To put their demons to rest once and for all, Josh Lambert and a college-aged Dalton Lambert must go deeper into The Further than ever before, facing their family's dark past and a host of new and more horrifying terrors that lurk behind the red door.
Ty Simpkins
Dalton Lambert
Patrick Wilson
Josh Lambert
Rose Byrne
Renai Lambert
Lin Shaye
Elise Rainier
Sinclair Daniel
Chris Winslow
Hiam Abbass
Professor Armagan
Andrew Astor
Foster Lambert
Juliana Davies
Kali Lambert
Steve Coulter
Carl
Peter Dager
Nick the Dick
Joseph Bishara
Lipstick Demon
Angus Sampson
Tucker
Leigh Whannell
Specs
Justin Sturgis
Alec Anderson
David Call
Smash Face / Ben Burton
Stephen Gray
Sick Kid
Robin S. Walker
Supervisor Robbins
Bridget Kim
Sorority Girl #1
Logan Wilson
Paige
Kasjan Wilson
Young Dalton / Young Josh
Mary Looram
Mourner
Adrian Acosta
Frat Boy #1
AJ Dyer
Frat Bro #2
Kalin Wilson
Server Frat Boy
E. Roger Mitchell
Dr. Bower
Dagmara Dominczyk
Priest (voice)
Tom Toland
Student (credit only)
Elaine Apruzzese
Pedestrian / Driver (uncredited)
Suki Úna Rae
Art Student (uncredited)
Desi Ramos
Student (uncredited)
Victorya Danylko-Petrovskaya
Sorority Girl (uncredited)
Director
Patrick Wilson
Characters, Story
Leigh Whannell
Screenplay, Story
Scott Teems
July 22, 2023
6
"Dalton" (a competent effort from Ty Simpkins) and his dad "Josh" (Patrick Wilson) have a strained relationship as they come to terms with recent family upheaval and that pressure is beginning to unravel the hypnotism that is protecting them from even more ghastly memories from nine years ago. At college, he quickly befriends the quirky and outgoing girl "Chris" (an overpowering Sinclair Daniel), who is wrongly assigned to be his room-mate. Before long the pair are mired in a series of mysteries that seem to emanate from his imagination - a comatose state sets in and another dimension - and it's perils - arrives to terrorise the family via an ominous looking painting that he has instinctively created and hung on the wall. Can they unite, put their differences behind them and rally to defeat their nemesis and close the portal for ever? Well, sadly I didn't really care. This is really just a revamp of the first "Insidious" (2010) film with some added teenage angst, familial discord and little enough by way of contributions from the other siblings to give any depth to this routine father and son drama that save for the slightly livelier denouement was really rather predictable and dull. There are a few jump moments mid-way through the drama, but for the rest of it it seems that Wilson was perhaps too preoccupied with both of his roles here to focus properly on either, and that leaves us with a rather unremarkable muddle of a film that I'm afraid is just instantly forgettable.