Dabbe: Curse Of The Jinn Direct

The film also avoids jump-scare reliance. Terror builds slowly through:

The pacing is relentless. The film uses a "slow burn" approach, but unlike other movies where nothing happens for an hour, Curse of the Jinn maintains a constant hum of dread. The background sound design—whispers, scratches, and sudden silences—keeps the viewer on edge even when nothing explicitly scary is happening on screen. dabbe: curse of the jinn

If you think you’ve seen everything the found-footage genre has to offer, you probably haven’t delved deep into Turkish horror. While Hollywood was busy recycling jump scares in the Paranormal Activity sequels, Turkish director Hasan Karacadağ was perfecting a brand of terror that feels ancient, visceral, and disturbingly real. The film also avoids jump-scare reliance

Dabbe: Curse of the Jinn is not a perfect film. At times, the CGI hasn't aged well compared to big-budget blockbusters, and the pacing can feel frenetic. However, these are minor complaints in the face of its successes. Dabbe: Curse of the Jinn is not a perfect film