Ouija: Origin of Evil (2016) - full transcript

In 1967 Los Angeles, a widowed mother and her daughters add a new stunt to bolster their seance scam business, inviting an evil presence into their home.

Let's begin.

Very good.

What was your wife's name?

Mary.

Mary. All right.

He seeks the spirit of
Mary Browning.

Mary, we invite you into our circle.

Mary Browning, we invite
you into our circle.

We seek you in love and light.

Dad, don't give
this woman our money.

Mary?



Mary, if that's you,
give us a sign.

Blow out the candles.

Welcome, Mary.

We may ask three questions.

Why just three?

Mary, we ask that you let the
candle burn if the answer is yes.

Blow it out if
the answer is no.

Ask your questions, sir.

Mary,

are you in pain

anymore?

She's not.

The pain she felt
before she passed,

she's saying it was an illness?



Cancer?

Yeah.

She is restored. She's...

She's young again and beautiful.

Beautiful forever, now.

Mary, I...

Can you forgive me?

For all the things...

She says yes.

She forgives you.

And she asks for your
forgiveness in return.

Okay, I don't know how you're doing...

Do not break the circle.

Anyone can shake
a table with their knee.

She won't be
here much longer.

Ask your last question.

Honey,

I have to ask you about Jenny.

She's seeing this young man, Don,

and they want
a lot of money from me.

Don't.

I have to mortgage the house.

It's supposed to be
a terrific investment,

and he says he'll marry her
if it turns out right...

Okay, I don't know how she's doing this,
but this is a scam, Dad.

I'm so sorry.

The spirit world is unpredictable.

She sounded angry. So angry.

It's hard to explain.

Well, thank you for your time.
No, no.

No, I can't.

Just remember what she came to say.

She's at peace.

And she loves you.

And that's all to
take away from today.

The rest is
the business of the living.

Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, thank you.

What was that? You almost gave
that poor man a heart attack.

Paulina Zander, get in here!

She deserved it, Mom. She was just
trying to steal her dad's money.

That isn't what we do here. It's our
job to comfort them, not judge them.

It's your job to stand at the
curtains and not attack the clients.

And you, young lady?

I heard screaming and got scared.

I didn't mean to knock things down.

This is unacceptable.

That lady was unacceptable.
She was a real bitch.

Witch. I'm not sorry.

It cost us five dollars.

Let me see that.

He had so much weight on the table,

it was hard for me to latch on.

What's a scam?

The lady said we were a scam.

Doris, listen to me.

A scam is a lie.

We don't lie. We help people.

We give them closure,
we give them peace.

We heal their hearts.

And that's not something that can

happen without some showmanship.

We tell them the truth, we just
need to help them believe it.

Oh.

Okay.

Well, we're gonna need to spice
that showmanship up a little,

because it's getting kind of stale.

And if we aren't here to judge,

then why did you blow
out the last candle?

We're none of us perfect, Lina.

She really was a bitch,
wasn't she?

You are Miss Lizzie Borden,
I presume.

I must say, you're not
exactly what I expected.

I'm not Miss Lizzie.

I'm Emma.

Oh, the sister. Hmm.

Well, let's see,
it's been a year

since your mother and father...

Mom, ten more minutes.

Hmm, I'm sorry, sweetie.
It's a school night.

My sister was acquitted.

And we never talk about it.

Well, of course you don't,

but the public's interested,
you know.

Now, I represent the
Sacramento Record.

You're one of those reporters?
That's right.

I'm saying goodnight
now because I'm tired

and I didn't have
a very good day at school,

because Teri's still
picking on my skirt.

So, please send us the money
to buy a new skirt.

Oh, and Lina got in trouble again.

I was good, though.

I love you and I
miss you every day.

Goodnight, Daddy.

Amen.

Why don't you
pray anymore, Mommy?

Who says I don't pray?

You used to pray every
night with Daddy and me.

But since he's gone,
you never do.

You're still praying to Daddy?

Remember what Father Tom says?

We're supposed to pray to God.

I'd rather talk to Daddy.

But he never answers.

The people we help,

their mommies and daddies
in heaven talk to them.

Why doesn't Daddy talk to us?

Just because you can't hear him
doesn't mean he isn't there.

What is it?

Just saying goodnight.

Goodnight.

Took you long enough.

Hey, Zander!

Lina-Lina-bo-bina.
Pull up a coffee cup.

It's a little late for caffeine.

My mom left her keys out.

Groovy.
When's she gonna be back?

From her bridge game?

Usually after midnight, smelling a
lot like coffee, if you get me.

You want some?

I don't think so.

I mean, why not?
We see the moon every day.

Why can't one of us just go on it?

There's so many
things that prevent us.

I'm with Betty on it.

Yeah?
I don't see why not.

Yeah, but just,
they put the big helmets on...

Yeah, exactly.
Whatever.

The whole thing is a myth.

Well, no. There's no
air or atmosphere up there.

My mom just got that.

She and her bridge club
friends play it sometimes.

Is that the one
where you talk to ghosts?

Uh, then, no, thanks.
I get enough of that at home.

It's actually really scary.

You guys wanna play?

We could just make conversation.

The rules.

Never play alone.

Never play in a graveyard.

Always say goodbye.

Circle once for each player.

Come on.

Come on.

As friends we gather,
hearts are true.

Spirits near, we call to you.

Is there a spirit here?

Oh, my God.

Relax, Betty.

Are you in the room with us?

Oh, my God.

Ellie, are you doing that?

No, I swear.

Ask your questions.

What's it like on the other side?

Oh, my God.

Okay, here's how it works.

All right, we all have our hands on it,
so we can't tell who moves it.

We react to the slightest pull by
helping it move subconsciously.

Okay.
I mean,

this game was designed
to make us scare ourselves.

Yeah.
There's nothing

on the other side, believe me.

Okay.
You're no fun.

Okay, well, if we're just
talking to ourselves, then...

Spirit, will Lina come
to homecoming with me?

Stop it, Ellie.
It's the spirit.

Guys, this is really
starting to freak me out.

There's no spirit, Betty.

Okay.

Spirit, prove to us that you're here.

Give us a sign.

Yeah, you're right.

See?
Yeah, there's no spirit.

There's no spirit.

Ellie!

Mom, I'm sorry.

Get in.

Why do you do these things?

If you're gonna ground me,
just do it already.

'Cause that worked
so well the last time.

We were just
playing a stupid game.

I can smell your breath.

I know how hard it's been for you
and I understand how you feel.

But I need you to help me, Lina.

For all of us.

I'm asking, honey.

I'll try.

Really? A Ouija board?

It's actually pretty fun.

You should consider
adding one to the act.

...soil is brought back to the Earth,

eight guest scientists will join 14 others

at the Ames Research Center
near San Francisco

to analyze it for evidence of life...

Honey, please sit with us.

Just once I want to have
a normal family breakfast.

Urn, actually, I'm gonna be late
this morning, so I'm gonna walk.

Don't be silly, have some food.
I'll drop you off.

No, it's cool.
I'm walking with a friend.

Who?

Just a friend. So...

I gotta go.

I'll get it!

No, Doris, it's okay.
I got it.

See who it is first!

It's some boy.

Really?

Hi, young lady.
Is Lina home?

Yeah, she's right here.

Hey, do you wanna go?

Hi. Who are you?

He's just a friend.

Hi, Mrs. Zander. I'm Mikey.

Are you ready to go?

Not quite. If you guys
are walking to school,

why don't you take
your sister with you?

I could use the morning
to run some errands.

But, Mom, I have class.
Thanks, honey.

I need my shoes.

Go help your sister get ready.

Come on, pipsqueak.

Wow, this is...

This is a beautiful home.

Hmm.

Is that where you do the seances?

Readings.

Come on in.

Have you ever had your palm read?

Can't say I have, Mrs. Zander.

It's totally painless.

Hmm. Southpaw.
My husband was a lefty.

This is your head line, this is your
life line, this is your heart line.

You're wearing a senior jacket.
How old are you?

I'm 17.

Lina's a sophomore, you realize.

Yes, ma'am.

Oh...

What's wrong?
Hmm.

It's your life line.
You see how this curves here?

This could mean a few things.
This is your dominant hand, right?

Mmm-hmm.

I'll tell you this for sure.

If this hand, or any other hand,
for that matter,

touches my daughter in
a way I don't like...

I'd hate to see something
happen to your life line.

You dig?

Yes, ma'am.

Off you go.

You need to see the new Ramblers.

The new Ramblers are in
at your local Rambler dealer.

Dawson's Hardware, your friendly

neighborhood hardware supplier...

Your mom's a witch.

You are so weird.

Are those cobwebs in your hair?

Creepy little witch.

Doris, the dorkus!

Doris, the...

That's enough.

Now, go on.

You know why people say
mean things, right?

Why?

Because they're scared.

Makes me kind of feel sorry for them.
How about you?

Yeah. I feel bad for them.

All right, off you go.
I'll be right there.

Thank you, Father.

Does she have a lot of problems?
With other kids?

She has her fair share,
but it's nothing too concerning.

She's been slow making friends.
Since her dad...

I know.
I talk about that with her.

That's very good of you.

Well, she's a lovely girl.
It's really no trouble.

Thank you, Father.

Maybe you could invite
Father Tom over for a reading.

I don't know if Father Tom would
want a reading, sweetheart.

So he could talk to his wife.

He's a priest.
They aren't allowed to have wives.

He had one.

Before he was a priest.

She died.

Just like Daddy.

Hey, what's this?

A new prop.

For work.

Is there a presence here with us?

What is your name?

Marcus.

Yes.

No.

Who are you talking to, Doris?

Spirit, can you hear me?

Yes, we can.

And we can see you.

That'll work.

What was that all about?

What?

Roger?

Honey, are you there?

I'm here.

Are you there?

Hi, friend.

Now what?

Who are you?

Cut it out, Doris.

Doris?

Doris?

This is a little awkward, but I had
to ask you because it just seemed...

Well, so unusual.

Have you been helping Doris
with her homework?

Oh, God. Uh...

Maybe not as much as I could.
I'm sorry.

Is she falling behind?
I can help her more.

It's nothing like that.

In fact,

unless she's learned cursive,

then somebody's been
helping her quite a bit.

No.

Doris, who helped you with this?

My new friend.

Who's your new friend?

I didn't do it.
Well, I didn't.

And Doris definitely didn't.

Well, then, I don't know what to tell you.
It wasn't me.

Did your sister do
your homework for you?

I told you.

No.

Your new friend did.

I let her use my hand.

Do you think
we'll have to move?

I don't know, sweetie.

Dad won't like this.

I should tell him.

As friends we've gathered,
hearts are true.

Spirits near, we call to you.

Daddy...

Did you hear that?

We might have to
move out of our house.

I'm sorry, Mom.

It's not right.

This was your dad's house.

Our house.

And this is where
he wanted us to live.

If there's any part
of him left, it's here.

In these walls.

Doris doesn't quite get it, does she?

No.

She thinks he just left,
like he went to work.

It's better than getting hit
by some asshole driving drunk.

I think it's best
she doesn't understand.

I wish he could
watch you girls grow up.

Wish he could see
the women you'll be.

Here you go.

What's that, honey?

It's for us.

Where...
Where did you find this?

It's over here.

There's no more. I checked.

They're from people
who were here before.

How did you find
out about that?

Daddy told me.

With the board.

Come on.

As friends we've gathered,
hearts are true.

Spirits near, we call to you.

Daddy,

we found the money.

Thank you.

It's hard to hear him sometimes.

Like a car radio
when we go in a tunnel.

You can hear him?

Whispers.

They're tough to make out.

But I can hear them a little
better when I'm at the board.

A lot better if I
touch the planchette.

Doris, this is mean.

It's okay, Lina.

Daddy, are you here?

Stop it.

Okay, then...

Roger, if this is you,

when I told you I
was pregnant with Lina,

where were you when I told you?

Is she right?

He doesn't really need me.

Isn't that right, Daddy?

What are you looking at?

Sometimes I can see
them through this.

I haven't seen Daddy, yet.

But I want to.

Roger,

are you really here?

Look, she could have manipulated

the board in any number of ways.

You know that better than anyone.

It's real.

What we've been doing here,
what we thought we were doing here,

we can truly help people.

We can actually do what we've
been pretending to do.

And, Lina,

we can talk to Daddy again.

But how, Mom?
It's just a stupid game.

My mother was a fortune teller.

Before I was born.

Read tea leaves and tarot cards.

I thought it was silly.

I thought she was pathetic.

I thought it was all a scam.

Maybe she was right.
Maybe it just skips generations.

I'm gonna take this to
the bank in the morning.

I knew your father
would take care of us.

Goodnight, Mom.

Yeah, I guess I'm not allowed
over there anymore.

Ellie's mom called
my dad and he flipped.

Hell, it's not like he
isn't hittin' one bottle

or another before he
comes home from work.

Were you serious?

About what?

About homecoming.

Why?

I don't know.

I mean, yeah.

Yeah, sure I was. I mean,
we could go if you wanted to.

Or not.
It's just a dumb dance.

I do.

Want to go.

Great.

Sorry, um...

I'm just surprised. You seem too
cool for these kinds of things.

I'm not.

I'm not cool, I mean.

No, but you're wrong about that.

Mr. Russell.

Not much room for the Holy Ghost,
is there, Mikey?

Three's a crowd?

Ms. Zander, could I have a word?

No offense, Father,

but I don't need to make room for
another ghost in my life right now.

Holy or not.

No, it's not about that.

You're a smart young lady.

I imagine you can trust yourself
not to make bad decisions.

But boys his age,
they require discouragement.

Makes them better
men in the long run.

Oh, well, thank you.

I guess.

I actually wanted to talk
to you about your sister.

It's four days in a row now that
she's been absent. Why is that?

It's complicated.

Usually when she's sick,
your mother sends a note

or she comes by and
picks up her homework.

She's not sick.

Um...

She and my mom
have been working.

What do you mean?

Let's see if we
can't reach your father.

What do you wanna tell him?

Um...

Do I make him proud?

Is he proud of me?

Always.

That tickled.

I can't thank you enough.
That was amazing.

Can I come back tomorrow?

Of course.
It's our pleasure.

Lina.

Lina.

My neck hurts.

Take this. If it gets worse,
we'll wake Mom up.

It stings.

Like a bee.

It'll feel better in a bit.

Goodnight, squirt.

As friends we've gathered,
blah, blah, blah...

What happened to my neck?

Daddy, it hurts.

This was a game.

Mabel, Mabel, set the table

Do it as fast as you are able

Don't forget the salt,
pepper ketchup, mustard

Check out the freak.

She's so weird.

Oh!
What are you doing?

Hey, keep an eye out.

What are you doing?
I'm not doing it.

Stop it!

Stop it, Jack!

At Cape Canaveral,
another probe into space.

Target: the Moon. A 52 ton...

Lina, you call the restaurant
if you need anything.

Mom!
What?

No. You just look...

What?

Nothing.

Nothing, you just look nice.

I'll be a few hours, tops.

In bed by 9:00 and you have the number
for the restaurant if anything...

I know.

Homework.

I know!

Go.

I'm sorry I'm late.

Oh, no, not at all. Please.

This is lovely.

I've been by it so many times
but I've never come inside.

Well, I thought you could use
a night away from cooking.

You're absolutely right.

Some nights I'm so frazzled,

I don't even bother to heat up
the SpaghettiOs.

Oh, God.
Please forget that.

I'm really not a bad mother.

Oh, I have cold
SpaghettiOs twice a week.

Twice a week at least.
I keep a case at the rectory.

Actually, I invited you here because

I wanted to discuss
the girls and home.

Out of their earshot.

I won't have it, Lizzie.

I'll die first.

Hey, come on in.

Hey.

But I don't have to die, do I?

Oh, hello, kiddo.

Hey, thanks for...

Well, I have some records up in my
room and she's just gonna watch TV,

so, we should go

upstairs.

I do what I have to do.

If you tell Mom he was here,

I promise you I'm going to melt

each and every single one of your dolls

until they're just a giant blob of
hair and arms. Do you understand?

As soon as I saw the ax, I knew.

Wait, Emma.

I'm not an expert on the occult.

I'm not either, to be honest.

But the spirit world is dangerous.

The thing is though, what we do
for people, it's not dangerous.

It's good, Father.

It's good work.

I wish you'd let me show you, and
let me help you talk to your wife.

I'm sorry. I'm just...

I assumed you'd want to.

Who says I don't want to?

I didn't have a chance to tell her

all the things I wanted to tell her

before she passed away.

Hmm. We never do.

But I've always felt
that anything I didn't say,

she already knows.

Gloria and I, we used to
come here once a month.

Roger always ordered wine
in a French accent.

It was so bad.

It felt like those days
were over for me, so...

I felt that they were, after...

Well, I guess I kind of made
sure of that, didn't I?

Yeah, if they weren't over
before the seminary...

I didn't think this through.

Maybe in another life.

Here's to another life, then.

You know, it's awesome
you don't have to move.

Such a great house.

It's classic.
It's great bones.

Um...

Sorry, my dad's an architect.

His idea of a good time

is driving me and my brother
around and looking at houses.

Yeah?

Yeah.

Yeah, I'm really
glad you're not moving.

My mom's gonna be home soon.

I thought you said another hour.

I'm not taking any chances.

She'll seriously kill you.

And me.

Romeo and Juliet.

More like Bonnie and Clyde.

Sadly, for us.

Well...

Goodnight.

Goodnight.

Later, kiddo.

Christ.

You scared the crap out of me.

Wanna hear something cool?

Sure.

Do you know what it feels like
to be strangled to death?

First, you feel
the pressure in your throat.

Your eyes water

and you start to
taste something very,

very sour in your mouth.

Then, it's like
someone lights a match

right in the middle of your chest.

And that fire grows.

It fills your
lungs and your throat,

and all the way
behind your eyes.

And finally that
fire turns to ice,

like pins and needles of ice are
sticking into your fingers,

your toes, your arms.

You see stars, then darkness.

And the last thing you feel, is cold.

Goodnight, Romeo.

What the hell did
you do this for?

I didn't.

Dad gave me this
and you know that!

I didn't do it!

Daddy did.

To stop the voices.

You stop this, Doris.

This isn't funny anymore.
You stop it!

What?

What is all the yelling?

Look what she did!

Did you do this?

No!

She's lying.

Something is wrong with her.

You're either too stupid
or too stubborn to see it!

You watch your tongue, young lady.

You two can live in this
fantasy world all you want,

but you can leave me out of it.

And you know what? You can
leave Dad out of it, too.

You can't talk to me that way.

I don't know how else
to make you hear me.

Your sister, she's been through
just as much as you have.

She's dealing with the same
things that you're dealing with.

Something is wrong with Doris, Mom!

She's experiencing something amazing!

So am I!

I wish you'd join us.
It could help you heal.

Have you listened
to what she's saying?

What that stupid
board is actually saying?

Yes! Every day!

Basic things!

Forgiveness, "I'm so proud of you."
"I miss you."

Things that you used
to tell your clients

because you knew
they'd wanna believe it.

You know how that works,
you taught me!

No! She knows things!

I asked her specific questions.

You heard me.

Things only he could know.

How do you explain that?

I can't.

I'm sorry.

I know this is
hard to accept, honey,

but something is happening here

that we can't understand.

It's changing Doris.

It's changing her and I know you
see that, at least a little.

And if it was Dad, if it really was him,
then why would he change her?

Why would he ever do
anything to change her?

We're gonna be late.

I don't wanna go to school.

I know, honey,
but we've missed too much.

Did you do your homework?

I don't wanna go,
I don't wanna go,

I don't wanna.
I don't wanna go!

Lina, will you get your sister's
things out of her room?

No! I don't want to go.

I wanna stay here
and talk to my friends.

Lina. Come in.

Father.

What can I do for you?

I don't know how to ask you this,

but is there anyone at this
school who speaks Polish?

Um...

I'm not sure. Why?

I found these at my house and...

I just wanna know what they say.

I think they may be in Polish, but...

Doris wrote them.

I'm not sure I understand...

I saw her.

I believe Sister Hanna came here

from Poland during the war.
I can...

I can ask her to look at them.

Lina?

What are these?

Hopefully nothing, Father.

Father. Um...

What a nice surprise.

I'm sorry to call on you like this.

I was hoping I could take
you up on that reading.

Oh, uh...

Well, please come in.

...U.S. astronauts in 1970.

Gotta say, I'm surprised.
I thought...

I thought you were
against the idea of...

I changed my mind.

...virtually every
record in manned space flight.

Astronauts walk and work,
their capsules...

Hi, Father.

Lina, hi.

I thought I would see firsthand
what all the fuss was about.

Doris, would you be willing to...

...in a series of pinpoint,
bullseye splash-downs.

Gloria was your wife's name, right?

That's right.

Gloria, are you here?

Darling.

She's a little hard to hear.

You miss me.

Gloria, what's your middle name?

Lynn?

Is that right?

Remarkable.

You forgive me?

For what?

Thank you, love.

But what was that fight about?

She says it's not important.

"Don't

"hide

"behind

"collar.

"Want you to be..."

Happy.

That was something.

Thank you, Doris, for doing that.

I'm afraid that's not the
only reason I came by.

Lina's gotten herself
into some trouble at school.

What?

Isn't that right, Lina?

I'm sorry, Mom.

What kind of trouble?

I'd rather not talk about it here.

Is there some place we
can speak in private?

Um, we can talk in your
office in the morning?

I'd prefer to
speak to you about it

right now, if that's all right.

I promise it won't take long.

We could go up to my room.

I wanna come.

How old are you now, Doris?

Nine.

Nine? Well, you're
practically a young lady.

You think you could
manage to hold down

the fort on your
own for a few minutes?

Are you up for that?

What's this about, Father?

Can I watch TV?

Of course.

It's right this way.

Where did she write them?

Over there.

Where are you going?

Mom, please.

My wife's middle name was Catherine.

I'm sorry, I...

Is this about your reading?

My mother's middle name was Lynn.

Did you see her writing these?
Actually writing them?

Yes. Right over there.

Sometimes the medium gets confused.
Different voices...

I tricked her.

What are those?

"Do not believe every spirit, but test

"the spirits to see
whether they are from God.

"For many false prophets have
gone out into the world."

John 4:1.

I thought this was about Lina.

It's about all of you.

Please.

She started by calling me darling.

An easy guess.

A common term of endearment.

Then said she missed me.

An appeal to comfort.

Did you bring me
up here to tell me

my 9-year-old daughter is a fraud?

Oh, no.

I don't think she's a fraud.

Not at all.

When I asked for
Gloria's middle name,

I thought the word
"Lynn" as hard as I could.

I repeated it over
and over in my mind.

Why would you do that?

Because when we ask a question
we know the answer to,

we think the answer as we ask it.

That's right.

And she was listening to me.

I thought "Lynn," she said Lynn.

When I asked what
our fight was about,

I cleared my mind.

Just imagined static
on a television set.

She changed the subject.

Your wife's voice?

We all heard it.

It was a woman's voice.

That's all.

Just a woman's voice.

I'm so shocked to hear it
come from her mouth.

I don't really scrutinize whether
it sounded exactly like Gloria.

And she only says one word.

Enough for me to
hear it's a woman,

but not enough
for anything else.

Accent, inflection, nothing too familiar.

I don't think your daughter is a fraud.

I believe she is channeling
powers and forces

we do not understand.

But I'm certain she was
not channeling my wife.

Keep your badge on.

Hey, Doris.

What's the skinny?

Is Lina home?

Come in.

Actually, not right now.

She and Mom are talking
to the man about us.

They'll be right back.

They...
They left you here alone?

They'll be here any minute.

She said you should wait.

Yeah?

Wanna see something neat?

You know, maybe I should...

I should come back later.

There's treasure in the walls.

We used it to pay the bills.

Yeah, I heard about that.
Kind of.

The treasure in the walls,
is that for real?

I'll show you.

She'll be here any second.

This is something Doris wrote.

Sister Hanna came here from
Poland during the war.

I asked her to translate them.

It upset her a great deal.

This is a journal
from a man named Marcus,

who grew up in Poland
during the Second World War.

It talks about his family
and how they were rounded up

by the Germans during the invasion.

It's this way.

I found a hole in the wall behind the
furnace, and the money was inside.

It was old and dusty.

I think there's more.

And it talks about
a doctor at the camps.

They called him the Devil's Doctor

because of his interest in the occult

and the experiments
he'd conduct on the patients.

He talks about being
rescued by the Allies.

He came to America and lived on the
streets, ended up in a mental hospital.

I found some jewelry in there, too.

But I put it back.

For later.

He recognized one of the doctors
using a different name,

but he knew it was
the Devil's Doctor.

It's not unlikely a lot of them
fled to America after the war.

And then one night, the doctor
took him out of the hospital

and brought him to his house.

He describes the house.

This house.

He says the doctor had a
secret room in the basement

where the experiments continued
on Marcus and others.

He cut out their tongues,

he severed their vocal cords
and sealed their mouths.

Kept them in the secret basement,

so even as people visited
and socialized upstairs,

they couldn't be heard below.

My God.

And he describes his
murder in great detail.

His murder?

The journal doesn't stop there.

There could be so
much more in there.

It talks about after.

After his murder?

Things that could help my family.

It talks about being in
the dark with the others.

Voiceless, cold, insane.

And it talks about the
other things in the dark.

Things that were never human.

Things that were
taking him over.

You were right.

What you said about this house.

Good bones.

No.

She knew things.

Things only Roger and I knew.

I asked...

You asked about things that
happened inside the house.

Things that you and Dad said
and did after you moved in.

Of course they knew
all of the answers.

They were here in
the house even then.

They were watching.

So we move. We get her
out of the house.

The problem isn't the house.
Not anymore.

I've called the archdiocese.

The Vatican has people
who investigate these things.

I'll ask them to approve an exorcism.

Shh. Don't say anything else.

They were watching us all of
those years inside the house.

Everything we did.

That means they're watching us now.

Doris? Honey?

I'll bring her down.

When I've got her,
and we get her outside...

No. No, no, no! No!

No! No!

Honey. Honey, look at me.

No! No! No! No!

Look at me.

Look at me.

Look at me.
No!

We have to find your sister.

What's that?

The basement.

Lina, wait outside.

No.

No way.
No, that's my sister.

This is my house,
and I'm going with you.

Besides,

splitting up sounds like the
stupidest idea in the world.

Okay, then.

But if we're going down there,
we're burning that thing in the furnace.

Doris?

Doris?

Honey?

Let's burn that.

They're in here.

All of them.

We played in a graveyard.

Think that'll work?

I honestly don't know.

Mom!

Mom, help!

I'm scared.

Mommy, help.

You stay here with your daughter.

What about staying together?

If she's in there,
I'll bring her out.

That's where we died.

Our Father, who art in Heaven...

He can't see this house, Father.

If he could, none of
us would still be here.

You're not Doris.

Is Doris still here?

I'm sorry this happened to you.

Come with me.

I can help you.

Yea, though I walk through the
valley in the shadow of death...

I shall fear no evil.

Father?

Where is she?

She's part of the walls now.

And she told me the most wonderful,
awful things.

No, no!

Tom.

Mom! Mom!

You gotta get out of here!

What do we do?

I don't...

Mom!

Stop it.

Let her go.

Speak to me.

I'm a vessel.

I can help you.

She's a better vessel.

What do you want from her?

Voice.

Then take mine.

You can cut it out, for all I care.
But you leave my girls alone.

Let them go!

Take me!

We'll take all of you.

Dad!

What the hell did you do this for?

I didn't.

Dad gave me this and you know that!

I didn't do it!

Daddy did.

To stop the voices.

I didn't do it!

Daddy did.

To stop the voices.

Sweetie, don't.

I just wanted to be able
to talk to Daddy again.

I just wanted you to be
able to talk to Daddy.

He's gone.

He lives in the dark and the cold

and he screams and screams and...

No, he doesn't.

Lina?

I'm sorry, Doris.

Daddy.

Doris?

Doris?

No.

No, no, no, no, no.

No.

No.

Oh, God.

Oh, God.

My baby.

I had to.

To stop the voices.

I'm sorry.

I'm sorry.

Mom!

Mom.

Mom.

It wasn't you.

Wasn't you.

It was my fault.

I love you.

I love you, too.

Doris?

Everybody's waiting.

No, I'm sorry!

Oh, God!

Hey, Lina.

Lina?

Lina.

Where did you go just now?

What were we talking about?

Your sister.

Again.

Right.

Right.

What about her?

I need you to try to remember

anything at all that can help us find her.
Or her body if she's...

Of course.

Of course.

I'm sorry.

My mother might know.

I think she said
something about where...

We've been over this.

She's dead because you...

Right. Of course.

You've been here two months, Lina.

We can't find your sister and still,

we can't have a proper conversation

about what happened to your mother.

My mother.

Really, the only thing that I
can say about my mother is that

she wanted to know that we
weren't alone after my dad died.

And now she knows.

We were never alone.

I'll never be alone.

I'll never be alone again.

Doris,

are you there?

Are you there?

Miss Zander?

You have a visitor.

She says she's your niece?