Army of Darkness Evil Dead 3

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Army of Darkness Evil Dead 3

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Spawned from the warped imagination of celebrated film maker Sam Rami and staring cultural icon/B-movie Brando Bruce Campbel as Ash, Evil Dead 3 takes the concepts already established by the previous movies to a new level of twisted wierdness.

After accidently unleashing the demonic forces held within the Necronomicon (The Book Of The Deas) the now legendary Ash finds himself being transported back in time to the dark ages where he is forced to do battle with a relentless army of grotesque, flesh eating "dedites".

Armed with his ever reliable chainsaw, his big, smoking boom stick and a second hand car, Ash Williams - hero, man of Action, Prophesised saviour of acient times and discount store employee- is about to show the medieval dead what it means to be truly, groovy, because this time they're messing with the wrong chin. it's time for some sugar baby.

Highly inventive, instantly qouteable and hugely entertaining, with equal amounts of romance, action, adventure and severed limbs, Evil Dead 3: Army Of Darkness, feels like it was concieved within the psychotic mind of a muntant Ray Harrhausen as it explodes across the screen with a frenzied verve rarely seen in motion pictures. This is cult movie making at its most awsome and not to be missed!










If you ever want to get a funny debate going among movie-loving friends, ask them what they think of Sam Raimi's 'Evil Dead 2: Dead by Dawn' (1987). Some will immediately laugh and gush, "Great movie." Others will say, "Stupidest movie ever made." Still others will say both in the same breath.
The debate, I suspect, will begin anew with Raimi's Army of Darkness (which Universal refused to release under its proper title, Evil Dead 3: Medieval Dead). This, too, is the sort of film that inspires a response like "Jesus, that was dumb, and I loved every minute of it." Army of Darkness is stupid in the fearless, half-admirable way that the best Ren & Stimpy episodes are stupid; it keeps topping itself just when you think it can't. Actually, "stupid" isn't the right word here -- a better label might be "campy," and very intentionally so; Raimi's Evil Dead films are essentially gutbucket comedies, and this one's no exception. This extended guitar riff of a movie blows the doors off any fantasy-adventure I've seen in years.

Raimi, known mostly to readers of Fangoria for directing the first two Evil Deads before stumbling onto mainstream success with Darkman, hasn't outgrown his devotion to monster movies, superheroes, and the Three Stooges -- the three pop phenomena that guys gravitate to but most women find inane. (Army of Darkness is not the ideal date movie.) Raimi is a playfully inventive director -- his movies are big, junky toy boxes -- and his affection for senseless, sophomoric trash is infectious. He turns violence and gore into slapstick, yet he isn't cruel; his affection extends to his characters, even the slobbering zombies. Especially the slobbering zombies.

Army of Darkness picks up at the exact instant that Evil Dead 2 left off, but if you missed the first two installments (though obviously I recommend them), the new movie stands pretty well on its own. Raimi re-introduces us to Ash (Bruce Campbell), the college student who found the ancient Book of the Dead out in a cabin in the woods and unleashed the forces of hell, one of which possessed his girlfriend. (Amusing trivia: Bridget Fonda plays the girlfriend in the new footage.) After much mayhem and blood-spritzing, Ash somehow created a vortex that spirited him to Medieval England, along with his crappy '73 Delta-88 Oldsmobile. Armed with a shotgun and a chainsaw (the latter of which is attached to the stump of his right hand), Ash now finds himself fighting the "Deadites" and questing for the Book of the Dead, his only ticket home.

Raimi, who wrote the script with his brother Ivan, approaches this scenario as if someone had given him a deep pail of Magic Markers and told him to draw the ultimate comic book. The setting is Frank Frazetta by way of Monty Python, the action strictly Three Stooges Meet Jason and the Argonauts (lots of eye-boinking). Like Brian De Palma, Raimi borrows from a lot of sources but mooshes the stolen elements into an inspired style all his own. As usual, he shows you things you don't see every day: a shot of an arrow in flight, filmed from the arrow's point of view (Raimi loves that shtick -- he's done the POV-of-flying-object in almost all his movies); a sequence in which Ash's face is pulled like Silly Putty. Raimi doesn't have a thing on his mind except to give you a raucous good time, and he does. In a period when you can almost see the director's dour face hovering over the camera, worrying about being taken seriously, it's a goddamn relief to have someone like Raimi who cackles gleefully from the first shot.

It's been six years since Evil Dead 2, and even longer (13 years) since Raimi and Campbell finished shooting the original Evil Dead, so Campbell has lost his frat-boy look (his Ash still acts like one, though). But age has given him an edge: After the crap he went through in Evil Dead 2, nothing shocks or impresses him any more. When a crowd of grateful people hail him, he muscles through them: "Yeah, yeah ... Right ... Get the fuck outta my face." Wiry and demented, Ash slams his way through the most chaotic and absurd situations (such as when he breaks a mirror and his own tiny reflections emerge from the shards of glass and attack him) as if he were dealing with nothing more unusual than a loud kegger. Campbell, a gifted physical comedian with a deadpan knack for cheesy B-movie dialogue, fits into Raimi's fantasies as snugly as Robert De Niro fits into Martin Scorsese's urban dramas. Buddies since high school, these two deserve each other, and deserve to grow old together on film.

Darkman was Raimi's crossover hit because it satisfied the audience's need for a comic-book movie with style and a kidding sense of itself; unlike Batman and Dick Tracy, it came out of nowhere, with no particular pretensions. If Army of Darkness becomes another hit*, that's because it has everything connoisseurs of great junk look for: zombies in armor, swordplay, gunplay, slapstick, a damsel in distress, a truly loopy hero, jaw-dropping visuals (literally, in one case), and enough slaphappiness for ten movies. Army of Darkness is epic fun. If all Sam Raimi wants to do is make cinematic comic books, I won't mind as long as they're as energetic and screwy as this one.






Bruce Campbell ...  Ash
Embeth Davidtz ...  Sheila
Marcus Gilbert ...  Lord Arthur
Ian Abercrombie ...  Wiseman
Richard Grove ...  Duke Henry the Red
Timothy Patrick Quill ...  Blacksmith
Michael Earl Reid ...  Gold Tooth
Bridget Fonda ...  Linda
Patricia Tallman ...  Possessed Witch
Ted Raimi ...  Cowardly Warrior / Second Supportive Villager / S-Mart Clerk (as Theodore Raimi)
Deke Anderson ...  Mini-Ash #2
Bruce Thomas ...  Mini-Ash #3
Sara Shearer ...  Old Woman
Shiva Gordon ...  Pit Deadite #1
Billy Bryan ...  Pit Bitch






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