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By the 2010s, the killer doll became a cliché of horror stock characters. [ 12 ] : 251 The killer doll Annabelle, allegedly based on a real haunted doll , was prominent in the 2010s. [ 1 ] : 199 The character was created for The Conjuring (2013) before receiving a dedicated film series within the Conjuring franchise . [ 9 ]
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More recently, a character based on the doll named Annabelle owned by Ed and Lorraine Warren has been featured in The Conjuring series of films. [ 1 ] The popularity of films and entertainment about haunted dolls has resulted in the sale of dolls claimed to be haunted on eBay , Amazon , Etsy and many other sites.
The doll made history as the first commercially-produced recorded-audio entertainment device in the world — and the women who taped their voices are thought to be the first paid recording artists.
The second movie in the "Conjuring" franchise was inspired by a real Raggedy Ann doll with a disturbing backstory. ... There is indeed a real Annabelle doll, though she’s a bit less creepy ...
The doll has been stored in a wood and glass case since 1979 because there were too many 'near miss' incidents while it was displayed at the museum without protection around it.
In a different episode, "The Ziff Who Came to Dinner", a possessed killer doll named "Baby Button Eyes" appears in a horror film, The Re-Deadening (a parody of Dolly Dearest). The doll is most likely based on the real-life appearance of "Annabelle", a possessed Raggedy Ann doll.
A Raggedy Ann doll. Annabelle is an allegedly-haunted Raggedy Ann doll, housed in the now closed occult museum of the paranormal investigators Ed and Lorraine Warren. Annabelle was moved there after supposed hauntings in 1970. A character based on the doll is one of the antagonists that appear in The Conjuring Universe.