HORROR MOVIE REVIEW Evil Dead Burn- French Extreme Horror Hits the Evil Dead Franchise
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Evil Dead Burn: French Extreme Horror Hits the Evil Dead Franchise

Sébastian Vanicek’s Infested follow-up brings New French Extremity and a family abuse metaphor to the Deadite saga.

The Evil Dead franchise goes French extreme—and the humour is the first casualty.

Evil Dead Burn: French Extreme Horror Hits the Evil Dead Franchise review
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Sébastian Vanicek, the director behind the claustrophobic spider nightmare Infested, drags the Evil Dead franchise into the unflinching territory of French Extreme Cinema. Evil Dead Burn abandons the series’ signature gallows humour and replaces it with a grim, propulsive nightmare of abusive relationships and Deadite carnage. Anchored by Souheila Yacoub, the film channels New French Extremity’s visceral brutality across an hour and fifty minutes of unforgiving butchery. It may not sit comfortably alongside Evil Dead Rise or Raimi’s slapstick horrors, but for a blood-soaked descent into relentless horror, it stakes its own grim claim.

Evil Dead Burn: French Extreme Horror Hits the Evil Dead Franchise

Vanicek opens hard and never slows down. The film’s humorlessness and its somewhat tortured (ha!) central metaphor keep it from feeling truly at home in the franchise. But for an hour and fifty minutes of unforgiving butchery, you could do worse.

A Horror Movie Review by Hope Madden

The Evil Dead franchise goes French extreme—and the humour is the first casualty.

Nasty. Relentless. Grim.

Evil Dead Burn saw me coming!

Say what you will about the Deadite franchise, but you’re not likely to use the adjective “boring.” One of the reasons it’s remained relevant over six films and a 3-season TV show is that the team behind the bloodshed is not afraid to switch things up. Sam Raimi’s original, Stooges-inspired trilogy and the Bruce Campbell starring TV series were more grossout comedies than anything.

But the films took on a darker tone with Fede Alvarez’s 2013 reboot, a style that continued with Lee Cronin’s 2023 episode, Evil Dead Rise. For their latest installment, Executive Producer Raimi tapped French filmmaker Sébastian Vanicek.

Vanicek’s 2023 arachnid horror Infested was an impressive exercise in claustrophobic terror. He brings with him the flavor of French Extreme Cinema, so vital and gruesome in the early 2000s. What he abandons is the underlying, though ever darkening, humor that has always marked the franchise.

That or it just doesn’t work this time.

In what is essentially a metaphor for abusive relationships, Evil Dead Burn follows one family in the wake of their eldest son’s ghastly vehicular death. Naturally, the family gathers to mourn in their dead grandpa’s old farmhouse. He used to travel the world collecting creepy stories, kept a journal scribbled with incantations. You know the drill. It stars with “kanda” and ends with serious carnage.

Vanicek writes the script with Raimi and Florent Bernard, who co-wrote Infested. The story is tight enough, and solid performances quickly carve out recognizable characters who still manage not to feel flat or cliché.

Souheila Yacoub is Alice, the deceased’s widow and our central figure. Her tortured past sometimes threatens to weigh down the mayhem, but it never drags anything to a stop. How could it? Vanicek opens hard and never slows down.

The action choreography is fascinating. Cinematographer Philip Lozano (MadS, Cobweb) takes inspiration from the Raimi classic, his camera snaking and stalking its way through scenes. But this camera rolls, dips, and flies, all of it in service of the slaughter.

The film’s humorlessness and its somewhat tortured (ha!) central metaphor keep it from feeling truly at home in the franchise. But for an hour and fifty minutes of unforgiving butchery, you could do worse.


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Hope Madden, a graduate of The Ohio State University, is an author and filmmaker.

In addition to 12 years at the independent weekly newspaper The Other Paper, Hope has written for Columbus Monthly Magazine, The Ohio State University Alumni Magazine, and is a published poet. Her first novel, Roost, is out now, as is the anthology Incubate, which includes her short story “Aggrieved.” She recently wrote and directed Obstacle Corpse, the first feature film from MaddWolf Productions! She also writes for Columbus Underground and the UK Film Review.

In Central Ohio, you can catch Hope on TV every Friday morning on ABC6/Fox28’s Good Day Columbus.