Insidious: The Red Door Review
‘Insidious: The Red Door’ manages to find some new life in an aging horror franchise. Directed for the first time by star Patrick Wilson, this serves as something of a legacy sequel, digging into the movies’ history.‘The Red Door’ marks Wilson’s directorial debut, and it’s a solid start for the actor-turned-shot-caller. Aside from a few early moments that stretch a little too far into wannabe arty, he maintains a solid visual aesthetic that lets the characters do the work, but also wrangles his team to create some effective scary moments.
Movie Details
Insidious Collection
A series of American horror films where the plots are depicted as case files of demonologists. The first two films center on a couple who, after their son mysteriously enters a comatose state and becomes a vessel for ghosts in an astral plane, are continuously haunted by demons of a hellish realm known as the Further until they take from the family what they want most: life. The third film, a prequel, focuses on the same psychic that helped the family this time come to the aid of a young girl who calls out to the dead, and the fourth follows her when her own family becomes haunted. All plots are depicted as case files of demonologists.