
But in this present, it's a guilty pleasure on another chain, it's chilling opening, brilliant, not letting us forget how frightening and evil the original is. Though of course with not the greatest script that I've actually read part of, here's a well shot remaking of a notorious horror, that of course, can't surpass the original, but comes pretty close. How he become the hero near the end, and braved up, I liked. Shiloh Fernandez's character irked me some, while not even managing to make his mother's funeral, months prior. What was good was the catalyst of the story, the reason for them all being there in the woods, as to comfort the young heroin addict girl, one, her brother who's managed to show up here, hot girlfriend and all. The highlight is the girlfriend cutting off her own arm with a chainsaw scene, with the boyfriend (Fernandez) asking "Are you okay?" There are some nice touches of humour here I liked that worked better here, than the original, and the slipping on the tongue scene was inventive.
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I must admit I was disappointed at one aspect, as I thought it would be full on throughout, much like Evil Dead 2, (my oldie favourite) where everything just goes crazy and you can't think straight, but there's enough blood shed in this to satisfy you gore lovers. This was the biggest thing, I must say, that really impressed me. With another attractive cast, who deliver realistic performances, especially the heroin addict sister, the film too is beautifully shot in the cold misty woods of New Zealand, and this works wonderfully, cinematically, I might add. In all fairness, director Fede Alvarez has come through successfully on remaking this 81 cult horror, that sees a group of young campers, possessed by evil spirits from that notorious book that should never been opened. No one at my screening squealed, laughed or got grossed out by the added ultra violence.we all just munched on our popcorn and let out a collective "meh" as the end credits rolled.Reviewed by videorama-759-859391 8 /10 Fede, you've done us proud The modern "Evil Dead" committed the cardinal sin of a horror film.

Objects are broken, tossed aside or set on fire.only to necromance back to their original state a few frames later. The few traditional special effects are ridiculously cheap and poorly done, and were clearly afterthoughts tossed in after the CGI budget line item ran out. When it's a glossy Hollywood production the fact that all of the above happen often isn't 's just careless and lazy. I can forgive a $1.50 and a shoestring film for plot holes, continuity errors and characters that are lifeless long before their on screen deaths. Additionally, for a $14,000,000 film, it's appallingly sloppy in a way that could easily been avoided with that much production budget. The protagonists die in the exact order you'd expect them to, and it all comes across as oddly perfunctory, with buckets of bile and a demon with a voice stolen straight from "The Exorcist" part of just another day at the office. Without the spirited ability to make fun of itself."The Evil Dead" becomes a shadow of its former self, and the few spots where the remake changes essential plot elements only serve to make this ever more of a wad of ABC gum, with about as much flavor. Demonic possession, the haunted cabin in the woods.those were genre clichés in 1981, and they are more so 30 years later.

It plods through the original plot pretty faithfully, and completely ignores the fact that the plot wasn't what made the original great. The remake plays dead straight for so long, when it finally attempts a few brief moments of the original's laughs, they fall as flat as the actors' bland performances.

Granted, the original "Evil Dead" isn't nearly as camp/slapstick as its sequels.but it did have a sense of spiteful fun amongst all of the gore. Think about "The Beyond" and its glorious dime store surrealism, "Dead & Buried"'s layers of moody atmosphere, the weird quirk that managed to make people root for "The Human Centipede" to escape its scenery chewing creator.or in the case of "The Evil Dead" the fact that it was a horror film, but had a very good balance of black comedy, and Bruce Campbell had an excellent knack for knowing when to toss in a bit of a wink and a nudge. Unfortunately a lot of makes B horror classics special is the inventiveness forced by their sheer lack of budget.Concise runtimes born of necessity often kept things moving at a brisk pace, with out fluff or an excess of pointless padding. Rather than use the extra budget to fully realize the ideas and quirks that made the originals awesome.those buckets of cash are dumped into bloated, overlong run times and buckets of CGI blood sloshed about with a few surround sound sheer volume "jump" moments. "The Evil Dead" suffers from the same malaise as many of the modern remakes of grindhouse/B Horror classics("I Spit On Your Grave", "Black Christmas" etc.).
