Sweeney performs a younger nun named Sister Cecilia who has lately taken a gig at a distant Italian convent the place very aged nuns are put into hospice care on the finish of their lives. Cecilia would not converse Italian, and her backstory is skinny; it appears she turned to faith after surviving a near-drowning in a frozen lake. Cecilia appears wholly unfazed by offering end-of-life take care of aged nuns. One would possibly assume there’d be conversations about religion, dying, and the challenges that include watching outdated girls die each day. No, when Cecilia begins her work, there may be solely a vibrant montage of folding laundry, laughing, and making pals. Cecilia does have one compatriot, Sister Gwen (Benedetta Porcaroli), however she has even much less character. It is a unhappy state of affairs when “The Nun II” has richer characterization than your film.
To everybody’s shock, Cecilia wakes up one morning to seek out that she is pregnant … regardless of abiding by her vow of chastity. Evidently she might need immaculately conceived a toddler. This immediately makes her a celeb on the convent, and the native priest (Álvaro Morte) creepily begins to dote on her. It is also at about this level within the film when audiences be taught that the convent is outwardly evil; Cecilia rapidly discovers one other nun having her tongue chopped off by mysterious red-masked figures that lurk within the shadows. One other nun tries to drown her, and one other nonetheless throws herself off a roof.
The movie then climaxes with violence, blood, and rock-smashing horror. At the very least “Immaculate” ends properly.
As a result of most audiences have probably seen “Rosemary’s Child,” we’re maybe meant to intuit one thing demonic may be taking place, however there aren’t any hints to that impact. It is creepy, however imprecise.