Score: 4 / 5
(This post also includes my brief thoughts on the entire franchise, as I haven't posted about it before, so please bear with me.)
If you don't know the Evil Dead franchise, you actually already do. The original 1981 film, an independent horror experience shot in rural Tennessee by a then-unknown Sam Raimi, is famously one of the most financially and critically successful indie films of all time. It effectively canonized now cliché tropes: a secluded cabin in haunted woods, its secret cellar filled with horrific artifacts, phrases like "dead by dawn," and of course the warning to never read the mysterious Latin phrase in a bloodstained book. Its release at the start of the '80s signified a turn in horror sensibilities from the moralistic slasher craze of the '70s to the meta-horror of the late '90s, though it (and Wes Craven's 1996 Scream) was fairly unique in its brazen aptitude for both horror and surrealist comedy until well after the millennium. It, like its contemporaries -- a serialized mess of slasher sequels that littered the '80s -- spawned a franchise, one that has perhaps the greatest cult following of the decade.
The Evil Dead is an amazing movie, both in terms of its real-life production and its gleefully garish portrayal of specifically amoral vicious chaos. Some will naturally see its lurid colorscape and low-budget effects as humorous, and Raimi himself would no doubt embrace that reaction; I've always found that first film deeply disturbing because of its desperation to shock and scare with such a small budget and no notable names to market. Its sequels (Evil Dead II in 1987 and Army of Darkness in 1992) cemented its legacy as a horror-comedy, as both of those leaned much more heavily into the wacky, metafictional nature of their bizarre concepts: the first sequel literally re-enacts the plot of the first in its frenzied opening sequence before basically making fun of itself for the rest of its frenetic bloodbath of a plot, while the second sequel involves time travel to the Middle Ages and a lot of action and humor and basically no real horror. I personally find these films dull at best, but many fans enjoy their "groovy" sensibility. Star Bruce Campbell and Raimi went on -- along with basically every other major horror franchise -- to adapt a sequel series for cable in the mid-2010s titled Ash vs Evil Dead, airing on Starz and which I just couldn't get into.
But the franchise wasn't dead yet, not even in a reanimated "Deadite" form as its titular villains came to be called. Fede Alvarez (writer and director of The Girl in the Spider's Web, the amazing Don't Breathe, and the latter's atrocious sequel) created a remake of the original, marketed it as the scariest film ever made, and released it in spring of 2013. I saw that on opening weekend and had my first panic attack in a cinema. Its hype may have been off-putting and its horror may not be for everyone, but it was indeed one of the goriest and scariest films I'd ever seen at that time (although Scott Derrickson's 2012 Sinister might hold the first-place prize for this viewer). Completely devoid of comedy, if not bleak humor, Alvarez's remake features electrifyingly higher stakes, sharper focus on character development, and no small amount of unrelenting bloody body horror.
Its grimy, Gothic trappings belie an acute awareness of groundbreaking effects and postmodern boundary-pushing excess. One might go so far as to say its embodies camp like the original, whereas the sequels were, at best, kitsch; that is to say, the original and the remake take themselves and their subject matter very seriously indeed, so much so as they revel in its unreality and its exuberance, which is really the essence of camp. One would have hoped for more Evil Dead films in the vein of Alvarez's entry, but a decade passed with no such luck.
Out of the void, then, prophetically, Evil Dead Rise indeed, from Irish writer/director Lee Cronin (The Hole in the Ground) and produced by Raimi and Campbell. Cronin's vision was definitely inspired by Alvarez's film; the stakes are unbearably high, the tension constantly ratchets up, and his inventive use of gore makes your eyes pop as you flinch. Yet, crucially, Cronin also revives a more Raimi-esque comedic sensibility, both in terms of a fresh and bizarre setting, his equally hilarious and terrifying depiction of the Deadites, and a slight withdrawal from pure body horror. Let's dive in.
Setting and characters. Abandoning a haunted woods and remote cabin, the plot of Evil Dead Rise is set in a high-rise apartment building in Los Angeles. While this suggests a hell of a lot more diabolic mayhem, it's quickly revealed that the building has been condemned and will be torn down soon, so very few residents remain. On an upper floor, a small family packs and prepares to leave, though the recently single mother Ellie, a tattoo artist, has no idea where she'll go next. Her teenagers Bridget and Danny can help a bit with the youngest, Kassie, but they are in dire straits. Suddenly Ellie's sister Beth arrives, though their relationship appears strained as Beth's professed job as guitar technician is derided by Ellie as her being a "groupie." There are a few neighbors, including an older man with a gun and a cat, and a younger hunk with faith, but these are clearly meant to be fodder for what's to come.
It should be noted that the film does include a cabin in the woods as part of its framing sequence. We start with a furious airborne charge above a stream through the forest before careening out over a wooded lake (not unlike in The Shining) and coming to a dock where three young adults are on vacation in a nearby imposing A-frame cabin. One of the women is sick and resting until she violently attacks the others -- effectively setting the tone of the movie -- and levitates, seemingly possessed, above the water as the title text appears gloriously behind her. This scene is unrelated to the plot of the film and is only tied in by the closing scene, as the young woman leaves the apartment building to go on vacation with her cousin and boyfriend and gets attacked by the swooping first-person camera just like Ash in the original film. It's a cute throwback, and nicely atmospheric, but ultimately isn't more than an unrelated short in the ever-expanding Evil Dead universe.
The stakes. So while the main plot takes place in the apartment building, it's not so dissimilar from a remote cabin as to cause much upset. Before long, an earthquake rattles the building, taking out the staircase and cracking open the foundations; the building apparently was once a bank, and so beneath its parking garage lie the old buried vaults. Danny, dangerously jumping in despite the threat of aftershocks, discovers the vault of a priestly order and collects a book and some vinyl records to investigate and hopefully hock. Taking them up to his room, he uses his DJ tech to play the records, which tell of the priests' battles with bloodthirsty demonic forces and speaks cursed phrases from the Naturom Demonto, the book, which is apparently another version of the Necronomicon, the Book of the Dead. As we expect, the invisible demons attack and everything goes haywire. Despite the additional, obviously doomed characters, we're primed to be scared more than usual in this franchise because the main characters are all family, and more than half of them are children. This movie is not scared to endanger, brutalize, and even kill children, which is still extraordinary in the genre.
The Deadites. Alyssa Sutherland plays Ellie as both the hard-pressed and strong-willed single mother and as the possessed version of herself, psychologically tormenting her children and sister even as she attempts to physically torture them. Her physicality is nothing short of amazing, to say nothing of her nightmare-inducing, wide-eyed and toothy visage, but it's her voice that really chills. She sounds like a drag queen or a caricatured "homosexual" from at least forty years ago, swallowing her tone and drawing out phrases with something between vocal fry and mocking effeminacy. Her nasty little jabs at Beth and cloying attempts to persuade (seduce?) her children are laced with both honey and venom, making her easily the most interesting version of a Deadite we've ever seen. The effect on her children, specifically Nell Fisher's Kassie, is never less than horrifying for the audience. (It should be noted that Gabrielle Echols and Morgan Davies are really wonderful as the older siblings, and we can hope to see more of these young actors as their careers take off.)
This has been a long post, but I'm nearly done, because really this film is meant to be experienced rather than talked about. Its internal logic doesn't hold water, but in an Evil Dead movie, we only really need it to hold blood. And that it does in spades, with so much inspired carnage it's hard to think of much body horror not featured in this film, or at least threatened in it. It proudly wears its influences on its sleeve, making it as much a commentary on other horror films as on its own franchise. The climax involves another incarnated demonic entity called the Marauder (not unlike the Abomination of Alvarez's film) and so much blood it may as well have been filmed with a scarlet lens cover. Not everything works well; apart from the general need to suspend disbelief within its premise alone, the screenplay works hard to try and build and explain every bit into itself like a Chekhov play, and actually now that I say it, this whole thing probably would work just as well as a play. Because as an Evil Dead film, we don't need or really even want explanations and exposition for everything.
Ultimately, it's all a hell of a lot of fun, and hopefully this entry will ignite some new installments in the same vein. While opening some veins, of course.