ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

Review: Horror hits home in ‘Evil Dead Rise’

The new release is playing at or coming to local movie theaters near you: Cozy Theatre in Wadena, Comet Theater in Perham and Washington Square 7 in Detroit Lakes.

"Evil Dead Rise" movie poster
"Evil Dead Rise" is the latest installment in Sam Raimi's "Evil Dead" horror film franchise. The new release in some movie theaters is also available now to watch at home on select streaming services.
Frank Lee / Wadena Pioneer Journal

Almost nothing is as scary as when loved ones are in danger.

A family terrorized by a malevolent supernatural force in “Evil Dead Rise” knows that in the latest installment in Sam Raimi’s “Evil Dead” film franchise. The new picture was recently released theatrically and is available now on streaming services.

Raimi and franchise star Bruce Campbell executive produced the R-rated film written and directed by Lee Cronin, who made his directing debut in 2019 with another supernatural horror movie “The Hole in the Ground,” which had a plot like “Invasion of the Body Snatchers.”

“Evil Dead Rise” is a taut thriller that runs about 90 minutes long and is gory, but not gratuitously so, for a feature film about the fabled “Naturom Demonto,” Latin for “Book of the Dead.” A single mom and her three children in the film have the unfortunate circumstance of finding the tome.

With a book cover made from human skin and razor-sharp, animal-like teeth holding its covers shut against prying eyes, the “Book of the Dead” is not something one finds at the local library or at Amazon.com. The centuries-old religious artifact is more a harbinger of pain and misery.

ADVERTISEMENT

Teen Danny in “Evil Dead Rise” accidentally discovers the cursed book at his family’s condemned Los Angeles apartment complex during a natural disaster. Rather than leaving well enough alone like anyone who has ever watched a horror movie would do, he absconds with it.

Soon tragedy visits the family, starting with his single mother, a tattoo artist played by Australian actress Alyssa Sutherland. Mostly unknown to American audiences, the lanky Sutherland uses her physical form to great effect when she becomes possessed after the book is unwisely read.

Frank Lee headshot
Frank Lee
Kelly Humphrey / Brainerd Dispatch

The body count soon starts to pile up and the blood begins to flow freely when well-intentioned apartment neighbors get in on the action and try to help the family. But the movie never strays too far from the audience’s emotional investment in the safety of Danny’s family and his aunt.

Another Aussie, Lily Sullivan, plays the estranged and visiting Aunt Beth, who unbeknownst to the guitar technician she portrays on screen, could not have picked a worse time to catch up in person with her sister Ellie and her brood of three young children.

Beth is conflicted about her discovery that she is pregnant and visits Ellie for some advice and to view parenting up close and personal, to find out what it’s like to be a mom whose safety of her children is paramount, what it means to love unconditionally and learn about self-sacrifice.

In fact, when Ellie turns on her children after she becomes possessed, it’s up to Beth and the surviving family members to rally one another to save what lives they can (or their own). And it also means some of the siblings or the aunt will have to die if they or she want to save others.

Themes of family and motherhood – and a copious amount of blood and lots of body parts – are in “Evil Dead Rise.” The HBO Max-intended movie was released theatrically by Warner Bros. after positive test screenings. The film honors the franchise’s legacy while taking it in a new direction.

“Evil Dead Rise” currently has an 84% approval rating among critics and a 77% approval rating among audiences at Rotten Tomatoes, a review-aggregation website for film and television.

ADVERTISEMENT

The consensus from the critics at RottenTomatoes.com: "Offering just about everything longtime fans could hope for while still managing to carry the franchise forward, ‘Evil Dead Rise’ is all kinds of groovy."

I cover the community of Wadena, Minn., and write features stories for the Wadena Pioneer Journal. The weekly newspaper is owned by Forum Communications Co.
What To Read Next
Get Local

ADVERTISEMENT