The young women found scraps of paper here and there that had “Help me” written on them. The ghost of the little girl, Annabelle, seemed to be attempting to communicate with Donna and Angie. Annabelle was not “harmless” at all, but the two roommates did not find that out until later. That is likely why the medium believed that the Raggedy Ann was possessed by the ghost of the little girl, and also why she told Donna and Angie that the doll was harmless. The place where the apartment Donna and Angie lived in was supposedly built on a field where a young girl was murdered. Her daughter, Donna, who had a roommate, Angie, was happy when she was given the doll, but that happiness soon changed to unease and then terror when the Raggedy Ann would move, on its own, from one place to another when there was no one in their apartment.ĭonna asked a medium to come to the apartment to try to discover if the doll was possibly haunted. Originally, as the history of the Raggedy Ann doll goes, a mother found the doll in a second-hand store and bought it sometime during the 1970s. A priest comes by and blesses the doll two times a month to this very day.īesides the doll being a different type of doll than the one in the movie Annabelle, another difference is that the film takes place in Santa Monica, California, while the historical case of the demon-possessed doll occurred in New England. The doll is not like the one in Annabelle, however it is, instead, a Raggedy Ann doll. 1952 was when the museum was founded by Ed and Lorraine Warren. Annabelle is attracting huge numbers of people in to see it during its debut weekend, many of whom are fans of The Conjuring and wanted to see the origins behind Annabelle, the doll, in the films.Īccording to an interview that Leonetti gave to Latin Post, the Ed Warren family, who now have the original Annabelle doll in a display case at the Warren Occult Museum in Monroe, Connecticut, believe that the doll is still possessed by a demon. Leonetti was the cinematographer who worked on The Conjuring (2013), of which Annabelle is the frightening prequel. The history behind the movie and the doll and the demon which supposedly possesses the doll to this very day is almost as fascinating and creepy as the movie, itself, which is directed by John R. Annabelle (Warner Brothers) is one of the creepiest flicks ever made and - if you believe in the supernatural origins behind the movie - it is based on an actual doll.
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