Warner Bros. Discovery
What did Evil Dead Rise do in its production? The new film in the saga reaches unimaginable heights in terms of people and, above all, blood.
Evil Dead Rise made a mess with people and blood. The director of the tape, Lee Cronin, has confirmed the ridiculous amount of fake blood that was used during the filming of the film.
According to information from Slash Film, Evil Dead Rise used about 6,500 liters of fake blood. That is to say, more than the one that contains 1,133 alive people. Cronin noted that “it’s movie blood, sticky and disgusting. Like the real one. There is no trick in taking some water and putting red food coloring in it. Because that doesn’t work. Everything was cooked. We had to hire an industrial kitchen to make the amount of blood we needed, and it was everywhere. So yeah, it’s the real deal. And it’s splattered all over the screen.”
This is all we can expect from the new movie
Warner Bros. Discovery
Lee Cronin has also commented on the doubts that raised him the use of so much fake blood in the filming of Evil Dead Rise. “I had to hire an industrial kitchen to create the amount of blood we needed,” recalls the filmmaker. “When I was checking out, I had to warn the landlord: ‘He’s going to find bloody handprints all over the apartment… but they’re not real, really!’”
The latest installment in the long-running franchise that began with Sam Raimi’s 1981 cult classic Hell’s Possession, Evil Dead Rise is preparing to take the saga out of its usual woodsy haunts and into the big city. It’s all thanks to an outbreak of Deadites within the walls of a Los Angeles apartment building.. Cronin had already opened up about Raimi’s requests when making the film, noting that Raimi asked him to “make sure there’s a book involved, and make sure there are good Deadites.” Cronin weighed in on the franchise’s demonic villains: “What I love is that they’re not just mindless zombies. They talk and make fun… There is more dialogue than ever”.
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