6.9 | / 10 |
Users | 0.0 | |
Reviewer | 3.0 | |
Overall | 3.0 |
In the fifth Evil Dead film, a road-weary Beth pays an overdue visit to her older sister Ellie, who is raising three kids on her own in a cramped L.A. apartment. The sisters’ reunion is cut short by the discovery of a mysterious book deep in the bowels of Ellie’s building, giving rise to flesh-possessing demons, and thrusting Beth into a primal battle for survival as she is faced with the most nightmarish version of motherhood imaginable.
Starring: Lily Sullivan, Alyssa Sutherland, Morgan Davies (XII), Gabrielle Echols, Nell FisherHorror | 100% |
Supernatural | 28% |
Action | Insignificant |
Video codec: MPEG-4 AVC
Video resolution: 1080p
Aspect ratio: 2.39:1
Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1
English: Dolby Atmos
English: Dolby TrueHD 7.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
English: Dolby Digital 5.1 (448 kbps)
French (Canada): Dolby Digital 5.1
Spanish: Dolby Digital 5.1 (448 kbps)
English SDH, French, Spanish, Korean, Mandarin (Simplified), Mandarin (Traditional)
Blu-ray Disc
Two-disc set (1 BD, 1 DVD)
Digital copy
DVD copy
Slipcover in original pressing
Region A (B, C untested)
Movie | 3.5 | |
Video | 4.0 | |
Audio | 5.0 | |
Extras | 0.0 | |
Overall | 3.0 |
I'm not the world's biggest Evil Dead fan by any stretch, with my lifetime experience limited to a few stray viewings of Sam Raimi's original three films during my teenage and twenty-something years... and that's pretty much it. I certainly don't have them memorized, nor have I seen later installments yet such as the 2013 remake or even a single episode of Ash vs. Evil Dead. So I actually breathed a small sigh of relief knowing that Lee Cronin's Evil Dead Rise is more of a spiritual continuation to the long-running franchise than a new sequel, one that required no deep knowledge of its lore to enjoy or understand. Nonetheless, this blood-soaked exercise in claustrophobic horror feels like it achieves a decent balance of appealing to die-hard franchise devotees, total newcomers, and people like myself (AKA "somewhere in the middle") by retaining its peaks and valleys while throwing in more than a little harmless fan service.
Trouble has long been brewing for this unconventional family unit, and now you can go ahead and add "supernatural entity hell-bent on death and destruction" to the list. Upon returning from a last-minute pizza run, the kids are terrified by an earthquake that rocks the city and leaves a large hole in their apartment building's parking garage. The curious Danny crawls in to explore and finds an abandoned vault will all sorts of relics inside, including a creepy-looking book that might be valuable and even a few dusty records (presumably for sampling!). Ellie, Beth, and their neighbors are happy to have the kids back safe and sound, but shit goes down quick once Danny and Bridget pry the book open and play their new records, the second of which features a creepy backwards incantation. After a power failure occurs and an unseen force takes control of Ellie's body, she's violent towards her family, briefly comatose, and soon awakens in a ghastly new physical form, ready to unleash all manner of revenge for bringing her back into the world.
Evil Dead Rise does a number of things extremely well once its oddball opener is out of the way, not the least of which is its overall mood and tone, which is effectively oppressive and fully commits to a quickly-building sense of dread as its story unfolds. At a mostly sleek 97 minutes, it feels paced just right for a story that's essentially stripped down to the bare minimum for character development and extraneous details. (One could argue that it doesn't help us care about the affected family, but I'd argue that wouldn't have helped much.) Viewers will feel an uncanny amount of dread as key and supporting characters are maimed and outright killed, and often done so with practical effects and buckets upon buckets of fake blood that are practically franchise staples at this point. Subtle -- and not-so-subtle -- references are made to previous horror classics, from several Evil Dead entries to genre staples like The Shining. Yet none of its highlights stand out as strongly as Alyssa Sutherland's central performance as Ellie: she all but steals the show with a truly committed take on her character that's equal parts likeable, horrifying, and sympathetic.
Small portions of Evil Dead Rise keep it from achieving greater success. Garden-variety horror clichés are on board, such as a few
bone-headed decisions (one character listens to a record on over-the-ear headphones while a demon knowingly lurks), obligatory jump
scares, and "don't go in there" moments, as well as the aforementioned bookend segments and personal pet peeves like its overuse of young
actors. But by and large this is a decent effort for the franchise and genre, with its existing strengths also supported by fine
cinematography, effective music and sound design, and a running time that doesn't wear out its welcome once it gets going. This Blu-ray/DVD
combo pack from Warner Bros. offers a good A/V presentation but no extras. A separate 4K combo pack is also available.
My separate review of the 4K combo pack includes a general overview of Evil Dead Rise's particular visual aesthetic, where I referred to it as David Fincher Dark™. That factor alone -- which refers to its generally muted colors, heavy shadows, and only the bare minimum of light sources in some scenes -- is why Warner Bros. Blu-ray can't help but fall short of its UHD counterpart: even for a movie-only disc, this is awfully tough source material to squeeze comfortably onto a 1080p disc. As a result viewers will be able to pick out occasional signs of black crush and banding, as well as a generally less impactful overall appearance that gives the film a more boosted and unnatural look. Of course I'm saying all this in hindsight: those who didn't (or have no plans to) see Evil Dead Rise theatrically or on 4K/HDR home video probably won't know the difference, and from that vantage point this Blu-ray certainly offers a capable enough visual presentation on small to mid-size screens. As before, image detail comes and goes by design and the colors are still very well-represented -- if not a bit mushy in its darkest moments -- which can be a bit distracting but it certainly doesn't render the film anywhere close to unwatchable. I'll give it a warm 3.75/5 overall, yet this is a tough one to grade objectively and, for the most part, those not interested in 4K may not really notice or care.
Armed with a full-bodied Dolby Atmos mix, Evil Dead Rise goes all-in on its oppressive sonic atmosphere during critical moments, heightening tension with excellent use of side, back, height, and LFE channels to maintain its claustrophobic atmosphere. Early highlights arrive during the rushing low-angle opening credits and a handful of teasing jump scares while returning thereafter at predictable moments, from an earthquake that leads to the Book of the Dead's discovery to the absolute terror that arrives in its wake. A handful of creative sonic touches dot the landscape, from periodic playback of several ancient records -- through speakers, headphones, and one by unconventional means -- to distorted vocals that writhe and twist around the frequently wide sound stage. Other moments, such as a climactic showdown in the apartment's parking garage (where one character is later somehow able to video chat with no reception issues), operate on quiet-loud dynamics with tension ratcheted up to its highest levels. From start to finish, it's an effectively merciless mix that's rendered faithfully to bring a theater-grade audio experience home.
Optional subtitles, including English (SDH), are offered during the main feature.
This two-disc release ships in a dual-hubbed keepcase with poster-themed cover artwork, a matching matte-finish slipcover, and a Digital Copy redemption code. Somewhat shockingly, no bonus features are included.
Lee Cronin's Evil Dead Rise is a solid spiritual successor in an enduring franchise with no real prerequisite knowledge needed, making it an accessible entry point for new fans but familiar enough to satisfy seasoned vets. It does a number of things extremely well: the pacing is tight (aside from the bookending segments, which are frankly pointless), Alyssa Sutherland's performance is bananas and, perhaps most importantly, it commits to the ultra-bleak atmosphere and doesn't skimp on the gore. Other elements keep it from scoring higher, but in my opinion it's the rare modern horror continuation that actually does what it sets out to do. Warner Bros.' Blu-ray combo pack offers a predictably strong A/V presentation, but the complete lack of extras is a bummer. Fine for casuals, but the 4K is a better buy.
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