The Nun II suffers from what plagues all modern franchise horror: . Valak was terrifying in The Conjuring 2 because it was mysterious—a shapeshifting demon that mocked the crucifix. Here, the film provides a backstory involving a Duke of Hell, a goat, and a holy relic. By demystifying the monster, they neuter it. The final "battle" is a blur of fire, floating debris, and CGI light beams. It looks more like a Marvel movie than a horror film.
Taissa Farmiga remains the franchise’s secret weapon. She plays Sister Irene with a fragile steeliness that Vera Farmiga (her real-life sister) brought to Lorraine Warren. She sells the internal conflict of a woman whose faith is exhausted but who cannot turn away from evil. Bonnie Aarons, as Valak, needs only to tilt her head or widen her eyes to send a shiver down the spine. When the film lets her be a silent, looming presence, it works. The Nun II suffers from what plagues all
Set in 1956, four years after the events of the first film, Sister Irene (Taissa Farmiga) is living a quiet life in a Italian convent, still haunted by her encounter with Valak, the demon nun. When a priest is murdered under mysterious, fiery circumstances in France, the church reluctantly asks Irene to investigate. She is paired with a novitiate named Sister Debra (Storm Reid), a skeptic who doubts faith as a weapon. Together, they track Valak across the French countryside, while Frenchie (Jonas Bloquet)—now going by "Maurice"—works at a boarding school, unaware that the demon has been stalking him for a new vessel. By demystifying the monster, they neuter it
The Nun II is the horror equivalent of a mass-produced rosary. It looks holy from a distance, but under scrutiny, it is just plastic beads on a string. Valak deserves better. You deserve better. Taissa Farmiga remains the franchise’s secret weapon