During the production
of the movie there upfolded a legal battle in which AOD was caught
up. It had nothing to do with the content of the movie or an infringement
of any kind by the Renaissance team. This section will attempt to
wrap up the main crux of the situation and explain exactly what
went down. All information has been taken from other sources available
on the Internet.
How
it all began: Let's
start by saying that the situation arose between the following parties:
Dino DeLaurentiis( producer of AOD) and Tom
Pollock, president of Universal Pictures, the movie's US
distributor.
Reason
for the ensuing court struggle: Sam
Raimi: "Dino DeLaurentiis
, who had the sequel rights to Silence of the Lambs, had talked
to [Universal head] Tom Pollock about doing a co-production on the
sequel, with Universal releasing it in the States and Dino distributing
it foreign, as they've done with other pictures. When Silence of
the Lambs made it so big, and was such a huge financial success,
Tom came back to Dino and said, 'Let's go with that deal we had.'
I beleieve Dino said to Tom, 'We only talked about a deal.
We don't have a deal.' Therein lay the crux of the probelm."
Consequences: -
It delayed the release from autumn 1992 to January 1993. "The
only thing they had in common [at that time] was Army of Darkness,
so until they finally settled on the Lambs sequel, which they did,
they were using Army of Darkness as something between a hostage
and a bargaining chip; this delayed the release.", explained Raimi.
- It stopped any extra financial support from the studio,
"...which I really
needed."
-
It prevented a preview of the movie to the public, "...which
I also needed, I always count on not those cards, but just the audience
reaction, in shaping a cut-they're not jumping here, that's not
getting a laugh, let's sharpen it somehow."
Eventually
the film was released in the US on January 15, 1993 to less than
overwhelming critical acclaim. Fans of the previous films shunned
it having turned the series into a slapstick mockery of the raw
horror of the original. All quotes are from Sam Raimi.