...On the twenty first day of Christmas...
Ash J. Williams aka the great Bruce Campbell!
I remember someone asking me for Bruce... (was it you Frob?)
So here he is as a Ash disguised as Santa!
(how so very meta, heh?)
I'm taking YOUR ideas, all your ideas, into consideration!
Just drop them on this NEW poll~
Drawing © Eyz.2011
Character © ?
Showing posts with label BruceCampbell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BruceCampbell. Show all posts
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
Monday, December 5, 2011
Sunday, December 4, 2011
BestMovieScenesOfAllTime - This is my BOOMstick!!
Easily one of my all-time favorite scenese, from one of my favorite movies ever made!
From Army of Darkness.
From Army of Darkness.
Friday, August 19, 2011
Old Spice Commercial - Hungry Like The Wolf
Loved yesterday's Old Spice commercial with Bruce Campbell ?
No, I'm not gonna upload another random Old Spice commercial, but there's a second Bruce Campbell Old Spice commercial to check out.This one's even more awesome, more badass, more epic:
Hungry Like The Wolf~
Lucky Bruce or lucky ladies?
Hungry Like The Wolf~
Wednesday, August 17, 2011
Old Spice Commercial - Bruce Campbell
Old Spice...
Here in Europe (or to be precise, the rest of the world besides the US), no one knows what that is :P
(Hey, there's plenty of other more famous International brands beside Old spice, ya know!)
Yeah, they've been pretty popular lately thanks to the thousand Memes there recent ads generated.
They've always been pretty serious with their marketing, from the composition of their ads to their choice of actors.
Anyways!
Here's a cult classic ad from them.
A commercial starring Bruce Campbell nonetheless!
Enjoy,
Now that's some epic writing right there! :'3
Love the painting on that wall behind!
Did you spot the hidden chainsaw?
Wednesday, August 10, 2011
VideoGame Ad - "Hail To The King"
Here's something funny!
The ad for the PSX/Dreamcast survival horror game Evil Dead: Hail To The King!
Pretty fun little ad^^
I miss these sort of simple lil' ads.
Bruce Campbell as epic as ever!
The ad for the PSX/Dreamcast survival horror game Evil Dead: Hail To The King!
Pretty fun little ad^^
I miss these sort of simple lil' ads.
Bruce Campbell as epic as ever!
Sunday, July 31, 2011
BadassScene - Brisco County Jr
Brisco County Jr. was a pretty awesome, if short live, fun scifi/weird western show featuring Bruce Campbell.
It was pretty awesome and was full of badass moments like such:
Classic :D
It was pretty awesome and was full of badass moments like such:
Classic :D
Thursday, July 28, 2011
Interview: Bruce Campbell and Ted Raimi
"Where are they now??"
Funny parodic interview of Bruce Campbell and Ted Raimi. A bonus from the DVD extras of Xena - Season 4.
Gangsta Ted Raimi is teh bomb, yo!!
Funny parodic interview of Bruce Campbell and Ted Raimi. A bonus from the DVD extras of Xena - Season 4.
Gangsta Ted Raimi is teh bomb, yo!!
Tuesday, February 22, 2011
MR Army of Darkness
Hey! What's that you got on your face?
I kinda put this series review on hold for a while... but it is finally time to dig in the 3rd and last entry of the Evil Dead series!
This one's a bit special to me since it's one of my all-time favorite flicks!
Why?
How?
What did Sam Raimi turn this horror series into? Does Bruce Campbell still kick ass? Let's check it out~
Movie: Army of Darkness aka Evil Dead III, Medievil Dead or also Bruce Campbell vs. the Army of Darkness
Directed by Sam Raimi
Release date 1992-93
Genre Fantasy/slapstick comedy
Country USA
After the huge unexpected success of Evil Dead 2, a sequel was inevitable.
The follow-up would be continuing the adventure of Ashley Williams after the 2nd film's cliffhanger - an obvious move.
But first,
With that successful second episode, the original trio behind this series was finally able to make it into Hollywood.
Sam Raimi produced and wrote a couple of films. He appeared as an actor in some production and even directed the now cult original superhero/thriller Darkman in 1990.
Rob Tapert would launch several popular projects like the Hercules and Xena tv series during the 90s.
And the now cult Bruce Campbell became as popular as he is nowadays thanks to Evil Dead 2. He developed over the years a huge fandom, would star in hundreds of pictures, non-Hollywood-ysh mostly, including a ton of roles in science fiction B-movies or horror movies like the Maniac Cop series.
Bruce Campbell was now a part of the horror and slasher genre. You'd expect from another Evil Dead movie to follow in the footsteps of its predecessors, right?
But Sam Raimi liked originality, that's the way the orginals surprised the audience afterall. So instead of proposing yet another gruesome horror movie (like Evil Dead 1) or a more comedic slasher (like Dead by Dawn) the 3rd movie went outside the cabin and into a whole new genre and direction.
Time Traveler
What's the story so far?
After the incident of the cabin (Evil Dead), where everybody died and Ash had to cut his own hands to get rid of the evil in himself (Dead by Dawn), a giant portal opened up in the sky (remember?).
Ash wasn't able to destroy the book of the dead, the Necronomicon Ex-Mortis. And instead got sucked in the past along the book.
This epic tale opens up then with Ash falling from the sky in the 1300s, somewhere in England.
Ash finds himself trapped in a war between a certain Lord Arthur and a Duke Henry.
But worry not Evil Dead-fan, the Deadites tagged along for this story.
Soon a wiseman tells Ash he is the chosen one, the one who'll save the world from the evil Deadites. He must find back the book, destroy it before its too late and will be able to go back to his own time.
Long story short, Ash makes a big mistake, the problems get worse, the evil inside him comes out in the form of the coolest horror movie villain ever, Evil Ash, the so-called Army of Darkness rises...
Will Ash save the day once more? Will he get the girl, Sheila, as well? And more importantly, how does this story really ends???
Building The Deathcoaster
As you can see from all this, this last episode is nothing like the first movies.
But it was always the idea behind this conclusion. In fact much sooner in production, it was even supposed to already be the second part of Evil Dead 2, before a part of it became a remake of the first one.
Sam Raimi always wanted to take this series outside the cabin and even the forest.
When the budget was enough with the success of his series and other films (such as the already mentioned Darkman), he was finally able to make things bigger this time around.
And with the involvement of his brother Ivan Raimi, both co-wrote AoD has a big tribute and homage to the old classic epic movies.
As the original movies were tributes to the slasher/gore genre.
Only this one turned out more comedy and fantasy and less horror. Though the horror influence is still here.
But after Evil Dead 2, it looks like a natural evolution for the series. The main character Ash (and Bruce Campbell) went through so much in the past that he couldn't continue to be reactive and had to turn pro-active down the line. That's why all of this movie seems based around the fact that Ash is now a total badass - the reason why there's a background storyline about his past days as a S-Mart employee to establish his old normal live long gone by now.
Night Court
The Necronomicon takes us in the past (and changed his look for this final tale - though the other 2 looks make an appearance at some point in a graveyard) and Raimi moves the series into new horizons.
This time the genre's definitively fantasy. Returning composer Joseph LoDuca makes an exceptional score, very medieval and epic.
The movie in itself is a work of love from the crew, Raimi & co worked up a lot of references in the movie itself and based it around old classic tropes and themas.
Klaatu barada nikto, with this line Ash is supposed to sell away the book of the dead, but mispronounce it which results in the final act of the film. It was also the famous classic line from the 1951 scifi classic B-Movie The Day the Earth Stood Still. The movie in itself is a big tribute to classic adventure stories like Gulliver's Travel, Sinbad, etc..
Even more, Sam Raimi had a lot of stop motion work done for the final, the last act is very much inspired and done similarly to Jason and the Argonauts. Which was pretty unusual for the "modern" 90s.
End Titles
Finally I'd say a lot of love was put into this movie, and it really shows. There's so much fun, energy...all the lines sound perfect, the action is great and Bruce Campbell is at his best.
It's a movie made for fans before anything else.
And it was quite a success to much surprise, I'm sure most producers wouldn't had expected it by then.
It became the cult classic it is today because it's a work of love where the creative team had entire control over it.
Sure, some hip kids might say the stop motion animation isn't the greatest, but it wasn't back then too. It was made old school, like in Jason and the Argonauts for a reason. There's so much style in the way they interact with the living Bruce Campbell facing the practical effects Evil Ash! So many things are going on at the same time in the climax!
Overall, a great movie!
Bruce, and Ash, badass and at his finest!
His over-the-top lines.. The way this guy who butchered his own hand in the previous movie continue to move on be it by using a chainsaw in its place or making a mechanical fully animated hand in medieval times... The way nothing seem to be able to stop him, like a sort of anti-slasher (like the opposite of a Jason or Freddy)..
A whole cult for the series was born after this movie! Perhaps even more so than Evil Dead 2 (didn't most people check back the past 2 flicks because of AoD, honestly?)
Perhaps not as loved for horror-fans, but better directed and constructed as a film.
Raimi was even able to get Danny Elfman score a track, the big final confrontation theme, the March Of The Dead. (whom he had on Darkman - him again yeah)
This time it's more like 80% comedy and 20% horror, but as an horror fan I'm perfectly fine with this choice!
It's really fun and shows how creative Sam Raimi was as a creator and director.
Over-the-top, perfect.
Ash is an invicible deadite killer, monsters, demons and zombies better fear him and hope they never cross path with him!
Sidenote: On most releases, the movie feature an alternate ending. A darker and less optimistic one. I'm sure a sequel would follow it. And don't worry if you don't see it, it's not like an Evil Dead never remade/reshot details of the previous one.
(this time, actual scenes from ED2 were used in the prologue..but for copyrights reasons they couldn't keep the "Evil Dead" title, so they tweaked a bit of the previous one ending)
Final word? Watch it! Rewatch it! Buy it! Have it in your collection!
I give it:
Friday, October 29, 2010
GreatMovieScene - GROOVY
Something I wanted to have on my blog for a while.
Since I already put up comic pages or panels...why not do the "same" for movies too?
And since I kept wiriting how badass Evil Dead 2 was in my latest review, here's one of the many one-liners Ash has in this movie.
The shortest one, the greatest, and shows how briliant Sam Raimi directing/editing is:
Since I already put up comic pages or panels...why not do the "same" for movies too?
And since I kept wiriting how badass Evil Dead 2 was in my latest review, here's one of the many one-liners Ash has in this movie.
The shortest one, the greatest, and shows how briliant Sam Raimi directing/editing is:
MR Evil Dead 2 Dead by Dawn
This time, the second entry in this legendary horror cult franchise.
More slapstick-horror, more budget, more Bruce Campbell..this movie got it all!
Probably one of my favorite horror movies of all time~
Movie: Evil Dead 2: Dead by Dawn
Directed by Sam Raimi
Release date 1987
Genre horror/comedy
Country USA
Six years after the unbelievable success Sam Raimi had with his little movie called "The Evil Dead", he now had a good reputation, some real experience from a bizarre mix of comedy/horror/noir movie he did with for a studio in-between, Crimewave, and was able to do as he pleased.
So naturally, a follow-up to Evil Dead was made before it was turned into a franchise without his or Bruce Campbell participation, like many horror movies of the 80s ended up like.
With Rob Tapert still on the production and Joseph LoDuca returning on the music, the rest of the crew changed. He had some new FX guys with him, a much bigger budget, more experience and lots of ideas to put on film...
"We have to go back...Back to the mansion!" - Day of the Tentacle.
Sadly for Raimi's team, he discovered while starting the sequel he didn't had the rights of the first movie anymore... Errors from a young director due to his lack of experience back then.
This means he couldn't use images from the first movie as a recap in the beginning.
How to make a much larger-scale sequel, for a bigger public, if he couldn't explain what the deck happened until this point?
"Dead by Dawn", as this sequel is subtitled, starts by retelling the events of the first movie...altered.
You see, they simply reshot various scenes from the original movie.
The first 10 minutes of ED2 remakes simply the whole 1st Evil Dead. But because it was more expensive to have a big cast for such a screentime, they made some little tweaks to the story.
Ashley J. Williams goes on a little vacation to a cabin within the woods with a girlfriend of his, Linda.
There, he plays a recording found there, from a professor who was studying the Book of the Dead, the Necronomicon Ex-Mortis. It awakes the "dead", possesses the trees and the woods, attacks, possesses and transforms Linda into an undead Deadite. Ash gets beaten, kills her, goes outside at sunrise...when suddenly it is finally able to possesses Ash!!!
It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World
This is were Evil Dead 2 picks up for real.
The sequel's pace is pretty fast this time around.
Sam Raimi stills films on the super-8 and plays with a lot of tricks he picked up along the way. Zooming and travelling plans, angular shots...
The movie is all about all the pain in the world being inflicted to Bruce Campbell's Ash character.
The Deadite try to corrupt him by several occasions, he gets beaten, bitten and worse!
Ash briefly transforms into a deadite in the beginning and let show a view of what he might end up like if he doesn't escape from this nightmare by the end of the movie.
Also, we get a brief glimpse into a future foe from the next sequel and expanded universe stories. If the Necronomicon can't turn Ash into one of them, he can surely make another like him. The Evil Ash first appears in a reflection and then, after "spreading" is able to turn Ash's hand into "pure evil"...
Come and get some!
Ash is a survivor, Ash never gives up.
The movie kinda parodies horror and slasher flicks of that time, it's full of blood once again, but used in a more slapstick way, something that Sam Raimi catched on his last movie. There's blue blood, and green and many more colors depending on the situations.
The special effects are quite impressive this time around.
Decapitations, hands mutilated, explosions, more stop motion and puppetry...
The deadites makeups are quite gross and fantastic.
If Evil Dead 1 surprised and set up a bar for horror movies, Evil Dead 2 exceeds all the expectations and then some.
Hail to the King, baby!
Evil Dead 2 is a violent gory and fun ride.
Hardcore horror fans may prefer the original, but I like my "entertainment" with fun and humour.
The mix of over-the-top one-liners delivered by Bruce Campbell (of which he has become a master of since then), black comedy and gruesome horror is pretty original, not a lot of movies have been able to truly present this odd composition.
The movie is full of great memorable sequences and an amazing rythm.
Ash is turned from a frail frightened guy into a badass anti-slasher. The movie is full of creatures but only one "main" character. He's the one after those demon's butts. He's a reverse horror movie monster. You know from the start nothing will stand in his way and he will come out victorious in the end. Those deadites better count their time left!
It never stops and will have you glued to your seat to the last minute.
The movie ends surprisingly (at the time) with a crazy unexpected cliffhanger...that is if the next movie would follow it exactly unlike the transition from Evil Dead to Dead by Dawn...
Overall, an awesome badass movie, on top with the other 80s and 90s badass movies such as Terminator 2, Predator or Robocop. Only, the badass character here is a normal guy in an unnatural world.
If the original Evil Dead was a 100% pure horror movie, perrfect exemple of an 80s product of the genre, Dead by Dawn is more like 60% horror and 40% comedy. Mostly slapstick humour all thanks to Bruce Campbell's elastic expressions!
The film has some surprises along the way, develops a bit more the Necronomicon's background and what it does exactly. There's some hints of what Sam Raimi had in mind at the time for part 3 in the plot. (which it didn't ended up exactly being like)
The movie, being made on a much confortable busget, spends a lot more time making everything fun and look great. There's even some easter eggs to find here and there (such as Freddy Krueger's claw hidden in a basement, no meaning story-wise).
Also, Ted Raimi, Sam's younger brother, started his long-running career of cameos in this movie. After a little uncredited part in Evil Dead 1, he has this time a much bigger role as one of the Deadites!
Anyway, it's a great movie I've already saw so many times...
A must watch/per year! Exactly the kind of movie that you'll only like more the more you see it~
Great, fun, gruesome, terrific...
The legendary Bruce Campbell at his best in the defining role of a lifetime!
I give it:
B-Movies
With many more upcoming future movie reviews coming up on the blog, I wanted to have a little edito per say about a favorite subject of mine.
I like B-Movies.
I really do.
I always liked, since watching some serials on Wednesday afternoons on a local channel here as a kid to collecting some direct-to-DVD stuff nowadays.
Though it seems some people, particulary those more used to watching mainstream big budget movies, seem to regard B-movies like a silly market, something with no interest, something "stupid". Of the "so bad it's good" categorie.
But B-movies aren't just bad movies. I don't wanna hear that on this blog!
B- Movies aren't just over-the-top movies with crappy effects/budget/acting.
They're a much larger part of us, horror fans/slasher fans/scifi flicks fans, culture-
They're simply movies who don't have what people's magazines call A-List directors, A-List actors or A-List studios.
Does it mean they're all bad? I wouldn't say that.
They're not studios films for once. Meaning a much larger liberty for the cast & crew.
That's what helped the genre grow during the 70s and 80s. They could show nudity, gore, scares when they shouldn't have been able to in theatres.
They're not Hollywood movies.
And that's why I like them.
Of course, they're mostly composed of horror movies now, because of these liberties they could take.
But you have to to see this what's good too. Many of those still rely on stop motion, animatronics, monster suits and other practical effects.
Of course, many more use crappy CGi, this was bound to happen with it being so cheap recently.
But they still often have the charm of not being used as primary focus like any blockbuster (Avatar, Star Wars Episode 2, Van Helsing...) and being just a tool used by the director in a story/movie.
But does it mean they're bad, or at least supposed to be bad?
I wouldn't say that!
And you better not too!
I'd say that of any of those 2 Transformers movies, that.. that was bad.
They don't have billion dollars-huge budgets, but it doesn't mean they can't be good because of that.
It's kinda ridiculous how much money is lost on some movies nowadays, it's like producers lost control of production costs over the years..
Son of the Mask had a budget of over 80 million (!!!) dollars it ended up in an horrible product I don't want to think about anymore.
A movie is always about a story, characters interraction. Be it an horror movie (and then, the main player becomes the monsters/killer) or comedy.
You can spend hundred of thousands dollars on making it in 3D or fluo or whatever... but it won't make it any good because you have a big pocket.
But B-movies aren't all just about monsters and slashers and stuff.
They can be about other subjects just like summer blockbusters aren't all scifi action flicks.
Of course, you can't make a romantic comedy B-movie and expect it to sell. Specially for this exemple I used where people always expect big name actors.
Bubba Ho-tep for exemple, wasn't just an horror or gore movie.
It was a very good movie, well written, amazing acting. Probably one of my all-time favs!
I'd rewatch that over The Dark Knight anyday!
Not all B-movies need to be campy, silly, over-the-top... Of course that's the easier ones to make.
You asking me how do we recognise these B-movies?
What is and what isn't a B-movie these days? The line seem to have gotten quite blurry nowadays...
First, don't expect a big name studio logo popping at the beginning, though some big productions started publishing such DVDs in Europe or in other places.
They don't get big releases on theatres, at least not on many screens, just a couple of places.
Many well-known actors started there, so you may find a young Jim Carrey or George Clooney.
But that's it. Debuting there careers ant nothing more.
Also don't simplify and call all horror movies B-movies.
Saw or Scream are the best exemple of hollywood horror movies. With tons of filters, pictures cleaned, big names on it, etc..
And parodies like Scary Movie? That's another hollywood movie series, a silly teen movie series.
Want a real spoof of the genre, try Monster Squad, Critters, Gremlins...
And yes, Joe Dante started by making Trailers for these movies, directed some and got famous later on.
Fan favorites like Bruce Campbell, Michael Gross, and many others seem to have been stuck and defined by the genre, so you only see them in Big Blockbusters as cameos. They didn't made the transition as easily as the directors coming from this genre (Sam Raimi, Peter Jackson..).. maybe because they're more easily recognisable and end up typecast in these roles..
On a good final note: for fans who also happen to like cartoons, these actors are often casted for voice work on animated shows. Often DC animation like the Justice League, the DC animated original movies serie, etc..
I like B-Movies.
I really do.
I always liked, since watching some serials on Wednesday afternoons on a local channel here as a kid to collecting some direct-to-DVD stuff nowadays.
Though it seems some people, particulary those more used to watching mainstream big budget movies, seem to regard B-movies like a silly market, something with no interest, something "stupid". Of the "so bad it's good" categorie.
But B-movies aren't just bad movies. I don't wanna hear that on this blog!
Actual movie. Yep.
B- Movies aren't just over-the-top movies with crappy effects/budget/acting.
They're a much larger part of us, horror fans/slasher fans/scifi flicks fans, culture-
They're simply movies who don't have what people's magazines call A-List directors, A-List actors or A-List studios.
Does it mean they're all bad? I wouldn't say that.
They're not studios films for once. Meaning a much larger liberty for the cast & crew.
That's what helped the genre grow during the 70s and 80s. They could show nudity, gore, scares when they shouldn't have been able to in theatres.
They're not Hollywood movies.
And that's why I like them.
Of course, they're mostly composed of horror movies now, because of these liberties they could take.
But you have to to see this what's good too. Many of those still rely on stop motion, animatronics, monster suits and other practical effects.
Of course, many more use crappy CGi, this was bound to happen with it being so cheap recently.
But they still often have the charm of not being used as primary focus like any blockbuster (Avatar, Star Wars Episode 2, Van Helsing...) and being just a tool used by the director in a story/movie.
But does it mean they're bad, or at least supposed to be bad?
I wouldn't say that!
And you better not too!
I'd say that of any of those 2 Transformers movies, that.. that was bad.
They don't have billion dollars-huge budgets, but it doesn't mean they can't be good because of that.
It's kinda ridiculous how much money is lost on some movies nowadays, it's like producers lost control of production costs over the years..
Son of the Mask had a budget of over 80 million (!!!) dollars it ended up in an horrible product I don't want to think about anymore.
A movie is always about a story, characters interraction. Be it an horror movie (and then, the main player becomes the monsters/killer) or comedy.
You can spend hundred of thousands dollars on making it in 3D or fluo or whatever... but it won't make it any good because you have a big pocket.
But B-movies aren't all just about monsters and slashers and stuff.
They can be about other subjects just like summer blockbusters aren't all scifi action flicks.
Of course, you can't make a romantic comedy B-movie and expect it to sell. Specially for this exemple I used where people always expect big name actors.
Bubba Ho-tep for exemple, wasn't just an horror or gore movie.
It was a very good movie, well written, amazing acting. Probably one of my all-time favs!
I'd rewatch that over The Dark Knight anyday!
Not all B-movies need to be campy, silly, over-the-top... Of course that's the easier ones to make.
You asking me how do we recognise these B-movies?
What is and what isn't a B-movie these days? The line seem to have gotten quite blurry nowadays...
First, don't expect a big name studio logo popping at the beginning, though some big productions started publishing such DVDs in Europe or in other places.
They don't get big releases on theatres, at least not on many screens, just a couple of places.
Many well-known actors started there, so you may find a young Jim Carrey or George Clooney.
But that's it. Debuting there careers ant nothing more.
Also don't simplify and call all horror movies B-movies.
Saw or Scream are the best exemple of hollywood horror movies. With tons of filters, pictures cleaned, big names on it, etc..
And parodies like Scary Movie? That's another hollywood movie series, a silly teen movie series.
Want a real spoof of the genre, try Monster Squad, Critters, Gremlins...
And yes, Joe Dante started by making Trailers for these movies, directed some and got famous later on.
Fan favorites like Bruce Campbell, Michael Gross, and many others seem to have been stuck and defined by the genre, so you only see them in Big Blockbusters as cameos. They didn't made the transition as easily as the directors coming from this genre (Sam Raimi, Peter Jackson..).. maybe because they're more easily recognisable and end up typecast in these roles..
On a good final note: for fans who also happen to like cartoons, these actors are often casted for voice work on animated shows. Often DC animation like the Justice League, the DC animated original movies serie, etc..
Saturday, October 23, 2010
MR The Evil Dead
Seems like I haven't done a review in a while!
Sorry guys and gals!
Since Halloween's coming, I better have some more horror-related stuff up!
Joining the reviews of Hack/Slash and Splatterhouse, here's something without which both franchises wouldn't exist...
The master of slapstick-horror...
Movie: The Evil Dead: The Book of the Dead
Directed by Sam Raimi
Release date 1981
Genre horror
Country USA
Back in the 80s, while the horror genre started really pickin' up, everyone was doing slasher flicks and/or scary movies. Both hollywood and independents. It was easy, it was fun and no need of big A-list actors or huge budgets. Just to be somewhat creative in the presentation (deaths/scares..) and exploit any trick from the era.
Two movie amateurs, Sam Raimi and Robert Tapert, decided to start there career with a little horror movie project they had been working on since film school, "Within the Woods". Within the Woods was a no budget horror prototype movie from 1978 they had previously worked on, about a guy who confronts evil in the forest.
With a budget of around ~375,000 $ they wanted to make that idea into an actual full feature movie, cast some actors, have lots of special effects and use a better location, a real cabin in the middle of the Tennessee.
With Bruce Campbell, a childhood friend who was there with them since day one, joined by extras, a composer, a movie editor and and a producer, could they turn this little project into a one hour+ horror fest?
This is only the beginning for Ash...
The story of Evil Dead is about Ashley J. Williams and a bunch of his friends who go on a little cabin within the woods on a weekend.
There Ash, his girlfriend Linda, his sister Cheryl and his buddy Scotty find a mysterious recording and the Book of the Dead called the Necronomicon Ex-Mortis.
It seems the cabin was a professor's who had been studying and working on translating this book.
After playing the recordings, which reads some passages aloud...something happens in the woods...
JOIIIINNNN USSSSSSss~
The Necronomicon has the power to rise the dead!
First the so-called "evil dead" possesses the trees, the cabin, the environment...
Then it tries to attack and corrupt Ash's gang.
Soon, it manages to sort of "rape" Cheryl and slowly turn her into a Kandarian demon, an undead possessed monster... Then, it is able to infects all of Ash's friends, one by one and quickly, Ash ends up being the only last one standing against these Deadites...
This won't be the last he would see of that damn' book!
The Evil Dead is the proof of what people can achieve when they're truly motivated and love what they're doing.
Done one a very tiny budget (specially consider today's ridiculously high budgets of "horror" hollywood movies), it is truly amazing both visually and in its directing.
The effects are quite gory and spectacular. There's some puppets work, clay-motion, animatronics and even stop-motion!
Sam Raimi and his crew were pretty creative in the ways to spare money and use great tricks.
He mostly based his techniques on the experience he had during Within The Woods.
The fake blood for exemple was made from a mixture of corn syrup, food coloring, and coffee cream...
The movie took over almost 2 years in the making, being filmed once in a while when they could.
In the end they only had Bruce Campbell left from the original cast & crew and his aging through the movie still shows in the end. (he looks actually older in the last part of the movie)
The Evil Dead became a cult movie in its opening, showed that you could perfectly combine slapstick comedy with horror and opened a new way to slasher horror movies where tons of blood are spilled and the characters are mistreated, tormented, punched, bitten, kicked, decapited, amputated, etc...
Overall, more than just your usual fun 80s horror movie.
It launched a new franchise (the Evil Dead series), careers (Sam Raimi, Rob Tapert, Bruce Campbell..) and a whole genre! (which the comics Hack/Slash and game Splatterhouse are the direct modern successors in a way)
The Evil Dead went on to make a lotta money... Many similar movies followed such as Dead Alive, Re-Animator, etc..
The series continued in the much more successful sequels... (next time!)
Bruce Campbell became an horror and B-movie icon!
Anyway, this is a great gory, fun, creative and quite graphic movie!
I really recommend to see this if you're a fan of Sam Raimi directing (his camera tricks, most originated from Evil Dead 1!), Bruce Campbell or just an horror fan.
Though if graphic violence, gore and blood might scare you, start from the sequels, this one's not for kiddies! -__-
Finally, a great cult horror classic, unlike any modern movie!
I give it:
Thursday, October 14, 2010
Keiji Inafune Meets Bruce Campbell
Thanks to Frobman for the heads-up!~
Zombie master Inafune and Evil Dead's Bruce Campbell, met up at New York Comic Con!
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Makes you wish you were the one living next door to Bruce Campbell! XD