"Evil Dead," a reboot of the 1981 cult horror hit, has been generating quite a lot of buzz about how gruesome, walkout-inciting, and faint-inducing it is proving to be.
For many, it doesn't get better than âThe Evil Dead.â The 1981 original and its two sequels are the perfect blend of blood-drenched, graphic horror and B-grade camp, giving birth to one of the most abused horror movie clichés of all time: naïve college
Evil Dead was director Sam Raimi's first film. (Raimi has since gone on to bigger things including the Spider-Man franchise and Disney's recent hit The Great and Powerful Oz.) It cost an estimated $375,000 to make and brought in just $2.4 million at
The remake of âThe Evil Dead,â Sam Raimi's 1981 horror film about a cabin of cult curiosities, doesn't have the original's wooden performances, puffy clothes and hairdos or its amusingly crude special effects, but it does share its blood lust
(EW.com) -- In the years since its 1981 release, Sam Raimi's cabin-in-the-woods cheapie "The Evil Dead" has been elevated to the realm of myth. You won't find many films as near and dear to the hearts of horror nerds. The legacy isn't based on the fact
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