

What then ensues is night upon night of doors slamming, kitchenware flying everywhere, and pool equipment malfunctioning.
#PARANORMAL ACTIVITY MARKED ONES WATCH GOMOVIES FULL#
After what is suspected to be a home invasion, the family invests in a full setup of security cameras inside and outside of their house.

This includes her husband, Daniel (Brian Boland), his daughter, Ali (Molly Ephraim), and their infant child, Hunter, as well as their housekeeper, a Latina woman named Martine (Vivis Colombetti). In this sequel, which is actually a prequel, we meet Katie's sister, Kristi, and the rest of her family. While we can't speak for every fan of the franchise, this was most certainly the film that caused more than a few to abandon ship entirely. So does this mean Katie lost track of Hunter between the events of the second and fourth films? And if so, how did the Nelsons come to adopt him? We're given very little time to digest this as in zero time flat, and the film slams into a very rushed climax, even ending on a cheap jump scare. However, things get confusing when not only is it revealed that Robbie's mother is Katie, but it seems that Wyatt is actually Hunter from "Paranormal Activity 2." As the film goes on, things begin going bump in the night with its presence even highlighted by an Xbox Kinect - one of the film's only highlights. Following an incident, the neighbor's son, Robbie (Brady Allen), is forced to stay with Alex and her family, including her younger brother, Wyatt (Aiden Lovekamp). "Paranormal Activity 4" starts off with some promise, introducing us to a new protagonist, Alex Nelson ( Kathryn Newton) who becomes suspicious of the neighbor next door. It's as generic a horror film as you can get and a true disappointment when you consider how influential the first film was back in 2009. However, the 3D effects serve as nothing more than moderately intriguing window dressing to decorate an otherwise underwhelming movie. Additionally, the only other slightly noteworthy development is finally getting to see Tobi, the oft-mentioned demon, in physical form for the first time.

The film's biggest highlight, and we're using that term in the loosest sense, are the various callbacks to previous films. Found footage horror and 3D could be a potentially intriguing combination, but this test run was far from a home run.Įven as far as the story goes, it's a mediocre culmination of all the series' convoluted plot threads, barely bolstered by average performances from the leads. Still, even by 2015, people had caught onto just how cheap of a gimmick 3D could be, and nowhere is that more evident than here. We mention this because it feels like "Paranormal Activity: The Ghost Dimension" was only made to cash in while the trend was still vaguely hot.
