A young woman returns to her family’s eerie, isolated estate following her father’s mysterious death. She soon discovers that the house doesn’t just hold memories—it traps the angry spirits of wronged ancestors. With the help of a skeptical paranormal researcher, she must uncover a century-old secret before the ghosts drag her into the past forever.

If you’re hunting for so-bad-it’s-good horror, Haunted 3D: Ghosts of the Past has camp value. For actual chills or a coherent ghost story, look elsewhere. It’s the cinematic equivalent of a Halloween store skeleton: cheap, predictable, and forgotten by November 1st.

This film was clearly built for the early-2010s 3D TV push. Objects are constantly thrust toward the camera: floating candlesticks, reaching skeletal hands, and dust motes (yes, dust motes). In a theater, some of these pop-outs might have been fun. At home on a standard screen, they just look desperate. The 3D adds no atmosphere—only clutter.

Haunted 3D: Ghosts of the Past aims for classic ghost-train chills but ends up more like a dated theme park attraction—all setup, no payoff.

One star for Purvis’s commitment, half a star for one decent shadow-shot in the library. Would you like a shorter version for a site like Letterboxd or Amazon, or a comparison with another 3D horror film from the same era?

3d Ghosts Of The Past - Haunted

A young woman returns to her family’s eerie, isolated estate following her father’s mysterious death. She soon discovers that the house doesn’t just hold memories—it traps the angry spirits of wronged ancestors. With the help of a skeptical paranormal researcher, she must uncover a century-old secret before the ghosts drag her into the past forever.

If you’re hunting for so-bad-it’s-good horror, Haunted 3D: Ghosts of the Past has camp value. For actual chills or a coherent ghost story, look elsewhere. It’s the cinematic equivalent of a Halloween store skeleton: cheap, predictable, and forgotten by November 1st. haunted 3d ghosts of the past

This film was clearly built for the early-2010s 3D TV push. Objects are constantly thrust toward the camera: floating candlesticks, reaching skeletal hands, and dust motes (yes, dust motes). In a theater, some of these pop-outs might have been fun. At home on a standard screen, they just look desperate. The 3D adds no atmosphere—only clutter. A young woman returns to her family’s eerie,

Haunted 3D: Ghosts of the Past aims for classic ghost-train chills but ends up more like a dated theme park attraction—all setup, no payoff. This film was clearly built for the early-2010s 3D TV push

One star for Purvis’s commitment, half a star for one decent shadow-shot in the library. Would you like a shorter version for a site like Letterboxd or Amazon, or a comparison with another 3D horror film from the same era?