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Reprinted in Army of Darkness Omnibus Volume 2. Home Sweet Hell #9-12 With the world reset to its pre-apocalyptic state, Sheila discovers Ash has erased his memory of his deeds as "The Chosen One", turning him into a geeky stockboy, which has also made him a target for the physical avatars of the Seven Deadly Sins. Reunited with those who had ...
Army of Darkness [a] is a 1992 American dark fantasy comedy film directed, co-written, and co-edited by Sam Raimi. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] The film is the third installment in the Evil Dead film series and the sequel to Evil Dead II (1987).
Raimi confirmed plans to write Evil Dead 4 with his brother; it was later specified that this film would be Army of Darkness 2. [37] Álvarez revealed that Raimi would direct the sequel to Army of Darkness. [38] However, in a 2014 interview, Bruce Campbell announced that Army of Darkness 2 is not happening, saying "It's all internet b.s. There ...
Set in December 2008, 5 years after the events of the film Freddy vs. Jason and 16 years after the end of Army of Darkness, Will Rollins and Lori Campbell (the former protagonists from Freddy vs Jason) return to Crystal Lake to put closure to their experience, but Jason kills them a short while after and takes their decomposed corpses to his shack in the woods nearby.
Released for the PlayStation, Dreamcast, and Microsoft Windows, the game acts as a sequel to the 1992 film Army of Darkness. This was the second video game released to be based on the Evil Dead film franchise, following the 1984 title The Evil Dead, and was also the first video game to be developed by Heavy Iron Studios.
Evil Dead is an American comedy horror franchise created by Sam Raimi consisting of five feature films and a television series. The series originally revolves around the grimoire the Necronomicon Ex-Mortis, an ancient Sumerian text that wreaks havoc upon a group of cabin inhabitants in a wooded area in Tennessee.
Drag Me to Hell is a 2009 American supernatural horror film directed and co-written by Sam Raimi with Ivan Raimi, ... The Gift, and Army of Darkness. [18]
In the late 1980s, Raimi was initially attached to The Guardian, based on the 1987 book The Nanny by Dan Greenburg, but left in order to direct Darkman instead. According to screenwriter Stephen Volk, he and Raimi developed it as an "Omen-esque" horror film with set-pieces bordering on parody, but when William Friedkin replaced him, the script was rewritten from scratch.