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ARMY OF DARKNESS
Date of publication: 02/19/1993
For cast, rating and other information, (click here)
By Roger Ebert
- Sam Raimi's "Army of Darkness" is a goofy, hyperventilated
send-up of horror films and medieval warfare, so action-packed it
sometimes seems less like a movie than like a cardiovascular workout
for its stars. It makes the dubious claim of being a sequel to
Raimi's "Evil Dead II" (1987), on the basis of a tenuous link: A
cursed Book of the Dead found by the hero in that movie has sent him
hurtling back through time to the Middle Ages, where this movie takes
place. Uh-huh.
- "Army of Darkness" stars Bruce Campbell, who also starred in
the first two "Evil Dead" movies, and who looks like a square-jawed,
muscular comic book hero. The movie itself looks storyboarded; one
action sequence flows into another with only the briefest of pauses
for elementary plot details.
- Campbell plays Ash, who in real life works in a discount
supermarket, but finds himself and his car deposited on a medieval
battlefield, where before long Ash assumes leadership and leads his
knights in warfare against an army of the dead. (There are more
animated skeletons here than in any film since "Jason and the
Argonauts.")
- The method of the film is simple. As many action and horror
cliches as possible are trashed; the film does for medieval mythology
and horror what "The Naked Gun" did for cops. Ash, you will recall,
lost his left forearm in an earlier film, and has had the stump
modified to act as a mounting for a chainsaw. He fires a shotgun with
his right hand, and in case you're wondering how anyone could load a
shotgun with a chainsaw, the answer is: It's not necessary, because
the shotgun never needs loading.
- Heads spin, body parts fly through the arm, geysers of blood
shoot into the heavens, and Ash uses his old Chemistry 101 textbook
to learn how to manufacture gunpowder, which is catapulted into the
midst of the skeleton soldiers. Meanwhile, the beautiful Sheila
(Embeth Davidtz) falls in love with Ash, during those interludes when
she has not been magically transformed into a murderous harpy.
- The special effects in "Army of Darkness" are ingenious and
a lot of fun. The makeup is state of the art. So are the severed
limbs, geysers of blood, etc. The movie isn't as funny or
entertaining as "Evil Dead II," however, maybe because the comic
approach seems recycled. Then again, the movie seems aimed at an
audience of 14-year olds, who would have been 8 when "Evil Dead II"
came out, so maybe this will all seem breathtakingly original.
Army of Darkness (STAR) (STAR)
Ash Bruce Campbell
Sheila Embeth Davidtz
Directed by Sam Raimi. Running time: 81 minutes. Classified R (for
violence and horror). Opening today at local theaters.
Copyright © Chicago Sun-Times Inc.
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