Unlike
 the majority of the horror-lovin' world, I was not a fan of EVIL DEAD 
(1981), groundbreaking indie effort though it was, so in my eyes just 
about anything would have been acceptable as a followup. Luckily its 
first sequel was this delirious more-or-less, kinda/sorta remake of the 
first film, only with a bigger budget and director Sam Raimi displaying 
bolstered confidence behind the camera to compliment his visual 
imagination. Like a live-action cartoon filtered through a modern 
sensibility as influenced by a dosed-on-mushrooms Charles Addams, the 
movie is a roller coaster ride of crazed incidents and a sense of loony 
humor that would have been right at home in a Three Stooges short.
The
 plot is about as basic as it gets: Assorted innocents find themselves 
at a remote cabin that's home to the Book of the Dead, a tome that 
unleashes all manner of demonic forces when its pages are read aloud. At
 the center of all of this is Ash (Bruce Campbell reprising his role 
from the first film, with this followup being the turn that earned him 
his ongoing status as a top cult movie presence), a hapless everyman who
 is put through the wringer by the rampaging evil spirits. We root for 
him as he endures torment after torment and self-mutilation, and his 
adventure perfectly walks the fine line between the utterly terrifying 
and the downright hilarious. 
 
              The birth of an iconic image: Ash swaps his self-severed hand for a chainsaw. 
EVIL DEAD II is a horror comedy all the way, and in my opinion it is the hybrid of those two flavors that most perfectly nails the desired effect. Its set pieces are brutal, gory, and scary, but they are also howlingly funny, so the film is best approached with as little foreknowledge of its mad antics as possible.
As previously stated, this is pretty much a remake of the first film, so you can just skip that one and start here. EVIL DEAD II has a bigger budget, more imagination, and a greater sense of confidence and refinement from the filmmakers, and it came as quite a breath of fresh air during a decade dominated by dime-a-dozen un-scary and dirt-cheap slasher no-brainers. In short, EVIL DEAD II is a must-see gem.



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