A Brazilian woman has had be rushed to hospital after becoming hysterical while watching new horror film, it was reported today.
The unnamed 20-year-old had visited a cinema in Teresina, north-east Brazil, for a late-night showing of U.S. film Annabelle: Creation.
A video filmed on a mobile phone shows the woman lying on the floor of a shopping centre outside the cinema, screaming and coughing uncontrollably.
True fear: Video shows a woman after she went to the cinema to see the new horror film Annabelle: Creation in northeast Brazil
Friends are seeing trying to calm down the panicking woman, who reportedly started punching herself in the face as she left the cinema at around midnight on Friday.
Emergency services were forced to use a wheelchair in order to remove her from the shopping centre, local news reports.
She was then taken to hospital in the city in Brazil’s northeastern state of Piaui.
Annabelle: Creation is the latest in the The Conjuring horror franchise. The film, starring Lord of the Rings actress Miranda Otto and Without A Trace’s Anthony LaPaglia, is a prequel to the 2014 film Annabelle.
It tells the tale of how the murderous doll Annabelle came to be possessed by a demon.
Bad reaction: The woman apparently became hysterical, and would not stop screaming and coughing as she lay on the floor outside the cinema in a shopping centre
Prequel: Annabelle: Creation tells the tale of how the porcelain-faced doll became possessed
The Brazilian woman had reportedly started acting strangely at the scariest moment of the film, according to a audio message being shared with the video on social networking sites.
She says: ‘It was at the moment when the devil appeared.
‘When the film ended, we went to pay the car park and she started hitting herself with punches to her own head, and threw herself on the floor.
‘Other people in the shopping centre got together to try to control her, I became really scared.’
A member of staff at the shopping centre told Brazil’s UOL website: ‘We haven’t managed to find out exactly what happened or what caused this behaviour.
‘What we know is that she was really very nervous and couldn’t herself explain what had happened.’