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Paranormal Activity 3
Theatrical release poster
Directed by
Written byChristopher Landon
Based onParanormal Activity
by Oren Peli
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyMagdalena Górka
Edited byGregory Plotkin
Production
companies
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release dates
  • October 14, 2011 (2011-10-14) (Festival do Rio)
  • October 21, 2011 (2011-10-21) (United States)
Running time
84 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$5 million[2]
Box office$207 million[3]

Paranormal Activity 3 is a 2011 American found footage supernatural horror film directed by Henry Joost and Ariel Schulman and written by Christopher Landon. It is the third in the Paranormal Activity film series. The film stars Lauren Bittner, Christopher Nicholas Smith, Chloe Csengery, Jessica Tyler Brown, and Katie Featherston.

The film follows young sisters Katie and Kristi as their family begins experiencing escalating paranormal activity linked to an entity known as "Tobi", prompting their mother’s boyfriend to install home video cameras that capture the disturbances and uncover connections to a wider coven.

Paranormal Activity 3 premiered at Festival do Rio on October 14, 2011, and was released in the United States by Paramount Pictures on October 21. Made on a budget of $5 million, the film was a major commercial success, grossing $207 million and setting then-record opening figures for a horror film in U.S. It received mixed reviews from critics and was followed by Paranormal Activity 4 (2012).

Plot

[edit]

In March 2005, Katie delivers a box of old videotapes to her pregnant sister Kristi Rey and her husband Daniel, which holds footage of young Katie and Kristi with their mother, Julie, and her boyfriend Dennis. A year later, Kristi and Daniel's house is ransacked and the tapes are missing. The VHS footage, filmed in 1988, makes up the rest of the film.

A young Katie and Kristi are living with their mother Julie and her boyfriend Dennis. Dennis notices that since Kristi's imaginary friend "Tobi" appeared, strange things have been happening around the house. Dennis and Julie attempt to film a sex tape, but an earthquake interrupts them. After reviewing the footage and noticing an invisible figure revealed by falling dust, Dennis is advised by his friend Randy to place cameras throughout the house. Dennis and Julie hire a babysitter named Lisa to watch the kids, but she becomes desperate to leave due to several terrifying incidents. The following night, Kristi tells Tobi they are not friends anymore.

Dennis discovers a strange symbol in the girls' closet and finds the same symbol in a book about demonology. When Kristi becomes mysteriously ill, Julie and Dennis take her to the hospital. When Katie is left home with Randy, they are attacked by a black figure which violently flings furniture across the room and scratches Randy on his torso. When Julie and Dennis return home, he informs her that the symbol belonged to a witches' coven that brainwashed girls of child-bearing age into having sons, then forced them to give up their sons and forget everything afterward, but Julie dismisses his claim.

The demon harms Katie until Kristi agrees to do what it asks. She asks her mother to take them to her grandmother Lois's house in Moorpark, California, and Julie agrees after encountering frightening activity herself. At 1:00 am in Moorpark, Julie and Dennis are awoken by loud disturbances and Julie goes to investigate. When she fails to return, Dennis goes to look for her. He finds occult imagery on the walls, including the symbol from the girls' room, and discovers several women, including Lois, dressed in black. He flees back to the house, with the women in pursuit, and finds Julie's limp body levitating above the ground before it is thrown at Dennis. Dennis hides with Kristi in a closet before walking into the kitchen, where Dennis, from a window, sees the women circling around a bonfire outside. Katie and Lois, in the same room as Julie's body, kill Dennis. Lois then beckons to Kristi and Katie and tells them to get ready. Before they head upstairs, Kristi calls for Tobi and growling sounds are heard upstairs until the camera cuts out and the film ends.

Cast

[edit]

Production

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Principal photography began on June 6, 2011, and ended on August 5. At the time during production, the film was under the name "Sports Camp".[citation needed] The film was directed by Henry Joost and Ariel Schulman (who both directed the documentary Catfish).[4] Jason Blum, Oren Peli and Steven Schneider produced, along with Akiva Goldsman serving as executive producer. With a script written by Christopher Landon, the prequel was released on October 21, 2011.[5]

Once again using unique social media strategy after the success of the first two films, Paranormal Activity 3 created the "Tweet Your Scream" campaign on Twitter in preparation for the release and Paranormal Activity 3 Demon Summoner app.[6][7]

Reception

[edit]

Box office

[edit]

The film performed even better than its predecessors, grossing $8 million from midnight showings, setting yet another record for a horror film. Its total Friday gross was an estimated $26.2 million, which was the best opening day gross for a 2011 film since Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2 in July.[8] Bringing its total to $52.6 million, it set a new record for the franchise, surpassing Paranormal Activity 2's $40.6 million. At the time of its release, it also set new opening weekend records for a film released in the month of October, as well as the fall season (later surpassed by Gravity in 2013 with a weekend gross of $55.8 million).

Paranormal Activity 3 grossed $104,028,807 in the United States and Canada, along with $101,675,011 in other countries, for a worldwide total of $205,703,818,[9] making it the highest-grossing film in the Paranormal Activity series.

Critical response

[edit]

On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 67%, based on reviews from 123 critics, with an average rating of 6.1/10. The website's consensus is, "While the jolts and thrills are undeniably subject to the diminishing returns that plague most horror sequels, Paranormal Activity 3 is a surprisingly spine-tingling treat."[10] Metacritic gives the film a weighted average score of 59 out of 100, based on reviews from 25 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[11] CinemaScore polls reported that the average grade moviegoers gave the film was a "C+" on an A+ to F scale.[12]

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film a single star out of four, stating that "the appeal has worn threadbare", but predicted that the film would fare well at the box office nevertheless.[13] Kim Newman of Empire gave it 3 out of 5, writing, "If you don't expect innovation from a part three, then this won't disappoint: it may be hokey, but the scares still work."[14]

Home media

[edit]

Paranormal Activity 3 was released on DVD/Blu-ray and video on demand/pay-per-view on January 24, 2012, and includes an unrated director's cut, "lost tapes" (deleted scenes), theatrical version, and digital copy. A one-disc theatrical version of the movie was released on DVD on February 14, 2012. The film grossed $3.6 million in home sales.[15]

Sequel

[edit]

In January 2012, Paramount announced there would be a fourth film in the franchise. It was to be directed by Henry Joost and Ariel Schulman, the directors of the third film. Filming started in late June. The film was released on October 19, 2012. On August 1, 2012, the first trailer was released, teasing this film with the tagline, "all the activity has led to this".[16][17][18]

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Paranormal Activity 3 is a 2011 American found footage supernatural horror film directed by Henry Joost and Ariel Schulman, serving as the third installment and chronological prequel in the Paranormal Activity franchise.[1] Set in 1988, the story centers on videographer Dennis (Christopher Nicholas Smith) and his girlfriend Julie (Lauren Bittner), who begin documenting strange occurrences in their Santa Rosa, California home after their young daughters, Katie (Chloe Csengery) and Kristi (Jessica Tyler Brown), befriend an invisible entity named Toby.[2] As the disturbances escalate from minor noises to violent manifestations, the film uncovers the origins of the demonic presence tied to a coven of witches, providing backstory for the events in the earlier films.[1] The screenplay was written by Christopher B. Landon from a story by Oren Peli, the creator of the original Paranormal Activity, with production handled by Blumhouse Productions and Paramount Pictures.[3] Released theatrically on October 21, 2011, it opened to a record-breaking $54 million at the domestic box office, the highest debut for a horror film at the time, and ultimately grossed $104 million domestically and $103 million internationally, totaling $207 million worldwide on a modest $5 million budget. This commercial success solidified the franchise's reputation for low-budget profitability, building on the found-footage style that emphasizes realistic, tension-building scares over gore.[4] Critically, Paranormal Activity 3 received mixed to positive reviews, earning a 67% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 125 reviews, with critics praising its effective use of the formula and inventive camera setups while noting it largely adheres to series conventions without major innovation.[1] It holds a 5.8/10 average on IMDb from over 103,000 user ratings, reflecting audience appreciation for the escalating chills but criticism for repetitive elements.[2] The film also spawned home media releases, including an unrated director's cut on DVD and Blu-ray in January 2012, further extending its cultural impact within the horror genre.[5]

The film

Plot

In 1988, in Santa Rosa, California, eight-year-old Katie and six-year-old Kristi live with their mother Julie and stepfather Dennis, a wedding videographer who frequently records family moments. The story opens with a brief framing sequence in 2005, where an adult Katie delivers a box of old videotapes to her pregnant sister Kristi and brother-in-law Daniel; the tapes are later stolen during a 2006 ransacking of their home, linking to the events of the second film.[6] The initial paranormal activity begins during an earthquake that interrupts an intimate moment between Dennis and Julie, captured on video, revealing a tall, cloaked figure lurking in the shadows of their attic. Strange noises and movements plague the household at night, prompting Dennis to review his footage obsessively and set up additional cameras throughout the home to monitor the disturbances. The young sisters mention their "invisible friend" named Toby, initially dismissed as childish imagination, but Dennis discovers old Super 8 tapes from a visit to their grandmother Lois's house in Carlsbad, which depict unsettling rituals.[6][7] As Dennis investigates further, Toby's presence escalates, demanding the family create a protective circle of sand in the girls' bedroom to ward off threats, a ritual Kristi claims Toby requires for safety. Supernatural incidents intensify: Dennis awakens with deep claw marks on his torso, Julie's hair is violently yanked while she stands on a ladder hanging Halloween decorations, and Kristi begins sleepwalking into the sand circle at night. The family dog is mysteriously killed, heightening their fear, while footage reveals Toby's invisible force manipulating objects and attacking the adults.[6] The climax reveals the origins of the curse through additional found footage from the grandmother's tapes, showing Lois and her witch coven performing a blood pact ritual with a demon in exchange for power and wealth, binding the entity to the family line with the stipulation that it claims the first-born male descendant. Toby, the demon, turns deadly: it snaps Dennis's spine, killing him, then kills Julie off-screen and throws her body down the stairs. Katie and Kristi hide in panic as Toby attacks, with Katie ultimately smashing the camera in terror during the assault. The narrative concludes by connecting back to the franchise timeline, where the tapes entrusted by adult Katie in 2005 are stolen during the 2006 ransacking of Kristi and Daniel's home, underscoring the enduring family curse and themes of demonic possession.[6][7][8][9][10]

Cast

The cast of Paranormal Activity 3 features actors portraying family members and associates whose roles emphasize the intimate, everyday perspective central to the film's found-footage aesthetic and the franchise's ongoing narrative of a generational curse.[11] Christopher Nicholas Smith plays Dennis, the stepfather and amateur videographer whose home recordings document the escalating supernatural disturbances, driving the movie's realistic, handheld camera style.[11] Lauren Bittner portrays Julie, the skeptical mother who initially overlooks the early signs of activity in the household.[11] Chloe Csengery stars as the 8-year-old Katie, the young protagonist whose experiences with the entity Toby position her as a key figure resisting the hauntings and directly bridging to the adult Katie in later franchise installments.[11] Jessica Tyler Brown appears as the 6-year-old Kristi, whose childlike interactions with the invisible presence underscore the demon's subtle manipulation of innocence.[11] Hallie Foote is cast as Grandma Lois, the grandmother whose involvement reveals her as the leader of a coven, providing essential backstory to the curse's origins within the series continuity.[11] In cameo appearances framing the 2005 timeline, Katie Featherston reprises her role as the adult Katie, who delivers the mysterious tapes, while Sprague Grayden returns as the adult Kristi, who receives them.[11] Among the minor roles, Dustin Ingram plays Randy Rosen, Dennis's friend and colleague who delves into research on demonic lore to understand the events.[11]

Production

Development

Following the commercial success of Paranormal Activity 2 in 2010, which grossed over $177 million worldwide on a $3 million budget, the production team conceived Paranormal Activity 3 as a prequel to delve into the childhood experiences of sisters Katie and Kristi Rey, addressing fan curiosity about the origins of their hauntings.[3] Oren Peli, the creator and director of the original 2007 Paranormal Activity, returned as a producer to maintain the franchise's grounded, realistic tone and flag any overly cinematic elements during scripting and planning.[12] In May 2011, directors Henry Joost and Ariel Schulman were hired to helm the film, marking their narrative feature debut after co-directing the 2010 documentary Catfish, which blended personal drama with investigative realism in a style well-suited to the found-footage horror format.[13][14] The duo's selection emphasized their knack for building suspense through everyday perspectives, aligning with the series' emphasis on subtle, domestic terror.[12] Christopher Landon penned the screenplay in 2011, expanding on the franchise timeline by bridging the 1988 hauntings depicted in the film with the 2006 house fire referenced in prior entries, while centering the narrative on the emergence of the demon entity Toby and the inception of the family's generational curse.[12] Landon, who had co-written Paranormal Activity 2, collaborated closely with Joost, Schulman, and the producers to refine the script, incorporating additional scenes to heighten emotional stakes and supernatural reveals.[14] The project received a $5 million budget, an increase from the earlier films to support more elaborate practical sets, period-specific details for the 1980s setting, and enhanced visual effects, yet it preserved the series' signature low-cost, improvised found-footage approach to maximize tension through minimalism.[3] Jason Blum's Blumhouse Productions, which had produced the prior installments, prioritized efficient resource allocation to deliver high-impact scares without relying on expensive CGI.[12] To establish the supernatural mechanics, the screenplay drew from occult lore during development, integrating concepts such as blood pacts for summoning entities and protective sand circles to ward off demonic influence, providing a pseudo-historical framework for Toby's rules and the curse's propagation across the family line.[12]

Filming

Principal photography for Paranormal Activity 3 took place in the Los Angeles area during the summer of 2011, following the film's official announcement in May.[13] The production adhered to a tight schedule typical of the franchise's low-budget model, wrapping principal shooting in a matter of weeks to align with the October release.[15] The primary filming location was a residential house at 19155 Mayall Street in Northridge, California, chosen for its suburban authenticity to mimic the story's setting without extensive modifications.[16] Additional scenes, including those at the grandmother's house, were shot in nearby practical locations around Los Angeles and Ventura County to keep costs under the $5 million budget and avoid building sets.[4] Directors Henry Joost and Ariel Schulman emphasized using existing homes with very little set dressing, scouting properties that already resembled everyday family spaces.[17] To maintain the found-footage aesthetic, the filmmakers employed handheld consumer-grade cameras and static tripod setups, simulating amateur home videos from the late 1980s.[17] Main scares relied on practical effects, such as strings and wires for subtle movements like hair-pulling and edited shadows to represent the entity Toby, avoiding heavy CGI to preserve realism on the limited budget.[18] Challenges included achieving convincing night vision footage through infrared filters and simulating an earthquake sequence with controlled vibrations and dust drops, all while ensuring seamless integration into the amateur style.[17] The directors often improvised scares on set to elicit genuine reactions, particularly from child actors Chloe Csengery and Jessica Tyler Brown, who portrayed the young sisters.[19] Filming with minors required strict adherence to California child labor laws, limiting their on-set hours to six per day and impacting the overall scheduling, with many scenes shot around their availability.[12] In post-production, basic editing focused on preserving the "recovered tape" authenticity, with minimal cuts to mimic unpolished home recordings.[17] Sound design played a key role, amplifying subtle creaks, whispers, and thuds to heighten tension without relying on visual effects.[19]

Release

Marketing

Paramount Pictures launched the marketing campaign for Paranormal Activity 3 in the summer of 2011, beginning with a teaser trailer debuted at San Diego Comic-Con that emphasized the film's prequel status and 1988 setting, positioning it as the origin story for the demonic entity "Toby" and connecting to fan speculation from the prior installments. The campaign highlighted the low-budget found-footage style synonymous with Blumhouse Productions, leveraging the franchise's reputation for high-impact horror on minimal resources to appeal to returning fans.[20][21][22] Viral marketing played a central role, including the creation of a fictional website called "Darren's Timeless Memories," which posed as a video transfer service and "leaked" eerie 1980s-style home footage hinting at supernatural events to generate online buzz and tie into the film's era. Another key element was a partnership with Eventful.com for a "Demand It" viral drive, where fans could request early screenings in their cities, building anticipation through community participation similar to the original film's strategy. Additionally, Paramount rolled out a global "Tweet to See It First" social media initiative, encouraging users to tweet from September 29 to October 13 to vote for premiere locations, with the top 20 markets hosting exclusive showings on October 18 to foster word-of-mouth among horror enthusiasts. These efforts aligned with the October 21 release to capitalize on Halloween seasonality, amplifying scares via shareable digital content targeted at young adults and franchise loyalists. The trailer rollout further built intrigue: the initial July trailer contrasted childhood innocence with escalating horror in a suburban home, while the September follow-up teased familial secrets and coven elements without major spoilers, distributed heavily across online platforms and cable TV. Cross-promotions extended to horror conventions like Comic-Con for live reveals and fan interactions, reinforcing the film's grassroots appeal. A tie-in iPhone app, "Demon Summoner," allowed users to simulate paranormal encounters by holding their device to a mirror in a dark room, purportedly revealing demonic figures to immerse players in the movie's atmosphere. The overall strategy prioritized digital advertising, social media amplification, and midnight fan events over traditional network TV, maximizing cost-effective hype for the target demographic of 18- to 34-year-old horror fans.[23][24]

Distribution

The world premiere of Paranormal Activity 3 took place at Fantastic Fest in Austin, Texas, on September 29, 2011, as a secret screening presented by directors Henry Joost and Ariel Schulman along with cast members.[25] The film received its wide theatrical release in the United States on October 21, 2011, distributed by Paramount Pictures across 3,239 theaters, strategically timed to coincide with the Halloween season to maximize audience turnout for horror content.[26] This rollout marked Paramount's approach to capitalize on the franchise's growing popularity by providing broad accessibility in major markets. Internationally, the film launched in select territories ahead of or simultaneous with the U.S. debut, opening day-and-date in 14 countries including France on October 19 and the United Arab Emirates on October 20, before expanding to over 60 markets by November 2011.[27] Key expansions included the United Kingdom on October 28 and Australia on October 27, with Paramount Pictures handling distribution through its international subsidiaries in most regions.[26] The Motion Picture Association of America rated the film R for some violence, language, brief sexuality, and drug use, a classification mirrored in equivalent certifications across many territories to reflect its intense supernatural horror elements.[28] To sustain theatrical momentum, the film's run was extended beyond its initial weeks, delaying home video availability until the DVD and Blu-ray release on January 24, 2012, via Paramount Home Entertainment, which included both the theatrical cut and an unrated director's cut.[29] This strategy allowed the production to leverage ongoing buzz from the October premiere and wide release before transitioning to physical media formats.

Reception

Box office

Paranormal Activity 3 opened in the United States and Canada on October 21, 2011, earning $8 million from midnight screenings across 2,200 theaters, which set a record for the highest midnight gross for a horror film at the time.[23] The film then grossed $52.6 million during its opening weekend (Friday to Sunday) from 3,321 theaters, marking the largest domestic opening for a horror movie until surpassed by later releases.[30] This figure included a strong $26.2 million on Friday alone, the biggest opening day for a horror film since Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 1 earlier that year.[31] The per-theater average for the opening weekend was $15,829, significantly above genre norms and reflecting robust demand.[30] The film maintained the top position at the domestic box office for two consecutive weekends, accumulating $104 million in the United States and Canada over its full run.[30] In its second weekend, it earned $18.1 million from 3,329 theaters, representing a 65.5% drop from the debut but still outperforming many competitors.[30] This performance was bolstered by its release timing ahead of Halloween, franchise fan loyalty, and positive word-of-mouth, contributing to solid legs relative to typical horror releases.[3] Internationally, Paranormal Activity 3 launched in 42 markets during its first weekend abroad, grossing $26.1 million, with the United Kingdom leading at $5.4 million from 391 screens.[4] Mexico debuted with $944,000 from 401 locations, while other strong openings included France ($1.1 million) and additional markets across Europe and Latin America.[32] Over its global run, the film earned $103 million from 66 international territories.[30] With a production budget of $5 million, Paranormal Activity 3 achieved a worldwide gross of $207 million, delivering a return exceeding 40 times its cost and surpassing the opening weekend of its predecessor, Paranormal Activity 2, by approximately 29%.[30][2] The film's financial success, reaching the $200 million milestone globally by mid-November 2011, further solidified Blumhouse Productions' model for low-budget, high-profit horror franchises.[4]

Critical response

Paranormal Activity 3 received mixed reviews from critics, who praised its effective scares and technical refinements while criticizing its reliance on familiar tropes. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a 67% approval rating based on 125 reviews, with an average score of 6/10.[1] The site's consensus states: "While the jolts and thrills are undeniably subject to the diminishing returns that plague most horror sequels, Paranormal Activity 3 is a surprisingly spine-tingling treat."[1] On Metacritic, it scores 59 out of 100 based on 25 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews.[33] Positive responses highlighted the film's pacing and atmospheric tension. Variety commended its "slow-building, stealthily creepy" approach, noting it was "slicker and more densely populated than earlier pics in the franchise" with improved supernatural thrills.[7] Reviewers appreciated the depiction of childhood vulnerability and the reveal of the entity's origins, which added depth to the series' lore without overexplaining. Audience reception, as of November 2025, holds a 51% score on Rotten Tomatoes, with some reflecting enjoyment of the jump scares and found-footage style.[1] Criticisms focused on repetition and lack of innovation. Roger Ebert awarded it 1 out of 4 stars, describing it as "tedious" and faulting its predictable surveillance footage and diminishing scares compared to predecessors.[34] Some outlets gave it 2 out of 5 stars, calling it formulaic and overly reliant on tropes, with underdeveloped characters and foreseeable twists. Overall, the consensus viewed it as a competent but unoriginal franchise entry that successfully scared audiences through refined execution rather than new ideas. The film garnered minor recognition in genre awards. It received two nominations at the Fangoria Chainsaw Awards, including Best Wide-Release Film.[35] It won Best Horror Movie at the 2011 IGN Summer Movie Awards.[35] No major awards were won, though it was nominated for Best Supporting Actress at the IGN Summer Movie Awards.[35] In retrospectives up to 2021, the film has been reevaluated more positively for its backstory depth. A 2021 review from Horror Movie Talk rated it 10/10, hailing it as the series' peak for sharpening the formula and delivering masterful scares, particularly in its exploration of the entity's origins.[36] No significant reappraisals have emerged since, maintaining its status as a solid mid-tier entry in the franchise.

Legacy

Home media

Paranormal Activity 3 was released on DVD and Blu-ray by Paramount Home Entertainment on January 24, 2012. The home video editions included both the theatrical cut and an unrated extended director's cut, which added approximately 10 minutes of footage, featuring five new scenes and one extended sequence, such as an elaborated coven ritual.[29][37] The release generated an estimated total domestic revenue of $3.58 million from physical sales.[38] Special features on the discs focused on the production's found-footage techniques, including a behind-the-scenes featurette detailing camera work and scare construction, as well as deleted scenes compiled as "Lost Tapes"—a mockumentary-style segment with unused footage like Dennis pranking Julie and a fictional commercial for his video company, tying into the broader franchise narrative.[39][40][41] Digital availability began in 2012 through platforms like iTunes and Amazon Video. As of November 2025, the film streams on Paramount+, with a 4K UHD digital remaster released for enhanced viewing on services like Vudu.[42][43] International variants featured region-specific editions, such as Region 2 for Europe with localized subtitles and packaging, and were bundled in franchise box sets starting from the 2012 three-movie collection onward, including later comprehensive sets like the 2022 Ultimate Chills Collection. No major re-releases occurred after 2020, though the film was featured in Peacock's 2023 Halloween marathon alongside other entries in the series.[44][45][46]

Sequels

Paranormal Activity 4, released in 2012 and directed by Henry Joost and Ariel Schulman, serves as the direct sequel to Paranormal Activity 3 by advancing the timeline to 2011, focusing on the family of Katie Featherston's neighbors following the destructive fire from the 2006 events of the earlier films, while reintroducing Hunter—Katie and Kristi's nephew from the 1988 blood pact—as the intended successor in the coven's demonic lineage.[47][10] The lore established in Paranormal Activity 3, including the demon's name "Toby" and the sacrificial blood pact orchestrated by the girls' grandmother to empower the coven, profoundly shapes Paranormal Activity 4's central possession narrative, where Toby targets Hunter to fulfill the ritual's long-term goals, and extends to the 2014 spin-off Paranormal Activity: The Marked Ones, which further codifies the demon's rules of influence and vulnerability through a new family's encounter with the entity.[48][49] Paranormal Activity 3's success as a prequel, grossing over $207 million worldwide on a $5 million budget, propelled the franchise to a total of seven films by 2021, influencing subsequent entries to incorporate chronological elements for deeper narrative continuity, with the series finale Paranormal Activity: Next of Kin indirectly referencing the 1988 origins through its depiction of the demon Asmodeus—revealed as Toby's true identity—amid a separate cult storyline. In 2025, a stage adaptation of the franchise premiered at the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles, extending its legacy to live theater.[50][51][48][52] On the production front, screenwriter Christopher Landon returned to pen Paranormal Activity 4 and several follow-ups, maintaining the interconnected mythology, while Blumhouse Productions adhered to the low-budget found-footage formula that Paranormal Activity 3's profits helped sustain and expand across the series.[53][54] Although no additional direct sequels have been produced since the 2021 entry, which concluded the original storyline, Paranormal Activity 3 endures as a cornerstone for elucidating the curse's foundational roots within the franchise.[55]

References

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