The creepy doll that frightened in The Conjuring (2013) and Annabelle (2014) is back in a prequel to a prequel, in which viewers meet the toy maker who created her. When tragedy strikes, Annabelle is locked away in a room in his California home—until curious orphans discover her. Critics are giving it a 69% "fresh" rating at Rotten Tomatoes. Samples:
- Presenting Annabelle's story in reverse may sound like a "recipe for disaster," but Annabelle: Creation is not a disaster. It's "spine-tingling," writes Isaac Feldberg at the Boston Globe. He describes it as "the kind of old-school chiller that starts slow, patiently turning the screws" before "a brutal, blood-curdling crescendo of a third act." Feldberg adds most will "come away feeling spooked and satisfied."
- Its scenes are "cheekily effective," writes Jeannette Catsoulis at the New York Times, who reserves most of her praise for director David F. Sandberg. He "proves a master of the flash-scare, a nifty choreographer of precipitous timing and striptease visuals. But he's also adroit with more leisurely horrors, like the snap-crackle-pop of the murderous shade flexing for the kill," she writes.