The La Llorona legend also exists in real life, dating back to the 17th century from Mexico, although the exact time of the origin of that legend is unknown, and there is no evidence that it was based on a real event. Three words: course, weeping, and woman, are portrayed in their full sense in this film. The two horror villains, though, have different mythologies and “modus operandi,” and La Llorona has a better, more interesting movie. Okay, La Llorona is “prettier”, but the difference in their appearance is, in fact, only in “yin-yang” clothing: the nun wearing a nun’s black uniform, and La Llorona’s is in a white wedding dress. The connections to The Nun could be that someone be could replace La Llorona for the Nun (yellowed eyes, dried ash-colored skin, rotting blackened nails). Although there are generally no such physical connections with other Conjuring films, this film can be said to have certain connections to The Nun. Also, the Annabelle doll will appear in one scene.
#The curse of la llorona annabelle scene movie
The only connection this movie has to any of these films is Tony Amendola in the role of Reverend Perez (Annabelle 1 ) but he has appeared here in a rather small role so that the experience of this movie will not suffer you if you have a slight foreknowledge about this franchise. The Curse of La Llorona is designed to be fully watchable even if you have never watched any of the films in the franchise so far. In anticipation of the arrival of “The Conjuring 3”, the “Annabelle 3” and “The Nun 2”, another hit of the lucrative Warner Bros studio franchise and producer James Wan has arrived – “The Curse of La Llorona” or “The Curse Of The” Weeping Woman ”by director Michael Chaves. “The Conjuring” expands the universe according to Marvel’s recipe and appeals to potentially iconic horror villains.