Sam Raimi
Birthday:
Birthplace:
Royal Oak, Michigan, USA
Like most children of the 1960s, Sam Raimi grew up acting out his fantasies with the benefit of an 8 mm movie camera. The film gauge "grew to 35" when Raimi, with the aid of friends and relatives, raised 500,000 dollars to film a horror feature, The Evil Dead (1983). Not your average sliced-up-teenager epic, Evil Dead was a marvelously wicked assault on the senses, belying its tiny budget with several extremely clever (if nausea-inducing) set pieces. Raimi switched to slapstick comedy with Crimewave (1985), a wild Detroit-based crime caper co-scripted by Raimi's friends and fellow devotees of the bizarre, Joel and Ethan Coen. Evil Dead 2: Dead By Dawn (1987) giddily expanded the scope and splat-stick humor of the initial installment, and quickly became a cult classic with it s over-the-top gore and imaginative direction. Evil Dead 2 was the mark of a director truly at the top of his creative game, and with that film a foundation was cemented between Raimi and Bruce Campbell that would reach almost mythical status among the hardcore fans of the series. Raimi next came out guns-blazing for Darkman (1990), a comic-book inspired fantasy/adventure representing the director's biggest production budget to date. Though it performed only moderately at the box office, fans clamored to see Raimi's first major release and got an extra kick out of longtime friend and Evil Dead cohort Bruce Campbell in an all-too-brief closing-scene cameo. Also expensively mounted was Army of Darkness (1992), a time-travel swashbuckler that gave evidence of extensive post-production tinkering (notably its skimpy 80-minute running time). A sequel to the first two Evil Dead flicks, the film was released under the more ambiguous title lest it be associated with the outrageously gory previous installments. In the following years the now-established director would hone his talents as a producer with such big-budget action releases as Hard Target (1993) and Timecop (1994). The mid-'90s also found Raimi producing two tele-films that would become the genesis of television's massively popular Hercules: The Legendary Journeys (Raimi would continue as executive producer during the series' four-year run) as well as executive producing Hercules arguably more successful companion series, Xena: Warrior Princess.In 1995, Raimi once again stepped back behind the camera to helm The Quick and the Dead, a revisionist Western starring Sharon Stone. It earned only a lukewarm reception, and it was three years before Raimi directed another feature. 1998's A Simple Plan was a far greater success than The Quick and the Dead: Starring Billy Bob Thornton and Bill Paxton as brothers driven to mistrust and paranoia after discovering four million dollars in the woods, it was Raimi's most lauded film to date, earning a Best Adapted Screenplay Oscar nomination for Scott B. Smith and a Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination for Thornton. The following year, Raimi submerged himself fully in the mainstream, directing the Kevin Costner baseball vehicle For Love of the Game. Unfortunately, the film met with a very mixed reaction from critics and audiences alike, many of whom longed for the days when Bruce Campbell, demonic mutilation, and possessed appendages reigned supreme. The Southern gothic trappings of Raimi's next film, The Gift (2000), found the director's longtime fan base hesitantly re-embracing the one-time cult figure with its tale of the supernatural and quietly creepy atmosphere. A frightening performance by the usually non-threatening Keanu Reeves caught jaded filmgoers off guard and the decidedly low-key film contained enough scares to prove that while it may have been temporarily dulled, Raimi had certainly not lost his edge.Although Raimi's next effort may not have been the long-anticipated fourth chapter in the Evil Dead saga (a fanboy fantasy that Raimi and Campbell had cheerfully dismissed on numerous occasions), the long-anticipated release of Spider-Man found the director
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Highest Rated Movies
Filmography
MOVIES
RATING | TITLE | CREDIT | BOX OFFICE | YEAR |
---|---|---|---|---|
26% | The Unholy |
|
— | 2021 |
21% | The Grudge |
|
— | 2020 |
No Score Yet | La maldición |
|
— | 2020 |
No Score Yet | La maldición |
|
— | 2020 |
No Score Yet | The Grudge: Maldição |
|
— | 2020 |
83% | Crawl |
|
— | 2019 |
88% | Don't Breathe |
|
$89.3M | 2016 |
94% | The Jungle Book |
|
$364M | 2016 |
No Score Yet | The Last of Us |
|
— | 2016 |
30% | Poltergeist |
|
$40M | 2015 |
27% | Murder of a Cat |
|
— | 2014 |
No Score Yet | Burst 3D |
|
— | 2014 |
No Score Yet | 3 Geezers! |
|
— | 2013 |
63% | Evil Dead |
|
$54.2M | 2013 |
57% | Oz the Great and Powerful |
|
$235M | 2013 |
39% | The Possession |
|
$49.1M | 2012 |
40% | Armored |
|
$16M | 2009 |
92% | Drag Me to Hell |
|
$42.1M | 2009 |
No Score Yet | Suck My Geek! |
|
— | 2007 |
No Score Yet | Boogeyman 2 |
|
— | 2007 |
51% | 30 Days of Night |
|
$39.6M | 2007 |
33% | Rise: Blood Hunter |
|
$59.9k | 2007 |
63% | Spider-Man 3 |
|
$336.6M | 2007 |
12% | The Messengers |
|
$35.4M | 2007 |
12% | The Grudge 2 |
|
$39.2M | 2006 |
13% | Boogeyman |
|
$46.4M | 2005 |
40% | The Grudge |
|
$110.2M | 2004 |
93% | Spider-Man 2 |
|
$373.4M | 2004 |
No Score Yet | Spider-Man 2.1 (Extended Cut) |
|
— | 2004 |
90% | Spider-Man |
|
$403.8M | 2002 |
57% | The Gift |
|
$11.2M | 2000 |
46% | For Love of the Game |
|
— | 1999 |
91% | A Simple Plan |
|
— | 1998 |
No Score Yet | Young Hercules |
|
— | 1998 |
33% | Darkman III: Die Darkman Die |
|
— | 1996 |
29% | Darkman II: The Return of Durant |
|
— | 1995 |
No Score Yet | Galaxis |
|
— | 1995 |
57% | The Quick and the Dead |
|
— | 1995 |
No Score Yet | Hercules in the Maze of the Minotaur |
|
— | 1994 |
No Score Yet | Hercules in the Underworld |
|
— | 1994 |
No Score Yet | Hercules and the Circle of Fire |
|
— | 1994 |
45% | Timecop |
|
— | 1994 |
20% | The Flintstones |
|
— | 1994 |
No Score Yet | Hercules and the Lost Kingdom |
|
— | 1994 |
No Score Yet | Hercules and the Amazon Women |
|
— | 1994 |
59% | The Hudsucker Proxy |
|
— | 1994 |
67% | Body Bags |
|
— | 1993 |
58% | Indian Summer |
|
— | 1993 |
No Score Yet | Journey to the Center of the Earth |
|
— | 1993 |
73% | Army of Darkness |
|
— | 1993 |
58% | Hard Target |
|
— | 1993 |
38% | Innocent Blood |
|
— | 1992 |
No Score Yet | Lunatics: A Love Story |
|
— | 1992 |
92% | Miller's Crossing |
|
— | 1990 |
No Score Yet | Easy Wheels |
|
— | 1990 |
58% | Maniac Cop 2 |
|
— | 1990 |
83% | Darkman |
|
— | 1990 |
No Score Yet | Intruder |
|
— | 1989 |
No Score Yet | The Dead Next Door |
|
— | 1989 |
53% | Maniac Cop |
|
— | 1988 |
95% | Evil Dead 2: Dead by Dawn |
|
— | 1987 |
No Score Yet | Thou Shalt Not Kill... Except |
|
— | 1987 |
50% | Crimewave |
|
— | 1986 |
32% | Spies Like Us |
|
— | 1985 |
No Score Yet | Stryker's War (Thou Shalt Not Kill... Except) |
|
— | 1985 |
95% | The Evil Dead |
|
— | 1981 |
No Score Yet | Within the Woods |
|
— | 1978 |
TV
RATING | TITLE | CREDIT | YEAR |
---|---|---|---|
85% |
50 States of Fright
2020
|
|
|
99% |
Ash vs Evil Dead
2015-2018
|
|
|
68% |
Rake
2014
|
|
|
67% |
Spartacus
2010-2013
|
|
|
69% |
Spartacus: Gods of the Arena
2011
|
|
|
46% |
Legend of the Seeker
2008-2010
|
|
|
No Score Yet |
13---Fear Is Real
2009
|
|
|
No Score Yet |
Xena: Warrior Princess
1995-2001
|
|
|
40% |
Cleopatra 2525
2000-2001
|
|
|
No Score Yet |
Hercules: The Legendary Journeys
1995-1999
|
|
|
67% |
American Gothic
1995-1996
|
|
|
No Score Yet |
Jack of All Trades
2000
|
|
|
Quotes from Sam Raimi's Characters
Knight: | He has fallen from the sky to save us from the deadites, he's a hero! (all knights shouting hero) |
Knight: | He has fallen from the sky to save us from the deadites, he's a hero! |
Ash Ashley J. Williams: | No.No. NO! |
Ash Ashley J. Williams: | No. No. No! |
Stick Coder: | I used some pretty heavy masking tape and lots of it, but it was no match for Ida Heikin. |
Knight: | Hail he who has come from the skies to deliver us from the terrors of the deadites! Hail! Hail! Hail! |
Ash Ashley J. Williams: | No! No!! No!!! No!!!!!! |
Ash Ashley J. Williams: | No! No! No! No! |