Ready to give you real chills?
Forget about the movies for a moment. This is not Hollywood. Six Mexican investigators—Raiza, Claudia, Renata, Andrea, “Pato” and Gerardo—sneak into the authentic Warren Museum, the one next to the house of the most famous ghostbusters in cinema. And what they experienced there is going to keep you awake.
“We slept in the same house and I dreamed that there was someone in the garden… I was very angry. The following days I continued dreaming about it,” says Raiza.
It wasn’t just a bad dream. They felt touches, recorded voices that could not be heard with the naked ear and even managed to “communicate” with something that made their devices ring. The place is full of objects with terrible stories: from the original Annabelle doll to the Shadow doll—who, they say, kills when someone dreams about her.
The Nightmare Society in action
This group, called the Nightmare Society, was founded in 2019 and had always wanted to enter the museum, but they knew it was closed and guarded.
“It was just a fantasy because they arrested people who approached. But at one point it opened up and we said: it’s time,” recalls Andrea.
They were equipped as if for an impossible mission: a voice-activated recorder, Ouija board, protective amulets, and a REM-POD—a device that beeps and lights up when it detects energy changes.
And boy did he detect it. While using the Ouija board, one saw a hand on his chair and another felt his arm being pulled. Every time they asked if the presence was nearby, the REM-POD would ring. Screams were recorded on the recorder.
“We all feel afraid at some point. The simple atmosphere gives something,” confesses Gerardo.
The tension was so great that Renata, who was pregnant, decided to withdraw before finishing the investigation as a precaution.
All this chilling experience is now condensed in the documentary “The Warren Museum”, which will have an exclusive screening at Cinemex from this Thursday to Sunday. And then… yes, it will be available on the internet for the brave who want to watch it from home (with the lights on, of course).
Coincidences or something else? Judge for yourselves.




