The Nun II
The Nun II is the best entry in the Conjuring Universe since the original Conjuring.…
Full analysis belowNo woke trap. The Nun II delivers exactly what the marketing promises: Valak returns, Sister Irene fights back, and the Catholic Church's spiritual authority is shown as the only effective weapon against demonic evil. The franchise's traditional Catholic framework is intact and central.
Our Verdict on The Nun II
The Nun II is the best entry in the Conjuring Universe since the original Conjuring. That is not a low bar to clear given how diluted the franchise has become, but director Michael Chaves and a solid script have produced a tight, genuinely frightening supernatural horror film that takes its Catholic theological framework seriously.
The film is set in 1956 France, four years after the events of the first Nun film. A priest is murdered at a boarding school under circumstances that suggest Valak - the demonic entity that takes the form of a nun - has returned. Sister Irene (Taissa Farmiga), now a respected young novitiate, is dispatched by the Vatican to investigate. She is accompanied by Sister Debra (Anna Popplewell), a less certain faith-seeker whose crisis of belief becomes the film's emotional core.
The boarding school setting is effective. It is a contained world with its own social hierarchy and secrets, and Chaves uses it to generate genuine dread before the overt horror sequences arrive. The students, particularly a girl named Sophie who forms a bond with the possessed Frenchie (Jonas Bloquet), are written with enough individuality to matter when they are put in danger.
Valak returns as a compelling villain, and the film expands the mythology of the entity in ways that make it more interesting without making it less frightening. The demon is not simply a monster but a specific theological entity - a relic-hungry possessing spirit with a particular relationship to sacred objects - and the film's climax hinges on Sister Irene understanding this nature and using it against Valak. The resolution is satisfying precisely because it emerges from the film's Catholic theological logic rather than from action-movie conventions.
From a values standpoint, The Nun II is one of the more traditionally grounded mainstream studio horror films of recent years. The Catholic Church is portrayed as a genuine spiritual authority facing a genuine supernatural threat. Prayer works. Relics have power. Faith is courage, not delusion. Sister Irene's certainty of belief is presented as a strength rather than a limitation. The film does not suggest that the Church's institutional failures invalidate its spiritual authority. These are deeply conservative premises for a mainstream studio film.
Sister Debra's faith crisis is handled well. She is not a skeptic-turned-believer through trauma (a lazy genre convention) but a genuine seeker whose encounter with Valak ultimately deepens rather than destroys her faith. The film treats her journey with respect and resolution.
The one area where the film sits less cleanly in a traditional values framework is the casting of Storm Reid as Kate, a boarding school supervisor. Her character is competent and warm but not ideologically charged. She functions as a character in the story rather than as a demographic statement. The progressive casting choice does not affect the film's values in any meaningful way.
Box office: $269 million worldwide on a $38.5 million budget. A major commercial success that demonstrates the continued appetite for mainstream horror that takes faith seriously.
Woke Tropes & Content Analysis
Formula: Weighted Score = Severity × Authenticity Multiplier × Centrality Multiplier
🔴 Woke Tropes
| Trope | Severity | Authenticity | Centrality | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female-Led Institutional Hero (Modern Casting Norm) | 2 | 0.7 | 1 | 1.4 |
| Diverse Ensemble Casting | 2 | 0.7 | 0.8 | 1.12 |
| Female Authority Over Male Characters | 2 | 0.7 | 0.8 | 1.12 |
| TOTAL WOKE | 3.6 | |||
🟢 Traditional Tropes
| Trope | Severity | Authenticity | Centrality | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Catholic Faith as Genuine Spiritual Authority | 5 | 0.7 | 1.8 | 6.3 |
| Female Religious Vocation as Heroic | 4 | 0.7 | 1 | 2.8 |
| Community and Institutional Authority Against Evil | 3 | 0.8 | 1 | 2.4 |
| Evil Is Real and Supernatural | 4 | 0.7 | 0.8 | 2.24 |
| Redemption and Sacrifice | 3 | 0.9 | 0.5 | 1.35 |
| TOTAL TRADITIONAL | 15.1 | |||
Score Margin: +11.4 TRAD
Director: Michael Chaves
NEUTRAL. Chaves is a journeyman horror director whose credits include The Curse of La Llorona and The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It. His work shows no progressive ideological agenda. He executes genre assignments with craft.Michael Chaves is a reliable horror director who has carved out a niche in the Conjuring Universe. He does not impose a distinctive auteur vision on his material, which in this case works in the film's favor. The Nun II is not a statement film. It is a well-executed supernatural horror sequel that takes its subject matter seriously: faith, demonic evil, and the courage required to confront both.
Writer: Ian Goldberg, Richard Naing, Akela Cooper
The screenplay is credited to Ian Goldberg and Richard Naing (story and screenplay) and Akela Cooper (screenplay). Goldberg and Naing have written for the Locke & Key TV series. Cooper wrote Malignant and M3GAN, both genre exercises without progressive messaging. The script for The Nun II is a solid genre construction: it builds the mythology of Valak, expands the world of the Conjuring Universe, and gives Sister Irene a worthy adversary who tests her faith rather than her politics.
Content Breakdown
Adult Viewer Insight
Conservative and particularly Catholic adults will find The Nun II more theologically coherent than most mainstream horror. The Conjuring Universe's premise, that demonic evil is real and that the Church has both the authority and the tools to combat it, is a distinctly pre-modern, deeply conservative worldview. The film does not deconstruct this framework or treat Sister Irene's faith as naive. In an era where mainstream culture routinely dismisses religious belief as backward, a $269 million box office hit that centers Catholic spiritual warfare as genuinely necessary and effective is quietly remarkable.
Parental Guidance
Is The Nun II Safe for Kids?
Rated R for terror, violence and some language. The Nun II contains frequent use of profanity including multiple instances of stronger language, though profanity is not the film's primary focus. Violence is the primary concern for parents. This is a supernatural horror film featuring intense and sometimes graphic depictions of demonic possession, exorcism sequences, and creature attacks. Characters are injured, killed, and shown with wounds and blood. The violence is meant to frighten and disturb rather than glorify, but it is presented realistically within the horror genre context. Sexual content is minimal. There is no nudity and no explicit sexual situations. A few suggestive moments and minor references exist but are not prominent to the plot. Alcohol and drug use is not a significant element of the film. The film contains substantial religious content centered on Catholic faith, including depictions of priests, nuns, churches, and exorcism rituals. While the film uses Catholic imagery and theology as its foundation, the portrayal treats faith respectfully as a genuine source of protection against evil rather than mockingly. The supernatural threat is presented as genuinely demonic. Given the intense horror content, graphic violence, and R-rating, The Nun II is appropriate for mature teenagers aged 16 and older who have experience with horror films and can handle genuinely frightening supernatural imagery. Younger viewers sensitive to horror, gore, or intense supernatural themes should wait until older.
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