Welcome back to Retro Flashback. Today we have a special critique, Sam Raimi's Evil Dead 2. There are countless sites devoted to the Evil Dead series and rather than rehashing old material, I thought we could try to find ways to view this classic in a new way. We all know Ash to be a hero, but what is he fighting for? Is it possible that he is merely battling for his own sanity? We will also rate Dead By Dawn to see where it falls in your horror education.
“Whether I shall turn out to be the hero of my own life, or whether that station will be held by anybody else, these pages must show. To begin my life with the beginning of my life, I record that I was born (as I have been informed and believe) on a Friday, at twelve o'clock at night. It was remarked that the clock began to strike, and I began to cry, simultaneously.” - Charles Dickens – David Copperfield
“Groovy!”
Ashley “Ash” Williams
In the beginning...
Sam Raimi was born in 1959 in Franklin Michigan. He is the second youngest of four children. When he was growing up, he idolized his oldest brother Sander. Sander was an amateur magician and a huge fan of Spider-Man comics. He taught young Sam all about magic and superheroes. When Sam was nine, his brother passed away in a tragic drowning accident. Sam was devastated, but vowed to continue Sander's penchant for thrilling audiences. Sam saved every penny he earned, doing odd jobs around the neighborhood, to purchase his first 8mm camera. He and another neighborhood friend, Bruce Campbell, got together and made innovative short films. After high school, the two friends went off to Michigan State University and they formed a club: Society for Creative Filmmaking. Through this club, Sam met many artists who would go on to help him throughout his career. One of these artists was Rob Tabbert. Sam, Rob, and Bruce found a modicum of success with their short films. Raimi's first film, It's Murder, was made when he was only eighteen years old. The collective – now including Sam's brothers and Scott Spiegel - went on to make a half an hour short called “Within The Woods.” With these short films as his calling cards he was able to raise money for The Evil Dead. So, he decided to drop out of college and become a filmmaker. While working on The Evil Dead, he was able to procure the editing team of Edna Ruth Paul and her assistant Joel Coen. Paul and Coen had worked on Fear No Evil (1981) and later Paul consulted on the editing of the Coen brothers first film Blood Simple (1984). After The Evil Dead, Raimi directed Crimewave which was written by Joel and Ethan. Since then, the collective, has interacted and assisted each other with each film. But we didn't come here for a history lesson, we came for Evil Dead 2.