Friday, July 26, 2013

Evil Dead Review

                               

            When Cabin in the Woods was released I had hoped that it would challenge movie producers to make better horror movies or to at least improve on the cabin-in-the -woods horror genre.  If the remake of Evil Dead is any indication of what’s to come then clearly those hopes were misplaced.  The poster has the balls to boast that this film is “The most terrifying film you will ever experience.”  To that I will simply retort to the producers “Don’t go writing checks your clichéd movie can’t cash.” 

            A group of friends, Mia (Jane Levy), her estranged brother David (Shiloh Fernandez), and three other characters, whose names aren’t worth remembering, decide to make a trip to a cabin in the woods in an effort to get a drug-addicted Mia to quit her dependence cold turkey.  Eventually they notice a foul smell coming from the cabin’s cellar which turns out to be full of animal carcasses and an ominous looking book covered in barbed wire.  Despite the book quite literally warning them not to read it, one of the idiots presses on anyway which of course summons a demon and all hell breaks loose (figuratively and literally).  Mia is the only one in the group with the common sense to be frightened but the others simply chalk it up to symptoms of withdrawal and ignore her.  They don’t really begin to notice that something is amiss with Mia until a dog turns up dead and then begins to burn her face off in the scalding hot shower.   

            What follows is a level of gore and violence I haven’t seen since the Saw series (and that’s not a compliment).  Like many movies before it Evil Dead appears to not understand that there can be a fine line between scary and needlessly gruesome.  The whole thing starts out rather promising but quickly devolves into the same junk that Cabin in the Woods made fun of last year.  I might’ve forgiven this if the remake had brought anything new to the table but instead it makes so many references to the original that the entire picture was a constant reminder that there was a much better version of this I could’ve been watching instead.  What is perhaps the most confusing thing about this movie is that Sam Raimi approved of it so much that he became one of the film’s producers.  I’m not really sure what he thought was so special about it since it’s mostly just a carbon copy of his work except with a bigger budget, almost nonexistent creativity and this time Bruce Campbell is nowhere to be found.    

            I will admit though that there is one thing Evil Dead has going for it, and that’s the ending.  I was legitimately surprised by it which is not usually something I can usually say about a horror movie.  It’s the only real significant change director/co-screenwriter Fede Alverez made to the original and it almost manages to save this movie.  It kind of makes me wonder just how much better this could’ve been if it been approached with a shred of originality.  Even with the new ending, however, we still wind up in the same place as the original. 

            I don’t usually find myself clamoring to see any horror movie and especially not remakes.  However, since Raimi appeared to believe in it so much, I was willing to give this one the benefit of the doubt and chose to believe that it would make something interesting.  Instead all I got was more of the same, along with bitter disappointment to add insult to injury. 


Grade: C

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