Written by Mike Flanagan And Jeff Howard
Directed by Mike Flanagan
Alice: "Where is she?"
Father Tom: "She's part of the walls now. And she told me the most wonderful, awful things."
Yesterday I wrote a review for the fairly mediocre Ouija movie, so it was time to give the better received sequel/prequel movie another go. Low and behold, here we are.
The antagonists in the first movie were the ghosts of Alice and Doris Zander with Paulina being confined to an institution. This movie explored that family's origin with the Ouija board in great detail.
Starting the movie off, it seemed like matriarch Alice (Elizabeth Reaser) was just coasting along with her customers, posing as a medium. She had her daughters Paulina (Annalise Basso) and Doris (Lulu Wilson) somewhat aiding her grift. Then the arrival of a certain board made Alice's job a bit too real for everyone's liking.
Notably with Doris being used as a vessel to communicate with the spirits, including the Zander patriarch, Roger (Michael Weaver). Doris's attachment to the spirits was definitely enabled by Alice getting in over her head but it was Paulina who was more freaked out by the whole thing.
Throw in a concerned priest named Thomas Hogan (Henry Thomas) and you've got something that slightly veered into The Exorcist territory with various possessions, dead boyfriends (poor Paulina) and a family that ultimately had the majority of its members killed, courtesy of Lina.
Yup, Lina's more or less the sole survivor in this movie, but considered that I've already seen the first movie, I already knew this. I do think this one did it's best to try and humanise both Lina and Alice a bit more while playing up the sheer creepiness of Doris being possessed by the spirits in the movie.
- Kate Siegel popped up briefly at the start as Jenny Browning, the daughter of Mr Browning (Sam Anderson). She's a gold digger.
- Post credit scene showed the older Lina (Lin Shaye) getting a visit from a woman claiming to be her niece.
- Standout music: Mike Lacey's You Gotta Move Me.
- Chronology: 1967 Los Angeles for the majority of the movie and 2014 for that post credit scene.
Ouija: Origin Of Evil certainly delivered a better movie than it's predecessor. It's sharper, better focused, more effective with it's scares and it nicely fleshed out the tragedy of the Zander family.
Rating: 7 out of 10