Dalton falls into a coma. He is not brain dead; he is just "gone."
The horror here is twofold. First, the medical tragedy: a family watching their son sleep indefinitely, turning their home into a hospice. Second, the supernatural implication: the fall didn't break his body; it freed his spirit. Chapter 1 spends a great deal of time on the sterile hospital rooms and the return home with a hospital bed in the living room. This blending of medical grief with supernatural terror is what makes Insidious unique. We are terrified not just of what might grab us, but of the silence of a child who will not wake up. No discussion of Chapter 1 is complete without praising Joseph Bishara’s score and the film’s sound design. Where modern horror uses loud, jarring stabs of noise (the "jump scare sting"), Insidious uses a violin bow across the nerves. insidious chapter 1
When Insidious hit theaters in 2010, it was hailed as a return to form for horror. Directed by James Wan (fresh off the Saw franchise) and written by Leigh Whannell, it promised a ghost story that didn’t rely on gore or torture porn, but on a much more terrifying concept: the slow, quiet undoing of the American family. However, before the iconic "Darth Maul" demon, before the séance, and before the journey into "The Further," there was Chapter 1. Dalton falls into a coma