When director Sam Raimi, star Bruce Campbell, and producer Robert Tapert began making a short film called “Within the Woods” at a Michigan farmhouse in 1978, they had no idea they were starting a journey they’d still be on 45 years later. That 32-minute short, made for $1,600 by a couple of Michigan college students and their dropout friend (who was so committed that he sometimes slept with his make-up on to save time and money), laid the groundwork for the Evil Dead franchise, an enduring and ever-expanding web of movies, TV series, comics, and video games.
Raimi, Campbell, and Tapert’s are all credited as producers on Evil Dead Rise, a major studio release out this weekend. It’s a fast-paced, unapologetically gross horror film set in a decrepit Los Angeles apartment building, seemingly outside of the universes ofRaimi’s original Evil Dead films and the 2013 remake Evil Dead. But the swooping camera work, splattering blood and chainsaws, and taunting demonic foes add up to an unmistakably Evil Dead movie.
If you’re planning to see the movie, or just want a refresher on one of the longest-running, most purely entertaining pop culture franchises, read on.
The Prototype
Raimi and Campbell had been friends since high school, making Super 8 movies together, building up to their most ambitious project to date:Within the Woods, a horror film about two couples who run into some supernatural trouble while staying at a cabin in the woods. Woods is predictably crude and some of the elements central to the Evil Dead mythos are absent. (Instead of an evil book, there’s a Native American burial ground.) But the restless energy that defined Raimi’s subsequent Evil Dead films, and much of the rest of his filmography, is already evident.
“Within the Woods” also served its primary purpose, serving as a proof-of-concept that would allow the team to make the (relatively) bigger budget feature they wanted to make.
The Classic Trilogy
In 1979, Raimi, Tapert, Campbell, and Within the Woods co-star Ellen Sandweiss reunited to film The Evil Dead, shooting much of the film at a remote cabin in rural Tennessee. It was, by all accounts, a brutal production. It was also a tremendous success. Raimi makes a virtue of his tight budget by using inventive tricks like a point-of-view shot to capture the perspective of an invading demon, and the result is a kinetic and scary film made all the more effective by its grunginess.
The Evil Dead also laid the foundation for the films that followed. The Evil Dead world is, to put it mildly, not governed by tight continuity and clear rules, particularly in these early films. In this first outing, Ash Williams (Campbell), his girlfriend Cheryl (Sandweiss) and three friends stumble on a book and recording of a professor reciting its incantations, having previously traveled to the cabin to do research (as one does). This unleashes demonic forces (later to be called “Deadites”) who possess the unfortunate vacationers and just about anything else they feel like possessing. The Deadites essentially do whatever the film needs them to do to be scary, whether that’s mockingly threatening the non-possessed or sexually assaulting a victim after taking over a tree.