The reboot of the horror movie classic played like gangbusters in Austin, but the making of it was just as creepy.
The cinematic "rebirth" of the '80s cult horror classic Evil Dead premiered late Friday night at the SXSW Film Festival to a raucous reception from the bloodthirsty crowd. And good grief, did they get a lot of blood — two tanker-trucks of it, according to director Fede Alvarez. That's 100,000 gallons of fake blood, and it's not the only unsettling revelation we learned about this movie while in Austin. Here are seven (well, more like six) more.
(WARNING! SPOILERS AHEAD!)
Image by Michael Buckner / Getty Images
Being covered in blood really is the worst.
The film follows the unfortunate exploits of five twentysomethings in a ramshackle cabin in the woods, who gather to help their friend Mia (Jane Levy) kick her drug habit. When Eric (Lou Taylor Pucci) comes across a book of the dead and reads from it, he unleashes a demonic force that possesses Mia's body and rips up her soul.
Which meant everyone was constantly bombarded with jets of blood.
So. What was that like? "Sticky," says actress Elizabeth Blackmore (Legend of the Seeker), pictured above.
"It's actually the most uncomfortable part about [making the film]," adds Levy (Suburgatory). "I swam through a swamp. I got buried alive. But the constant blood on your chest and under your chin and on your neck and crusted to your skin? Not fun."
The experience was especially difficult for Pucci (Southland Tales), who had fought for his academically inclined character to sport long hair and a grad student beard. "The dumbest idea ever," he says with a laugh. "It looked really good, but man, that beard was caked in blood every single day."
Image by TriStar Pictures
The book of the dead had hair on it. HAIR!
Called the Necronomicon in original 1981 The Evil Dead, the literally devilish book that causes everyone in the film such heartache had a slightly different look in the new version. Rather than sporting a goulish demonic face, explains Pucci, "it was just this disgusting, sewn-together skin that had hair on it." He laughs. "It was so nasty. It's hard to see [the hair] because it's only in a couple shots, but man that thing was nasty." He pauses. "I really want to grab a page out of it take it home. Frame it. But I didn't."
Did he learn nothing from the movie?!
Image by TriStar Pictures
Actress Jessica Lucas was resurrected to attack Lou Taylor Pucci.
It's no shock to learn that each character dies off one by one as they are possessed by the demon unleashed by Pucci's character. For Lucas' character, it meant at one point she had to crawl along a bathroom floor attacking her one-time best friend.
"She was so angry," says Pucci with a laugh.
"Well, you do it for the 20th time, it gets a little uncomfortable," says Lucas with a smile.
Actually, Lucas wasn't initially supposed to do it at all. "The second half of the bathroom scene where you see me crawling was [shot] months later," she says. "I was there [on set] for six weeks. I had wrapped the film. I went home. And right near the end [of production] I got a call saying 'You have to come back. We want to extend [the scene].'"
"It was so worth it," adds Pucci.
Image by TriStar Pictures