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Evil Dead Trap

1988 [JAPANESE]

Action / Horror

7
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh100%
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled49%
IMDb Rating6.2102963

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
919.69 MB
1204*720
Japanese 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 40 min
P/S ...
1.67 GB
1792*1072
Japanese 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 40 min
P/S 0 / 2

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by The_Void7 / 10

Relentlessly gory Japanese splatter

After seeing The Evil Dead Trap, I'm not surprised at all that it has a rather strong cult following; as despite the fact that the plot is rather ludicrous and the film isn't particularly well thought out, it makes up for these problems with a plethora of special effects and a bucket of gore; and the result is a brilliantly fun piece of Japanese horror. The influence for this film is clearly far reaching, but the most obvious is probably the Cronenberg masterpiece Videodrome, though the oeuvre of Lucio Fulci seems to be an influence and of course the English title is a clear rip-off of a very popular early eighties horror film. The plot focuses on a late night reality TV show hosted a young lady named Nami. The show receives a videotape that includes apparently real snuff tape footage. This leads the team to go and track down the origin of the tape, and they arrive at an old warehouse. After gaining access to the facility, it's not long before the group begin being picked off by an unseen assailant.

The film could easily be seen as a slasher flick, but actually it's much more ambitious than that. The snuff footage at the beginning of the film sets the tone for the rest of it; the violence is extreme, but also rather realistic and that is carried on throughout. One of my favourite things about it was undoubtedly the atmosphere; director Toshiharu Ikeda makes best use of the location and the fact that the central characters are isolated from the outside world. The violence is often shown and extreme and this is what makes the film entertaining. It's also rather inventive and the film offers much more than merely another man with a knife. The problems regarding the plotting and character are somewhat condemning; I do feel that if a bit more time and attention were given to these areas then the film could easily have been a masterpiece. But even so, if you want a good gorefest then you really can't do better than this film! I wouldn't hesitate to recommend it to all horror fans.

Reviewed by Leofwine_draca5 / 10

Stylistic gore flick

I wasn't a huge fan of this one, but then I don't really like gore flicks or style-over-substance, albeit with some exceptions. This one's a derivative little story that starts off with a snuff plot before moving into EVIL DEAD territory, with a bunch of characters in an abandoned factory tortured and killed by a mystery killer. It's certainly gory, featuring lots of bloody nastiness and an eyeball scene that outdoes the one in ZOMBIE FLESH EATERS, but around the halfway mark I started to find it more than a little tiresome and can't say I enjoyed it all that much.

Reviewed by Hey_Sweden7 / 10

"This isn't a place for adults." Or anybody else, for that matter.

This cult favorite B horror flick from Japan stars Miyuki Ono as Nami, the host of a late night TV program. One day, she receives in the mail a tape that contains footage of what appears to be an honest-to-God snuff film. Repulsed but fascinated, Nami assembles a camera crew (mostly female) and heads for the deserted factory where it is believed the footage was shot. Soon, Nami and company are subjected to repeated terrors, for there is indeed a killer on the premises.

At first, the set-up and the story (by Takashi Ishii) would seem to be on the routine side, but director Toshiharu Ikeda handles all of it in style, and delivers tons of potent doom-and-gloom atmosphere. The production design is truly first-rate, the gore by Shin'ichi Wakasa is first-rate ("Evil Dead Trap" can boast two great murder set pieces),the music (reminiscent of the Goblin score for "Suspiria", just one thing that "Evil Dead Trap" references) is good, and the performances (by a cast of Japanese porn stars) are capable. What elevates "Evil Dead Trap" is the big reveal at around the 82 minute mark, and the entire final act. It truly places poor Nami - who is put through the wringer over and over - into a vision of Hell. What's more, the disturbed antagonist is one that the audience can feel some pity for, as they just want their untenable situation to end.

Generally good fun, this does tend to be slowly paced, and a viewer could also see it as being repetitive, but it really does deliver a fair bit of genuine horror before those end credits start rolling. The splatter-riffic ending is truly one that is worth the wait.

Followed by two sequels.

Seven out of 10.

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