Wishmaster 1 2 3 4 Complete Collection - Horror... ❲Top 10 FULL❳
Djinn
The Wishmaster series follows the chaos unleashed by the , an ancient, malevolent being who grants wishes in exchange for the souls of humanity . His goal across all four films is to trigger an apocalypse by fulfilling a specific number of wishes. The Core Mythology
Wishmaster 2: Evil Never Dies (1999)
Wishmaster (1997)
In the beginning, God created three types of beings: Angels (light), Man (earth), and the Djinn (fire). Because of their dangerous nature, the Djinn were sealed away in a fire opal. If a human releases the Djinn and receives three wishes, the gates of Hell will open, allowing the Djinn's kind to rule the Earth. Wishmaster 1 2 3 4 Complete Collection - Horror...
- DVD/Blu-ray box sets (e.g., "Wishmaster: The Complete Collection" from Lionsgate or Vestron Video)
- Digital platforms like Amazon Prime Video, Apple TV, Google Play, or Vudu (availability varies by region)
- Only for completionists.
- A.J. Cook (Final Destination 2, Criminal Minds) is a likable lead.
- Some unintentional comedy in the low-budget wish sequences.
Watching the complete set is like a "Where's Waldo?" of 80s/90s horror royalty. No other franchise offers this density of cross-universe pollination. Djinn The Wishmaster series follows the chaos unleashed
- Director: Jack Sholder
- Premise: The Djinn is accidentally freed again and continues seeking ultimate release by manipulating new human victims and exploiting their desires.
- Tone & strengths: More focused on horror set pieces and practical gore; introduces new ways the Djinn corrupts wishes.
- Weaknesses: Lower budget feel than the original, less character depth, and diminished narrative stakes compared with the first film.
- Notable: Retains a cult following among practical-effects fans.
In the pantheon of 90s horror, few franchises are as delightfully malicious as Wishmaster . While other slashers stuck to knives and machetes, Wishmaster introduced a villain who killed you with your own desires. The Complete Collection (films 1 through 4) offers a fascinating time capsule of horror’s transition from the silver screen to the direct-to-video boom of the early 2000s. DVD/Blu-ray box sets (e