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Now that The Conjuring‘s fourth and final main title is out, it’s worth looking back and ranking the installments from worst to best, according to their overall quality.
4) The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It

The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It released in 2021 as the franchise’s third main installment and first directed by Michael Chaves. Set in 1980s Connecticut, The Devil Made Me Do It bases its story on the real-life trial of Arne Cheyenne Johnson (Ruairi O’Connor), whose defense claimed that he was under the influence of a demon when he murdered his landlord. Although the movie boasts a fascinating premise, as the case was the first of its kind in the United States, The Devil Made Me Do It doesn’t do anything spectacular with its material.
Even in its most horrifying moments, the film often devolves into ridiculousness. Its themes rooted in satanic worship aren’t nearly as creepy as haunted houses or ghoulish apparitions, leaving The Devil Made Me Do It‘s extreme gore as its only unnerving element. From a character standpoint, The Devil Made Me Do It also disappoints, failing to enrich the Warrens’ relationship to the same degree other Conjuring movies have. Lacking in effective scares memorable moments, The Devil Made Me Do It ranks as the least memorable of The Conjuring‘s core films.
3) The Conjuring: Last Rites

2025’s The Conjuring: Last Rites concludes the franchise’s main saga with only a moderate level of success. Michael Chaves’ follow-up to The Devil Made Me Do It revolves around the Warrens’ reckoning with a harrowing demon from their past, which involves their daughter Judy (Mia Tomlinson) and a Pennsylvania family in the film’s 1980s present day. In Last Rites, audiences get to see the Warrens live out their retirement as happy parents before the aforementioned final case throws them back into the paranormal world.
But the movie leans so much into family melodrama that genuine frights are too few and far between. An intense final act and heartwarming ending somewhat make up for Last Rites’ sluggish first half, but the movie still ends up underwhelming, bloated, and beneath expectations of a final installment. Wilson and Farmiga’s portrayals of the Warrens are as layered and enjoyable as ever in Last Rights; however, one can’t help but feel that a scarier and more powerful sendoff was possible.










