2 | Nun

Fans of The Conjuring universe will find enough familiar iconography and loud jump scares to pass a rainy evening. Casual horror fans, however, will be bored. This is a film made by algorithm: beat-for-beat scares, franchise-baiting endings, and a protagonist who wins not through cleverness, but because the script says so.

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. Fans of The Conjuring universe will find enough

Is The Nun II better than the original? Marginally. The acting is stronger, the pacing is tighter (110 minutes feels like 90), and it lacks the first film’s absurd "French soldier" subplot. But "marginally better than a bad movie" is not a recommendation. Set in 1956, four years after the events

Here is the cardinal sin of The Nun II : it is almost entirely a retread. The structure is identical to the first film: Sister Irene travels to a location, investigates a murder, gets separated from her ally, and then confronts Valak in a grand, CGI-heavy third act where she must "believe harder" than before. There is no narrative growth. Together, they track Valak across the French countryside,

The scares are painfully predictable. You will see every "jump" coming 10 seconds in advance: the mirror that reflects nothing, the magazine whose pages turn on their own, the statue that moves its eyes. The film relies so heavily on the "loud noise + sudden image" formula that it becomes exhausting rather than frightening.

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.

Director: Michael Chaves Starring: Taissa Farmiga, Jonas Bloquet, Storm Reid, Anna Popplewell, Bonnie Aarons