Insidious

The house is haunted but the spirit is exhausted

Insidious

(C) 2010 ALLIANCE FILMS (UK) LIMITED, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Director: James Wan
Starring: Patrick Wilson, Rose Byrne, Lin Shaye
Time Out rating:

In horror movies (as in life?), it’s better to have one brilliant gimmick, crude yet effective, than several sensible ideas – or even bold ones. So it is that Australia’s James Wan, a mere 34 years of age, will always be remembered for carving Saw, a 2004 little-indie-that-could that spawned a franchise and unwittingly emblematized its torturous decade.

No doubt snobs will nod approvingly at Wan’s step forward with the higher-toned Insidious, a haunted-house thriller whose title alone suggests a trip to the library. Yet the film’s low-budget atmospherics and clichéd floor-creakings are a poor substitute for Wan’s nauseating impact of yore. Written by the director’s longtime collaborator Leigh Whannell (who also appears in a small role), the new movie follows the Poltergeist playbook to an almost plagiaristic degree, complete with a believably warm couple (Patrick Wilson and Rose Byrne) wrecked by paranormal goings-on, a child taken to an alternate astral plane and a weird female specialist (Lin Shaye) brought in to lure the kid back from the ‘further.’

None of this is particularly well wrought, and only a bizarre gas mask worn by the séance leader counts as an inspired (if slightly silly) touch. The demon is revealed to be a fan of Tiny Tim’s ‘Tiptoe Through the Tulips’ and, evidently, Darth Maul’s face paint.

Insidious opens nationwide on August 27



By Joshua Rothkopf
Please note: All information is correct at the time of writing but is subject to change without notice.

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