Insidious Chapter 1 Review

Desperate to prove his theories, Harold performs an unauthorized ritual using hypnosis and EEG feedback, intending to project his consciousness into the boy’s mind. Instead, he tears a hole between worlds.

Tagline: Every possession has a beginning. Every demon has a first prey. insidious chapter 1

Insidious: Chapter 1 rewinds to 1969, following (played by a grizzled, obsessive actor), a brilliant but arrogant parapsychologist who has spent years trying to prove that consciousness survives death. Unlike the cautious Elise, Harold believes the living have a right to explore the afterlife. His wife, Margaret , a nurse, fears his experiments are tearing their family apart. Desperate to prove his theories, Harold performs an

He stumbles into the —not yet the foggy, red-lit purgatory we know, but a raw, shifting nightmare of memories, screams, and shadow. There, he finds young Samuel, terrified, hiding in a fractured version of the farmhouse. But something else notices Harold’s intrusion: The Red-Faced Demon . Every demon has a first prey

Long before the Lambert family’s nightmare, before Elise Rainier’s first encounter with the Red-Faced Demon, there was a case buried in paranormal archives—a case so disturbing it was never meant to be found.

Their lives change when they are called to a rural Pennsylvania farmhouse. A five-year-old boy, , has inexplicably fallen into a coma-like state. His body remains alive, but his eyes are wide open—black as coal. Doctors are baffled. The boy’s grandmother whispers of an old spirit door in the attic, sealed shut with salt and iron.