The Insidious franchise has always been terrifying despite the movies being rated PG-13, but how do the scares and gore in Insidious 5 compare?
Insidious: The Red Door has just been released, and where it sits on the scariness level compared to its predecessors couldn't be clearer. The series is about the Lambert family, who encounter malicious spirits in their home, most notably the Red-Faced Demon, who has become an iconic horror villain. The original 2010 movie sees the son trapped in a coma-like state and being tormented by the spirits. Insidious: Chapter 2 is about how Josh Lambert has become so connected to the spirit world.
SCREENRANT VIDEO OF THE DAY SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT The popular horror franchise began in 2010 and has gone from one success to another. The franchise has spawned spin-offs, has grossed more than $550 million worldwide , and Insidious 6 has even been teased. Insidious: The Red Door marks the fifth movie in the main series, and it's directed by Patrick Wilson, who has starred in most of the Insidlious movies as Josh Lambert.
Insidious: The Red Door Is Less Scary Than Other Insidious Movies As the Insidious: The Red Door story follows teenage Dalton again being tormented by the spirits from The Further, the fifth movie has been criticized as a retread of the first movie, and it's hard to be scared by a worse version of a much scarier movie. Insidious: The Red Door doesn't deliver the same scares as the previous movies, and while the fifth movie is less reliant on jump scares, it doesn't do anything new.
Tuckett explained that Insidious: The Red Door "mostly plays as though someone read the outlines for three or four average horror movies and then watched a couple of episodes of Stranger Things." Critics noted that the movie is padded with scenes that aren't remotely scary. While horror films should let audiences can catch their breath,this happens too often in Insidious 5.
Insidious: The Red Door Is Less Violent Than Other Insidious Movies Insidious: The Red Door is rated PG-13, which means that it isn't particularly violent, but that doesn't mean the movie doesn't deliver the goods, as every Insidious movie has been rated PG-13. As a result of not being R-rated, the Insidious series has never been overly violent, especially not compared to its peers like the Conjuring franchise, and Insidious: The Red Door is no different.
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