The Rope Curse 3

The Rope Curse 3

2023109 min
4.7/10
Horror

Plot Summary

Aspiring to become a parkour influencer, a gifted young man from an exorcist family gets caught up in a swirl of spooky events at an eerie hotel.

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🎬 Demo Trailer

📺 Demo Trailer: This is a demo trailer. In production, replace with actual movie embed URLs from MixDrop, Doodstream, or other streaming services.

👥Cast (20)

Zhang Ting Hu

Zhang Ting Hu

Guan-Yu

Hsing-Wen Lee

Hsing-Wen Lee

Wu-Xiong

Wu Yi-Jung

Wu Yi-Jung

Wan-Hua

Hsu An-Chih

Hsu An-Chih

Jia-Min

Chen Bo-zheng

Chen Bo-zheng

Master Xi

Hangee Liu

Hangee Liu

A-Guai

No Image

Chang Lee

Gui-Zi

Lotus Wang

Lotus Wang

Shu-Ping

Chen Wei-Min

Chen Wei-Min

Jun-Nan

Vicky Tseng

Vicky Tseng

Rose

Vera Chen

Vera Chen

Yu-Lan

Jason Tsou

Jason Tsou

Jia-Wei

🎬Crew

Director

Liao Shih-Han

Writers

Wan-Pin Cheng, Tzu-Ming Ma

Producers

Jeff Tsou

🖼️Gallery (11 images)

The Rope Curse 3 backdrop 1
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💬Reviews (1)

A

Alunauwie

8/31/2025

The Rope Curse 3 continues the series but strays far from the original concept rooted in Taiwanese legends. Unlike its predecessors, this installment lacks strong connections to the rope curse lore and instead focuses on the Thai demon, losing the thematic identity built in the first film. While it introduces new characters and returns some from earlier films, the storyline feels disjointed and fails to build meaningfully on previous events. The plot follows a familiar horror structure, beginning with eerie scenes during Ghost Month and escalating with supernatural attacks after a suicide room is cleaned. Although the conflict builds up and leads to a battle involving Taoist rituals, the climax lacks intensity. Kuan Yu, the main character, shows minimal logical growth despite his past trauma and mistakes, making his development frustrating and inconsistent. The film suffers from illogical scenes and weak performances by the main cast, while supporting actors—particularly Wu Yi Jung—deliver more compelling portrayals. Cinematography offers little innovation, aside from a few effective jump scares and visual effects. Overall, the film feels repetitive and disconnected, yet still manages to be watchable, with hints of a fourth installment introducing a new ghost figure from Indonesian folklore. Read the full review here: (Indonesian version : alunauwie.com) and (English version : uwiepuspita.com)

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