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Shaw and his wife Jasmine receive a private message about a curse that has followed his family through many generations. After a chain of unexplainable events happen, Shaw comes to see Gabriel and Father Westhoff to find out the answer. When discovering the truth, Shaw has to find a way to protect his family from the secret ancient evil that has been hunting them.
Writer-director Ajmal Zaheer Ahmad serves up glossy visuals on the back of a limited budget. However, Jinn often feels like it's a showreel for his visual talents. An admittedly uneven one at that.
Most of the time, this incoherent thriller resembles an overheated trailer for itself: a glaringly rough assembly of ill-staged computer-generated action sequences and portentous moments.
Clunky, missing engaging elements of franchise filmmaking that would make the viewer beg for a continuation. What's here is a cluttered snooze that limps to a conclusion.
With its awful acting, terrible dialogue, and laughable special effects, "Jinn" strains for the hapless genius of Ed Wood, but ends up just another bad movie.