Ed warren và lorraine warren
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Through books, film & TV adaptations, và self-promotion, the Warrens found themselves attached khổng lồ many of the most famous cases of haunting và detháng possession of the 20th century, including the Amityville Horror, the Enfield Poltergeist, & a haunted doll that has inspired three different films. For over 50 years, the couple either battled evil spirits or took advantage of vulnerable people desperate to lớn believe sầu in life after death, depending whom you ask. But whatever you believe, they were successful at it.
While Ed passed away in 2006, Lorraine got a chance khổng lồ consult on the movies based on her và her husband"s lives, even making a Stung Lee-esque cameo in The Conjuring in 2013. However, Lorraine Warren passed away on April 18, 2019, at the age of 92. Here are some things you might not know about New England"s most famous ghost-hunter.

Lorraine Warren was born Lorraine Rita Moran in Bridgeport, Connecticut, on January 31, 1927. According to con her hà thành New York Times obituary, she met Ed when they were 16 years old & Ed was an usher at the Colonial Theater in Bridgeport. Lorraine would come to béo the theater with her mother every week, & soon she and Ed started dating. Before long, Ed was off fighting in World War II, but they got married in 1945 when Ed was trang thiết yếu on leave.
Ed"s original ambition was to phệ be a painter, even attending art classes until deciding that the instructors were teaching hlặng "a lot of geometry với a lot of nonsense that need for painting." He phối out to paint on his own, & soon mixed that with his other obsession: ghosts. Ed had always believed he grew up in a haunted house & that he had encountered the ghost of an old woman floating inside a mysterious globule as a child. If he ever heard a rumor that a house was haunted, Ed would go paint it. They would give sầu the painting lớn lao the curious homeowners, who would then usually invite the couple in for a tour, giving them the scoop on the ghosts within. Maybe not the most expected beginning to bự a ghost-hunting empire, but, like, what would be the normal way to mập get into that?

While Ed"s role was that of demonologist — researching spirits và demons với assisting in or performing exorcisms to expel them — Lorraine"s contributions were the psychic powers she claimed to béo possess. Lorraine professed đẩy đà be a trance medium (that is, that she could channel the spirits of the dead by entering inkhổng lồ a trance) và a clairvoyant (not that she could see the future but that she could perceive sầu things that humans normally cannot). As Ed himself said, "Spirits are on that different vibrational field. They"re all around us right now but you can"t see them. But if you were like Lorraine, you could see them clairvisually, hear them clairaudioally."
According lớn lao the Warrens" son-in-law Tony Spera, Lorraine developed her abilities at a young age. At age 9, Lorraine was attending a private Catholic school & remarked that the light emanating from one nun was brighter than the light surrounding the Mother Superior. This, she believed later, was her realizing that she could perceive auras surrounding people. In addition to mập using these abilities during investigations, Lorraine also claimed to to have sầu gotten signs from Ed following his death in 2006, including some hand-grabbing & a mysterious whistling at a restaurant where Lorraine went lớn celebrate Ed"s birthday.

If you"ve sầu seen The Conjuring movies, you"ve sầu undoubtedly noticed the powerful Roman Catholic overtones that run through the franchise. The Warrens professed lớn be devout Catholics, & the movies clayên that Ed Warren is the only lay person authorized by the Vatican phệ perform exorcisms. While that last bit is Hollywood hyperbole, the Warrens" trang web certainly claims that "religious authorities have repeatedly called in" for help. It might seem pretty contradictory to bự clayên ổn béo be a Christian who can channel ghosts cùng talk to bự demons, but it"s certainly a concern for more mainline Catholics.
Whether their approach khủng Catholicism was orthodox, it certainly anchored the Warrens" philosophy of demonology. Their repeated refrain was "The fairy tale is true. The devil exists. God exists. And for us, as people, our very destiny hinges upon which one we elect khủng follow." Indeed they believed that modern secularism has invited more demonic activity inkhổng lồ the world. Despite all the religious trappings surrounding their work, however, the Catholic News Service Đánh giá chỉ of The Conjuring 2 makes it pretty unequivocally clear that these movies are not the way many Catholics want phệ be portrayed (& that lay people definitely don"t perkhung exorcisms).

The Warrens" painting-facilitated haunted house tours turned inkhổng lồ a more organized effort to phệ investigate hauntings, ultimately leading to to the founding of the New England Society for Psychic Retìm kiếm in 1952, making them the oldest ghost hunting group in New England. Admittedly that sounds like a pretty specific niđậy until you consider that about 35% of all cable programming features ghost hunting groups from New England.
The Warrens said their investigations evolved from mere investigations inkhổng lồ more active attempts to lớn drive spirits out in 1965 when they encountered the ghost of a little girl named Cynthia who was looking for her mother. From that point on, they decided to khủng dedicate themselves lớn helping people afflicted by the supernatural (or at least lớn lao write books claiming they did).
Since that time, N.E.S.P..R. Has grown from just the Warrens vĩ đại a network of "medical doctors, researchers, police officers, nurses, college students and housewives," according to mập their site. Their method follows the Warrens" example of a mixture of religion & something resembling science. For the past several years, leadership of the society has been assumed by the Warrens" son-in-law Tony Spera. Their main online presence seems to be a fairly light-on-information Facebook người page if that"s the kind of thing that gets you going.

Prior lớn the debut of the Conjuring films, the Warrens were most famous for their association with the Amityville haunting, a reported case of the supernatural that has inspired a truly staggering 28 films và counting. The short version of this famous haunting is that the Lutz family moved into to a house in Amityville, New York, in 1975, only to lớn be driven out by a demonic presence that manifested itself as a swarm of flies, hooded apparitions, cold spots, bad smells, và a weird pig for some reason. The Lutzes then learned that about a year before they moved in, Ronald DeFeo Jr. Had murdered his whole family in the house. This is all in the best known of the movies; you might have sầu seen it, or the remake with Ryan Reynolds.
You might have sầu noticed that this recap didn"t mention the Warrens, nor are they in the movie. That"s because their involvement came some time after the Lutzes left the house. They showed up at the house in February 1976 with a TV crew to lớn investigate the house. It was then that their crew took the famous "ghost boy" pholớn that the Warrens would show on various talk shows while promoting the first Amityville Horror film, on which they had been hired as consultants. The Warrens" experiences in the Amityville house were dramatized in early scenes of The Conjuring 2. That said, the entire Amityville haunting has been pretty thoroughly debunked, with Ronald DeFeo"s lawyer admitting he và the Lutzes made the whole thing up.
These days, the single most famous of the Warrens" cases is almost certainly that of the haunted doll, Annabelle. The creepy toy looms large over the first Conjuring film và also has its own franchise with the third installment, Annabelle Comes Home, hitting in June 2019.Xem thêm: Amatuer Là Gì - Ý Nghĩa Của Từ Amater
According to béo the New Haven Register, the story of the Annabelle films — with the doctor & the cult & all that — is completely fabricated, not even incorporating details from the Warrens" investigation. The real version (if you choose to đùng believe sầu the Warrens) of the Annabelle story is much closer lớn the events depicted in the first Conjuring film, with the nursing students và the weird messages written on parchment. But even that movie dramatizes events by turning Annabelle inlớn a dirty porcelain doll, while the real Annabelle is a traditional Raggedy Ann doll. It is true, however, that the doll is locked up in a special case in the Warrens" occult museum. Allegedly a museum attendee ignored the warnings on the glass & touched the case, only phệ die in a motorcycle accident shortly afterward. The Warrens" son-in-law Tony Spera says Annabelle is the thành công in the museum he is most afraid of. Lorraine Warren said she didn"t mind the liberties in the Annabelle films because they still served the purpose of warning people of the dangers of demons.
The Conjuring franchise is based, to đùng varying degrees, on the case files of the Warrens, as represented in books by and about the ghost-hunting couple. While the stories of the Annabelle films & The Nun are fully fabricated by screenwriters, the Conjuring films proper are based directly on the cases of the Perron family haunting với the Enfield poltergeist, with added elements from the Annabelle case và the Amityville haunting thrown in (though one could definitely argue that those stories are fabrications, too).But one cinematic universe isn"t enough to mập contain Ed với Lorraine Warren. In 1991, a made-for-TV movie called The Haunted tells the story of their investigation into phệ the Smurl haunting, based on a book with the same title co-authored by the Warrens. Likewise, the 1992 book In a Dark Place: The Story of a True Haunting by Ray Garton told of the Warrens" investigation inkhổng lồ the Snedeker haunting & served as the basis for the 2009 film The Haunting in Connecticut. (For whatever it"s worth, Lorraine Warren has denounced that film for its historical inaccuracy. She probably should have sầu denounced it for being terrible.)
But even this doesn"t tell the full tale of Lorraine Warren"s filmography, which includes dozens of appearances on various ghost documentaries & TV shows. There"s no shortage of the Warrens on the screen, which is probably how they liked it.
One Warren investigation somehow, amazingly, hasn"t been made inkhổng lồ a movie yet. It"s the story of Bill Ramsey, the Southend Werewolf. His story is the subject of the Warrens" 1991 book Werewolf: A True Story of Demonic Possession, which describes Ramsey"s experiences as a young working-class British guy in the 1980s who suddenly starts turning inkhổng lồ a wolf & biting his friends & some nurses và police officers. Serendipitously, the Warrens happen khủng catch a TV broadcast about Ramsey while in London on a book tour & managed to phệ convince hyên ổn to khủng come bachồng with them to Connecticut where they cùng their partner-in-exorcism Bicửa sản phẩm Robert McKenna might get to phệ the root of the problem. As it turns out, Ramsey wasn"t a werewolf in the traditional sense, but rather was possessed by a detháng that made hyên ổn định act like a wolf. The exorcism was apparently a success, as Ramsey doesn"t seem vĩ đại have sầu bitten anyone since 1992.Naturally, skeptics are, uh, skeptical about the whole thing, with a particularly scathing Đánh giá of Werewolf from Kirkus noting "the Warrens" assurance that this is "a carefully documented" case (they forgot lớn tưởng include the documentation, though)." That lachồng of evidence hasn"t stopped other cases from the Warrens" files from being turned inlớn blockbusters, và a mad demon werewolf going buckwild on his mates down the pub just has The Conjuring 4 written all over it.
According to mập the Associated Press, in 1981, a young man named Arne Cheyenne Johnson fatally stabbed his landlord, Alan Bono. What makes this story notable is that Johnson"s defense in court was that he was innocent, not because of insanity, but because of demon possession. He claimed his fiancee"s little brother, David, had been possessed by a demon, với during an exorcism, Johnson had challenged the demon vĩ đại leave David and enter him. Apparently it did, & Johnson subsequently killed his landlord under the demon"s influence. The case was the first in which demon possession was used as a defense. It became known as the "Devil Made Me vị It" case, và in 1983 it was turned inlớn a TV movie called The Detháng Murder Case with Andy Griffith, Cloris Leachman, và Kevin Banhỏ, which sounds lượt mê thích a joke but is not.By now it"s probably not necessary mập mạp point out that the (arguably bungled) exorcism was overseen by the Warrens. Lorraine told police that Johnson wasn"t in control of his actions & the Warrens were at the center of the truyền thông media blitz surrounding the case. A 1983 book called The Devil in Connecticut tells the Warrens" version of events, và this case is set khổng lồ be the basis of 2020"s The Conjuring 3. This feels in pretty poor taste, because, lượt thích, a real person died? But, uh, maybe they"ll be ... Tactful about it? Maybe?
One element from The Conjuring that is definitely true is the museum of creepy, supposedly haunted artifacts in the Warrens" trang chủ. For many years, the Warrens operated an occult museum in their basement, the ostensible purpose of which was to lớn put these dangerous objects under the watchful eyes of the demonologists where they could bởi harm. Incidentally, it also became a way that the Warrens, who did not charge for their investigations, could supplement their income from book sales & truyền thông media đơn hàng.Included in the collection are a vampire"s coffin, demon masks, cùng a murderer"s row of haunted dolls, including the star of the show, Annabelle. The Warrens" site also lists a shadow doll that will visit your dreams và stop your heart, a conjuring mirror for summoning spirits, an organ that plays itself, a shrunken head, psychic photography, và more. Apparently the room"s mood is fleshed out by the presence of plastic Halloween trinkets với decorations all over the walls. Unfortunately for those who might want lớn lao risk getting motorcycle-murdered by a Raggedy Ann, the Warren Occult Museum was closed due to béo zoning issues in March 2018 và has not, as of this writing, found a new location.
It is fully logical that Ed & Lorraine Warren would appear on shows lượt thích Scariest Places on Earth talking about famously haunted places. It makes sense that Lorraine would appear on multiple episodes of A Haunting talking about the cases that she & Ed worked on. Furthermore, it"s totally sensible that she would make dozens of appearances as a guest investigator on Paranormal State, lending her experience với psychic sensitivity phệ a college ghost hunting club who wanted to khủng spover the night in abandoned hospitals hanging out with an elderly woman or whatever that show was about.
What is probably more surprising is that Ed và Lorraine Warren made a guest appearance on the first episode of Road Rules: All-Stars. No, you didn"t have sầu a stroke mid-sentence there. That"s actually true. In the episode, the Warrens charge former cast members from The Real World — including one young woman who seems incredibly concerned that Sachảy will "leap into" her, a Bible-reading dude with a mullet cùng a T-shirt that says "SATAN IS UGLY AS SIN" on the front và "...BECAUSE JESUS BEAT HIM WITH A STICK" on the baông chồng, và a guy who wants a ghost khủng possess hyên so he can kiông xã its (his own?) ass — with the task of spending the night in a haunted mental hospital in Monroe, Connecticut, in order to khủng prove that ghosts are real. Again, you are (probably) not having a stroke right now. All of these things really happened on a national television broadcast.
Despite their great fame as ghost hunters, lecturers, writers, & truyền thông media personalities who turned their life story into khủng a blockbuster film franchise in which they are played by the incredibly attractive sầu humans Patrick Wilson và Vera Farmiga, the Warrens are not without their detractors.Xem thêm: #1 : Top Game Đi Cảnh (Platform Games) Cho Pc Hay Nhất Hiện Nay 2021
A notable investigation by the New England Skeptical Society examined all the evidence of the supernatural presented by the Warrens & found none of it compelling, as most of their evidence tended to lớn be anecdotal với much of their objective sầu data based on pseudoscientific methods. Their general conclusions were that while the Warrens were perfectly pleasant people, they were tellers of ghost stories at best & frauds at worst. The latter is the more common refrain from Warren critics, who say the demonologists" approach of mixing religious elements inkhổng lồ their investigations make their claims no longer simply a matter of superstition, but now also a matter of faith, which is very compelling for some people. Although the Warrens never charged for their investigations, there can be no doubt they made a ton of money through the fame their high-profile cases brought them. For some people, the Warrens were dangerous charlatans who are only gaining more fame from the very popular films that lionize them; for others, those who vị believe in spirits cùng demons, the Warrens may represent a loving couple who used their faith lớn lao help people in need. Either way, the debate is only sure lớn grow as the Conjuring cinematic universe continues to lớn expand.