring and Annabelle movies. Of this list, the Annabelle branch is probably the most chronologically tricky, featuring multiple flashbacks and flashforwards-and the fact that Annabelle proper is a prequel to The Conjuring while Annabelle: Creation is a prequel to Annabelle doesn't particularly help either.

Of course, like any horror movie inspired by real events the "true" part is loose at best and afforded the franchise to embellish not only the events themselves but to add whole new characters and monsters to the mix. The dates here are concrete thanks to the fact that the main line Conjuring films are all "based on true stories," in that they're direct references to cases that the real Ed and Lorraine Warren wrote about while they were active. The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It (1981).The timeline for these movies looks something like this. The Devil Made Me Do It is the third Conjuring film, and takes place-surprise!-after the second Conjuring film. They're a bit like the Avengers titles, if we're going to keep the superhero simile going, and they unfold in a way that can be understood totally independent of the other spin-off movies.

Thankfully, The Conjuring movies proper are pretty linear in and of themselves. And with eight movies, including this year's The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It, their shared universe is turning into a web of continuity and overlapping timelines where we meet different characters (some human, some very much not human) at different points in their lives across different movies. They may not be superheroes in the literal sense, but Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga's take on Ed and Lorraine Warren might be the horror genre's next best thing.
