

In-Fest

In-Fest
Your feedback improves this guide
Your feedback highlights guides that need a second look and keeps the rating trustworthy.
Does this age rating seem accurate to you?
Sign in to vote
Watch-outs
What this film brings
Content barometer
Violence
5/5
Very strong
Fear
5/5
Very intense
Sexuality
1/5
Allusions
Language
2/5
Moderate
Narrative complexity
0/5
Simple
Adult themes
4/5
Strong
Expert review
Although the upstream profile suggests a child friendly cartoon tone, the detailed story clearly describes a teen horror film built around a deadly curse in a high school setting. Sensitive content is frequent and strong, including disturbing visions, multiple violent deaths, grotesque body horror imagery, sustained supernatural menace, bullying between students, and direct references to drugs. The intensity stays high throughout the narrative, because the fear does not come from one isolated moment but from repeated scenes of dread, threat, and shocking deaths. Death is a central theme, young characters are repeatedly placed in serious danger, and images involving fire, illness, aging, and bodily distortion may linger in a young viewer's mind. This is not appropriate for a 4 year old, or for most children, and parents should save it for teens who already tolerate horror well and may still benefit from a conversation afterward.
Difficult scenes
Very early in the film, a teenage athlete is haunted by the vision of a burned man during a basketball game, then dies suddenly by bursting into flames. This opening sets a frightening tone right away, with a brutal body based death that could be deeply upsetting for younger viewers. A school authority figure blows the cursed object out of curiosity and is later attacked by a grotesque version of himself that inflicts a sudden terminal illness on him. The scene combines supernatural horror with body horror, and the idea of instant severe disease is likely to unsettle even many younger teens. Several students are then stalked by manifestations of their own deaths, and some deaths are described in especially distressing ways, including rapid aging and a fatal event linked to a crash. Because these moments repeat across the story, the film creates sustained dread rather than a single brief scare. The plot also includes a violent youth pastor connected to drug dealing, followed by an attempt to pass the curse onto someone else in order to survive. This adds significant moral darkness, with abduction, threat, and an ethical choice about sacrificing another person, which is far beyond child oriented storytelling.
Where to watch
No verified platform for the US market yet. We keep this section updated as availability changes.
Availability checked on Apr 01, 2026
About this title
- Format
- Short film
- Year
- 2026
- Runtime
- 7m
- Countries
- France
- Original language
- FR
- Main cast
- Elvan Eymet, Gabriel Larnac, Tom Masselot, Andrea Millard
Content barometer
Violence
5/5
Very strong
Fear
5/5
Very intense
Sexuality
1/5
Allusions
Language
2/5
Moderate
Narrative complexity
0/5
Simple
Adult themes
4/5
Strong
Expert review
Although the upstream profile suggests a child friendly cartoon tone, the detailed story clearly describes a teen horror film built around a deadly curse in a high school setting. Sensitive content is frequent and strong, including disturbing visions, multiple violent deaths, grotesque body horror imagery, sustained supernatural menace, bullying between students, and direct references to drugs. The intensity stays high throughout the narrative, because the fear does not come from one isolated moment but from repeated scenes of dread, threat, and shocking deaths. Death is a central theme, young characters are repeatedly placed in serious danger, and images involving fire, illness, aging, and bodily distortion may linger in a young viewer's mind. This is not appropriate for a 4 year old, or for most children, and parents should save it for teens who already tolerate horror well and may still benefit from a conversation afterward.
Difficult scenes
Very early in the film, a teenage athlete is haunted by the vision of a burned man during a basketball game, then dies suddenly by bursting into flames. This opening sets a frightening tone right away, with a brutal body based death that could be deeply upsetting for younger viewers. A school authority figure blows the cursed object out of curiosity and is later attacked by a grotesque version of himself that inflicts a sudden terminal illness on him. The scene combines supernatural horror with body horror, and the idea of instant severe disease is likely to unsettle even many younger teens. Several students are then stalked by manifestations of their own deaths, and some deaths are described in especially distressing ways, including rapid aging and a fatal event linked to a crash. Because these moments repeat across the story, the film creates sustained dread rather than a single brief scare. The plot also includes a violent youth pastor connected to drug dealing, followed by an attempt to pass the curse onto someone else in order to survive. This adds significant moral darkness, with abduction, threat, and an ethical choice about sacrificing another person, which is far beyond child oriented storytelling.