Ouija: Origin Of Evil -
: Young Lulu Wilson as Doris is genuinely terrifying. Her monologue about the "sensations of strangling" remains one of the most unsettling scenes in modern horror.
: Flanagan uses a "slow burn" approach, building dread through 1960s aesthetics and clever camera angles rather than cheap noise. Ouija: Origin of Evil
: The bond between Alice and her daughters, Lina and Doris, makes the eventual possession feel like a tragedy rather than just a plot point. The Verdict: Better Than It Had to Be : Young Lulu Wilson as Doris is genuinely terrifying
Are you a fan of other horror projects, or do you prefer more fast-paced jump-scare movies? : The bond between Alice and her daughters,
Set decades before the first film, the story follows Alice Zander ( Elizabeth Reaser ), a widowed mother running a "spiritual medium" scam out of her home. To spice up her act, she introduces a Ouija board—accidentally opening a door to the house's malevolent history. Unlike the original, this film thrives on:
While the final act leans into some predictable "spookshow" tropes and CGI-heavy scares, the film is widely regarded by critics on Rotten Tomatoes and sites like Common Sense Media as a massive upgrade over its predecessor.