It stars Sharni Vinson, Steven Ward, Zino Ventura, and Gustav Gerderner as kidnappers who take a young girl, played by Carlyn Burchell.
James finds two dead, mutilated priests in the cellar, and Ade realises that Katherine's parents have been gruesomely murdered.
On the way back, Ade swerves to miss an apparition of George, and James is assaulted by his dead mother.
Panicked by the demon's growing power, the priests attempt to immolate Katherine, but she kills everyone in the house.
Disturbed by the videotapes, Hazel, Ade, and Mark confront Katherine, who, as the demon, reveals that she only needs to possess two more people to be set free from hell.
[6] Frank Scheck of The Hollywood Reporter wrote, "What the repetitive film lacks in narrative drive and compelling dialogue it makes up for in technical prowess", praising Orr's direction and Vinson's acting.
[7] In rating it 2.5/5 stars, Gareth Jones of Dread Central wrote that the film "does manage to inject some new life into the premise" but throws too many tedious, cheap scares at the viewer.
[8] Benedict Seal of Bloody Disgusting wrote that it "has an interesting idea at its core, but kind of drops the bomb with an over-zealous barrage of samey jump scares.
"[9] Writing for Screen Anarchy, Andrew Mack said the film has "a lot to like" but "becomes an increasingly frustrating and predictable experience".
[10] Reviewing the film on DVD, Richard Whittaker of The Austin Chronicle wrote that although House on Willow Street is unsubtle, it is "so gung-ho in its action/horror fusion that it's hard to dislike".