We now know that Annabelle Higgins is really a possessed Janice, meaning that rather than simply trying to resurrect the Ram, she and her accomplice were attempting something else likely to transfer its soul into another vessel, first using the doll as a conduit. Of course, the prequel reframes what we saw in 2014 somewhat. Like most prequels, it's a tight connection to the original. Fans will have noticed the Higgins name and how Janice grew into the actress who played the previous Annabelle, but the real kicker comes with the reveal of Mia (played by the aptly-named Annabelle Wallis, the star of the original film). It's implied the opening murders brought the Ram to Annabelle, leading to its later attempts to possess Mia's daughter.Ĭreation thus ties its mostly self-contained story into the wider mythology with its final scene. It's later revealed the pair were "Disciples of the Ram", a cult focused on resurrecting the spirit through ritualistic sacrifice. The man is shot by police but the woman - Annabelle Higgins - takes the doll and slits her throat, with a drop of her blood going in her eye socket. That movie opens just as Creation ends, on the day Annabelle kills the Higgins' Mia is given the doll by husband John, then later that night are woken up by their neighbors being attacked by two assailants. This was the last time the doll surfaced before the family who reported it to the Warrens. The original Annabelle, a spinoff from The Conjuring that explains how its breakout "star" ended up in paranormal investigators the Warren's collection of haunted objects, for the most part follows new mother Mia, who is pursued by the haunted doll that wants to possess her newborn baby (set in a plush apartment, the film is a blatant riff on Rosemary's Baby). How The Ending Connects To The Original Annabelle
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