Ouija: Origin of Evil
Having had an extremely creepy and disturbing interaction with an Ouija board about 25 years ago, I tend to find movies about those truly evil devices more interesting and compelling than, say, possessed dolls (Anabelle) or nuns or clowns. I don't know for sure that all Ouija boards are connected to something out of the natural realm, but I don't trust them at all. I won't be in a house or a room that has one in it.
This movie did a good job of developing some suspense and horror as the damnable thing inserts itself into the life of a grieving family with a spiritual bent.
Elizabeth Reaser plays the mom, a recently widowed sham fortune teller who ekes out a living performing scam seances and spiritual readings with the help of her two daughters. Reaser is really odd. Sometimes she looks incredibly hot, others not so much at all. Can't figure that out and she vacillates between hot and not throughout this whole movie.
Reaser mom eventually decides to include an Ouija board into her act, fails to follow the three simple instructions (never alone, never in a graveyard and always say goodbye) that are required for "safe" use. In doing so, she unleashes some demonic hell through the younger of the two girls. The possessed child is Lulu Wilson who is making a serious career out of playing a creepy kid. She had a part in Deliver Us From Evil, was in Annabelle: Creation, plays in Haunting of Hill House, and had the primary role here. She's a cute girl, but does the weird pretty well.
The story has some conveniences -- why is it they live in a house with a horrific backstory, did the dead husband not have any insurance, how is it lightbulbs still burn after 50 years? -- but it has enough PG-13 frights and disturbing behavior to stand half a notch above the other forumulaic Blumhouse offerings.
It probably wouldn't have been as good to me without the very personal loathing I have for Ouija boards, but it was still pretty decent. Well acted and shot well.
It's not the next great horror offering, but it wasn't awful. I enjoyed it well enough.