Drag Me To Hell4 out of 5[...] while Raimi gleefully throws her around like a rag doll [...]
Now if only Peter Jackson could decide to go back to his roots in the same way
I still haven't seen the Evil Dead movies...horrible I know.
Evil Dead II is a masterpiece.
Quote from: Jon on June 02, 2009, 07:52:46 AMEvil Dead II is a masterpiece.No it's an insult to an independant horror classic that continue to frightening me more than 25 years later. This isn't an horror comedy (by the way I can appreciate this genre, just an exemple I like Return of the Living Dead), but The Bruce Campbell Slapstick Comedy Hours It looks cheaper than the original even if the budget was bigger and the acting is really bad...
Jimmy, that's rubbish! It was the same people!
How can you insult your own work?
And Evil Dead II is the one people remember...
That's what I thought. Isn't Army of Darkness considered one of them? I've seen bits of that one and liked what I saw.
Dead Alive is the one Peter Jackson did isn't it?
Bloody brilliant horror, this! Like Evil Dead II, it’s laugh out loud disgusting with a few jumps. Thank goodness for Sam Raimi, because my generation missed the truly decent cinema horrors of the late 70s and early 80s and have had to put up with predictable teen slashers and morally bankrupt Saw crap. Some of them were alright, very good even, but this is what horror films at the pictures should be about. It’s not as good as the old films, but it’s good enough to give I Don’t Bloody Care What You Did Last Summer the shits and that’s all that matters.
The story is typically straightforward with a predictable end, but a couple of not so predictable moments along the way. Girl gets cursed, finds out she’ll be Dragged To Hell by a Lamia demon, gets desperate to break it and risks losing everything in the meantime. Lohman is excellent; looks gorgeous, but isn’t whiny, while Raimi gleefully throws her around like a rag doll. Justin Long is her boyfriend and is quite happy to be Justin Long. Very good, but doesn’t really have to do a lot. Ted Raimi is fun as Christine’s manager and Reggie Lee is particularly funny as Stu.