Here’s a text that looks into Wrong Turn 4: Bloody Beginnings (2011), the fourth installment in the cult horror franchise. Released direct-to-video in 2011, Wrong Turn 4: Bloody Beginnings attempts to do something the first three films largely avoided: provide a backstory. As the subtitle suggests, this isn’t just another sequel—it’s a prequel that aims to show us where the cannibalistic mountain men came from. But does it succeed, or does it get lost in the snow?

Fast forward to present day (2003, by the film’s timeline). A group of college friends—including Jenna, Daniel, Kenia, and the obnoxious Vincent—are snowmobiling to a remote cabin for a party weekend. A sudden blizzard forces them to take shelter in the now-abandoned and crumbling Glensville Sanatorium. Unbeknownst to them, the cannibal brothers didn’t freeze decades ago. They’ve survived, thrived, and now have a fresh batch of trespassers to butcher.

The Hills Have Eyes , House of Wax (2005), The Collector , and winter slashers like Cold Prey .

Wrong Turn 4: Full Movie (often searched as "Wrong Turn 4 full movie" by fans of the series) is a divisive entry. If you’re looking for a gory, fast-paced, and unintentionally funny slasher with a unique winter setting, you’ll find plenty to enjoy. The kills are memorable, and the asylum is a great horror playground.

However, if you require logical plots, sympathetic characters, or a meaningful expansion of the Wrong Turn mythology, you’ll be disappointed. It’s a B-movie through and through—dumb, brutal, and entertaining in a guilty-pleasure kind of way.

The film opens in 1974 at a remote West Virginia sanatorium for the criminally insane, the Glensville Hospital. Two mutant brothers, referred to as "Three-Finger" and "One-Eye," are patients (alongside a third, Saw-Tooth, elsewhere). When a massive blizzard causes a power outage, the brothers escape, killing staff and patients alike. They’re eventually cornered in the boiler room, and the head doctor locks them in to freeze to death.

Best enjoyed with friends, low expectations, and a strong stomach.