Genre: Horror/Thriller
Director: Sam Raimi
Cast: Alison Lohman, Justin Long, Lorna Raver,
Jessica Lucas, David Paymer, Dileep Rao
RunTime: 1 hr 40 mins
Released By: GV & Scorpio East Pictures
Rating: PG (Horror & Some Disturbing Scenes)
Official Website: http://www.dragmetohell.net
Opening
Day: 11 June 2009
Synopsis:
Christine Brown (Alison Lohman) is an ambitious L.A. loan officer with a charming boyfriend, professor Clay Dalton (Justin Long). Life is good until the mysterious Mrs. Ganush (Lorna Raver) arrives at the bank to beg for an extension on her home loan. Should Christine follow her instincts and give the old woman a break? Or should she deny the extension to impress her boss, Mr. Jacks (David Paymer), and get a leg-up on a promotion? Christine fatefully chooses the latter, shaming Mrs. Ganush and dispossessing her of her home.
In retaliation, the old woman places the powerful curse of the Lamia on Christine, transforming her life into a living hell. Haunted by an evil spirit and misunderstood by a skeptical boyfriend, she seeks the aid of seer Rham Jas (Dileep Rao) to save her soul from eternal damnation. To help the shattered Christine return her life to normal, the psychic sets her on a frantic course to reverse the spell. As evil forces close in, Christine must face the unthinkable: how far will she go to break free of the curse?
Movie Review:
Hi, my
name is Justin, and I'm a Raimi fanboy.
Have been
since I was 13 years old, when I first saw VHS copies of the
“Evil Dead” trilogy. I remember them quite well.
I remember seeing one of the most inventive, inspiring shots
I'd ever seen in a film. You know the one in “Evil Dead
II”, when the camera takes on the point of view of a
demon settling on the cabin in the woods where our victims
and protagonists hid and in one long and unbroken shot, hurtled
through the woods, smashed into the door and chased our hero
from room to room. It was a delirious, manic romp that braced
and sustained my early interest in the genre that led me to
my favourite films -- “The Exorcist” and “Suspiria”.
It was so entertaining, so scary and so funny, but it was
also an education in films.
Raimi's
first feature, “The Evil Dead” introduced a young
filmmaker with terrific vision, inventive ideas and a refreshing
outlook on a genre that called for renewed innovation from
new bloods. Mixing in the spiritual tropes of “The Exorcist”
and Dario Argento's calculated blood-letting, Raimi showed
a mad but cultured approach to his scenes of terror and unnerving
provocations of unseen, intangible evils lurking away in the
shadows. He followed his prodigious debut with the above mentioned
quasi remake/sequel that acted as a sort of reboot to the
first by rewriting the characters and continuity to lead into
Raimi's now trademark melding of horror and slapstick, with
a heaping of ingenious grue-spattered nastiness. The film
was driven by a creative force so unhinged that it created
a visual diorama of gore and jet-black humour culminating
in “Army of Darkness”, the trilogy's last entry
– a film that seemed obligatory in its outlook but quickly
turned into a consuming blast of camp zaniness and exceptional
mind-etching set-pieces that redefined genre conventions and
turned them into staples, sealing Raimi's and his star performer,
Bruce Campbell's reputations as cult figures in the genre's
pantheon.
So after
a decade of helming yet another trilogy – the commercially
spectacular “Spider-Man” – the big question
going into Raimi's latest film, “Drag Me to Hell”
is whether one of the most resourceful and adroit film-makers
of his generation still had the chops to deliver new life
into a once lofty genre that is quickly becoming decimated
by cheap, often lazy remakes of Asian horror and nondescript
torture porn masquerading as horror.. Using a multi-platform
grab at teenagers and young adults – many of whom came
of age in the light of Raimi's early direction – through
meticulous reminders of his prodigious oeuvre, the hype leading
up to the release of the horror maestro's return to his playground
was significant as it differentiated itself from cookie-cutter
PG-13 horror films by the sole draw of its auteur's hallowed
reputation.
In many
respects “Drag Me to Hell” can be seen as the
coveted fourth “Evil Dead” film. It trades on
delicious 80s' nostalgia – from the opening frame of
its long unused studio logo to the film's build-up of the
genre's delectable excesses, culminating in the pitch-perfect
composition of an engaging narrative and the giddy volatility
of macabre absurdities. Raimi plays the most outrageous scenes
straight. That's not to say the film takes itself too seriously
at any point of time. There's an air of tongue-in-cheek vitality
in it that keeps us reassured that it scares us to entertain
us, like a carnival ride of frights and frisson. Perhaps it's
as an evolution of Raimi's approach to horror when he keeps
his protagonist – the ambitious, young loan officer
Christine (Alison Lohman) – real and consistently rattled
by that old predicament of a milky-eyed gypsy's vengeful curse
when she denies the old lady's mortgage payment. How's that
for contemporary moral-spiritual commentary of the banking
industry's long-overdue comeuppance?
This
film bares Raimi's signature tone and visual bravura throughout
the film, re-using and re-tooling much of the creepy imagery
from his past films and even manages to one-up and exhaust
the arsenal in his shock locker. He's here to have fun and
bring us along for the ride. It's hard to not be infected
by his excitement of getting loose of the didactic cobwebs
of the mainstream superhero films. Ultimately, Raimi gives
us a definitive answer to our probing of his viability by
refining his craftsmanship and even bringing back the possessed
camera-work and frenetic splatter gags of his glorious past.
“Drag Me to Hell” is a perfect storm of genre
film-making – rough, revolting and exuberant.
Movie Rating:
(Shocking, funny and a rollicking return to form by
Sam Raimi)
Review by Justin Deimen
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