Drag Me to Hell | |
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Directed by | Sam Raimi |
Written by |
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Produced by | |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Peter Deming |
Edited by | Bob Murawski |
Music by | Christopher Young |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Universal Pictures (North America, Latin America, Germany and Spain) Mandate International (International) [1] |
Release dates |
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Running time | 99 minutes [2] |
Country | United States |
Languages |
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Budget | $30 million [3] |
Box office | $90.8 million [3] |
Drag Me to Hell is a 2009 American supernatural horror film directed and co-written by Sam Raimi with Ivan Raimi, starring Alison Lohman, Justin Long, Lorna Raver, Dileep Rao, David Paymer, and Adriana Barraza. The story focuses on a loan officer, who, because she has to prove to her boss that she can make the "hard decisions" at work, chooses not to extend an elderly woman's mortgage. The old woman places a retaliatory curse on her that, after three days of escalating torment, will plunge her into the depths of Hell to burn for eternity.
Raimi wrote Drag Me to Hell with his brother before working on the Spider-Man film trilogy (2002–2007). The film premiered at the Cannes Film Festival and was a critical and commercial success, grossing $90.8 million worldwide on a $30 million budget. It won the Saturn Award for Best Horror Film at the 36th Saturn Awards.
In 1969 Pasadena, a Hispanic couple seek help from young medium Shaun San Dena, claiming their son Juan is hearing evil voices after having stolen a silver necklace from a Gypsy's wagon, despite his attempts to return it. San Dena prepares a séance, but an unseen force attacks them and drags Juan to Hell. San Dena vows to fight the demon again one day.
In present-day Los Angeles, bank loan officer Christine Brown vies for a promotion to assistant branch manager with her co-worker, Stu Rubin. Her boss, Jim Jacks, advises her to demonstrate tough decision-making. When Sylvia Ganush, an elderly and disheveled European Roma woman, asks for a third extension on her mortgage, Christine denies her request, and Ganush begs not to have her house repossessed. Security guards arrive and she leaves, accusing Christine of bringing shame on her. Later, in the parking garage, Ganush attacks Christine as she is leaving. After a struggle, Ganush rips a button from Christine's coat, curses it, and gives it back, warning that Christine will soon come begging to her.
Christine and her boyfriend Clay Dalton visit fortune teller Rham Jas, who tells Christine a dark spirit is haunting her. At home, the entity begins to attack Christine. At work, she hallucinates about Ganush and suffers a violent nosebleed. As she leaves horrified, Stu steals a file from her desk.
Christine goes to beg Ganush for forgiveness, but discovers that she has recently died. Christine inadvertently causes a scene at her funeral, and Ganush's granddaughter warns her that she deserves her fate. Christine returns to Jas, who explains that as long as she owns the cursed button, a demon known as the Lamia will torment her for three days before literally dragging her to Hell. He suggests that a sacrifice may appease it. Christine reluctantly sacrifices her kitten before meeting Clay's wealthy parents at their house for dinner, during which she is again tormented by grotesque hallucinations.
Christine angrily returns to Jas, who offers to introduce her to San Dena for $10,000, which a sympathetic Clay pays on her behalf. They prepare a séance to trap the Lamia in a goat and kill the goat to destroy it, but the Lamia possesses her and her assistant. San Dena manages to banish the Lamia, but dies soon afterward. Jas seals the button in an envelope and tells Christine that she can remove the curse by giving the button to someone else, thus transferring the curse to them.
At an all-night diner, Christine calls Stu, telling him she knows about his theft of her file and demanding he meet her there, intending to give him the button and pass on the curse. When he arrives, he tearfully begs Christine not to tell Jacks about his actions. Taking pity on him, she decides not to give him the button. Unable to give the curse to another living person, Christine consults Jas and learns she can make a formal offering of the curse to the dead, so she digs up Ganush's grave and shoves the envelope into her mouth. When it starts to rain heavily, Christine nearly becomes trapped in the grave with her, but manages to escape.
Christine returns home and prepares to meet Clay at Union Station for a trip, which Clay intends to propose to her on. She also receives a call from Jacks, who tells her that Stu was fired for stealing her file, and that she is set to be promoted. At the station, Clay hands Christine an envelope he had found in his car. It turns out to contain her cursed coat button; before digging up Ganush's grave, she had confused it for a similar envelope containing a rare coin she had given to Clay. Horrified, Christine stumbles and falls onto the tracks, where demonic hands emerge from the ground and drag her to Hell, leaving Clay staring in shock.
The film includes cameo appearances by Raimi himself as an uncredited ghost at the séance, his younger brother Ted as a doctor, and his eldest children Emma, Henry, and Lorne in minor roles. Frequent Raimi collaborator Scott Spiegel appears as a mourner at the death feast, while fellow frequent Raimi collaborator John Paxton and Irene Roseen appear as the old couple at the diner.
Drag Me to Hell has been noted for its relevance to the subprime mortgage crisis and more broadly, the Great Recession, which were ongoing at the time of the film's release. [4] [5] [6] Director Sam Raimi reportedly considered this a coincidence, stating, "We just wanted to tell the story of a person who wants to be a good person but who makes a sinful choice out of greed, for their own benefit, and pays the price for it." [4]
Also shortly after its release, a fan theory garnered attention online, positing that Christine—who’s depicted as being overweight in her youth—is experiencing hallucinations as a result of an eating disorder rather than a supernatural curse with her delusions repeatedly involving food or vomiting. [7] [8] [9]
The original story for Drag Me to Hell was written ten years before the film went into production and was written by Sam Raimi and his brother Ivan Raimi. The film went into production under the name The Curse. [10] The Raimis wrote the script as a morality tale, desiring to write a story about a character who wants to be a good person, but makes a sinful choice out of greed for her own betterment and pays the price for it. [11] The Raimis tried to make the character of Christine the main focal point in the film, and tried to have Christine in almost all the scenes in the film. [10] Elements of the film's story are drawn from the British horror film Night of the Demon (itself an adaptation of M.R. James' short story "Casting the Runes") such as the similar-shaped demons and the three-day curse theme in the film. [12] [13] The most significant parallel is that both stories involve the passing of a cursed object, which has to be passed to someone else, or its possessor will be devoured by one or more demons. Unlike his past horror films, Raimi wanted the film to be rated PG-13 and not strictly driven by gore, stating, "I didn't want to do exactly the same thing I had done before." [10] [14]
After finishing the script, Raimi desired to make the picture after the first draft of the script was completed, but other projects such as the Spider-Man film series became a nearly decade-long endeavor, pushing opportunities to continue work on Drag Me to Hell to late 2007. [10] Raimi offered director Edgar Wright to direct Drag Me to Hell which Wright turned down as he was filming Hot Fuzz and felt that "If I did it, it would just feel like karaoke." [15] After the previous three Spider-Man films, Raimi came back to the script of Drag Me to Hell, wanting to make a simpler and lower-budget film. [16] In 2007, Sam Raimi's friend and producer Robert Tapert of Ghost House Pictures had the company sign on to finance the film. [10] Universal Studios agreed to distribute domestically. [10]
After completing the script and having the project greenlit, Raimi started casting the film. [10] Elliot Page was originally cast for the main role of Christine, but dropped out of the project due to SAG strike-related scheduling issues. [17] The main role eventually went to Lohman, who did not enjoy horror films, but enjoyed doing the stunts during filming. [10] Stage actress Lorna Raver auditioned for the role of Mrs. Ganush. Raver was not aware of the specific nature of her character until being cast, stating that all she had read was "about a little old lady coming into the bank because they're closing down her house. It was only later that I saw the whole script and said, 'Oh my!'". [10] To prepare for this role, Raver met with a Hungarian dialect coach and asked to have portions of the script translated into Hungarian. [10] Raimi would later ask Raver to use some of the Hungarian words in the scenes of Ganush's attacking Christine. [10] Dileep Rao, who plays Rham Jas, made producer Grant Curtis mildly hesitant in casting him, stating that during his audition "he was a little bit younger than he read in the script. But as we were looking at his reading, Sam said, 'There's no minimum age requirement on wisdom.' Dileep has that wisdom and presence on screen, and that's what made him right. Once he got on camera, he brought that shoulder for Alison to lean on." [10] Many of the actors playing secondary characters in Drag Me to Hell have appeared previously in Raimi's films, including Joanne Baron, Tom Carey, Molly Cheek, Aimee Miles, John Paxton, Ted Raimi, Bill E. Rogers, Chelcie Ross, and Octavia Spencer. [10]
Raimi said he set out to create "a horror film with lots of wild moments and lots of suspense and big shocks that'll hopefully make audiences jump. But I also wanted to have a lot of dark humor sprinkled throughout. I spent the last decade doing Spider-Man and you come to rely on a lot of people doing things for you and a lot of help, but it's refreshing and wonderful to be reminded that, as with most filmmakers, the best way to do it is yourself, with a tight team doing the main jobs." [18]
Production for Drag Me to Hell began on location in Tarzana, California. [10] The production team included director of photography Peter Deming, production designer Steve Saklad and visual effects supervisor Bruce Jones. The film was produced by Grant Curtis and Rob Tapert. Tapert and Raimi are longtime collaborators, having attended college together in Michigan. [18]
Drag Me to Hell was edited by Bob Murawski, who has collaborated with Raimi on several films including the Spider-Man series, The Gift , and Army of Darkness . [18] Raimi has said of working with Murawski on Drag Me to Hell, "He'd come (down to the set) to see how things were going and to let me know if he'd just cut something that wasn't working the way he'd wanted it to, or to suggest a pick-up shot I should get for a piece he felt we needed in a sequence I hadn't realized I needed. He's very detail-oriented... So we're very close collaborators." Raimi finds editing with Murawski to be "relaxing", adding, "I love it. For me, it's so relaxing, unlike pre-production, which is fraught with anxiety and fear about how we're going to do things, and production, which is so rushed and a sleepless time and you're just racing to finish every shot and worrying about focus and so on. So post is soothing and I can watch the film come together, so it's a time of discovery for me as Bob and I fit all the pieces together. I see new possibilities in post, as Bob puts the film together, sometimes in a way I never imagined..." [18] The film was edited by Murawski on an Avid computer system in a West Los Angeles facility. The color grading was completed at Company 3 with colorist Stephen Nakamura. Nakamura used DaVinci Resolve. It was CO3's first start-to-finish feature in 4K resolution. [18] "For us, post is a very creative time where it's not just about this factory producing the blueprinted product. It's really a very creative, experimental time where we try and take everything that's been written and then shot to the next level," said Raimi. [18] The final sound mix was completed at the Dub Stage in Burbank with mixers Marti Humphrey and Chris Jacobson. [18]
The effects in Drag Me to Hell were created in many different ways, including green screen, puppets, prosthetics and computer-generated imagery. [10] Bruce Jones was the visual effects supervisor on the film. Of Jones, Raimi commented, "He brought a great can-do approach to the film... He's got a great team of artists and technicians with him, and he's got great instincts." [18]
There were hundreds of visual effects in the film, and different effects houses were utilized. According to Raimi, the Bay Area's Tippett Studio was a big player. "We also had work done by Amalgamated Pixels, Ghost VFX, KNB Effects, Home Digital, Cinesoup and IE Effects," said Raimi. According to Raimi, "Bob (Murawski) and I kept adding visual effects as post proceeded. In this film, the supernatural, the unseen, is almost another character, so sequences were developed — even in post — that would suggest the presence of the supernatural, and we kept on adding. The same with the sound effects, so it was a very ongoing, very live process in post." [18]
Director of photography Peter Deming tried to use realistic lighting in the film. Said Deming, "Normally, you'd put all corrected bulbs in, but we went with what was there, including the shots in the street. We used the streetlight look and mixed that with interior lighting. There were a lot of odd color sources that we chose to leave the way they would be naturally. It's a heightened sense of realism." [10] One of the earliest projects the special effects teams did was the scene in which Mrs. Ganush attacks Christine in her car. To film the action, which included close-ups of Christine jamming her foot on the pedal, hitting the brake, and shifting gears, the team created a puzzle car which allowed the front engine compartment and back trunk — as well as all four sides and doors — to come away from the car. The roof came off in two directions. [10]
Drag Me to Hell | |
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Soundtrack album by | |
Released | August 18, 2009 |
Genre | Film score |
Length | 52:27 |
Producer | Brian McNelis, Flavio Motalla, Skip Williamson, Christopher Young [19] |
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [20] |
Soundtrack.Net | [21] |
The film score was composed by Christopher Young. Young has worked with director Raimi previously on his films The Gift and Spider-Man 3 . The soundtrack was released on August 18, 2009, [22] and later in a vinyl edition by Waxwork Records in 2018. [23] Sam Raimi stated that emphasis was on using the soundtrack to create a world that didn't exist, a world of the "supernatural". [18] The score contains elements of Young's previous work on Flowers in the Attic . This is particularly apparent in the utilization of the ethereal childlike soprano vocals that feature prominently throughout the soundtrack.
All tracks composed by Christopher Young.
No. | Title | Length |
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1. | "Drag Me to Hell" | 2:32 |
2. | "Mexican Devil Disaster" | 4:33 |
3. | "Tale of a Haunted Banker" | 1:52 |
4. | "Lamia" | 4:06 |
5. | "Black Rainbows" | 3:24 |
6. | "Ode to Ganush" | 2:23 |
7. | "Familiar Familiars" | 2:11 |
8. | "Loose Teeth" | 6:31 |
9. | "Ordeal by Corpse" | 4:35 |
10. | "Bealing Bells with Trumpet" | 5:12 |
11. | "Brick Dogs Ala Carte" | 1:46 |
12. | "Muttled Buttled Brain Stew" | 2:51 |
13. | "Auto-Da-Fe" | 4:31 |
14. | "Concerto to Hell" | 5:58 |
Total length: | 52:25 |
Drag Me to Hell was first shown to the public as a "Work in Progress" print at the South by Southwest festival on March 15, 2009. [24] The film debuted in its full form at the 2009 Cannes Film Festival, where it was shown out of competition on May 20, 2009, as a midnight screening. It was released on May 29, 2009. [25] [26] [27]
Drag Me to Hell was released on DVD and Blu-ray Disc in the US on October 13, 2009. For home video, an unrated edition was made available in addition to the theatrical version, the unrated version containing some additional moments of gory violence. [28] In its first two weeks the DVD sold 459,217 copies generating $7.98 million in sales. [29] It has since accumulated $13.9 million in DVD sales in the United States.
On February 13, 2018, Scream Factory released a two-disc Collector's Edition of Drag Me to Hell, which included both the theatrical and unrated versions of the film remastered from the 2K digital intermediate, archival interviews and featurettes and all-new interviews with Alison Lohman, Lorna Raver and Christopher Young. [30] They would also later issue an Ultra HD Blu-ray edition on October 29, 2024, including all previous bonus features and a new director and editor-approved 4K remaster of both versions of the film, based on a scan of a preservation film negative. [31]
The film was released in the United States on May 29, 2009. The film opened at #4 with $15.8 million from 2,900 screens at 2,508 theaters, an average of $6,310 per theater ($5,457 average per screen). In its second weekend, it dropped 56%, falling to #7, with $7 million, for an average of $2,805 per theater ($2,514 average per screen), and bringing the 10-day gross to $28,233,230. [32] Even though its two-week initial performance was described as "disappointing", [33] Drag Me to Hell closed on August 6, 2009, with a final gross in the United States and Canada of $42.1 million, and an additional $48.7 million internationally for a total of $90.8 million worldwide. [3]
On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 92% based on 270 reviews, and an average rating of 7.6/10. The site's critical consensus states, "Sam Raimi returns to top form with Drag Me to Hell, a frightening, hilarious, delightfully campy thrill ride." [34] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 83 out of 100, based on 32 critics, indicating "universal acclaim". [35] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B−" on an A+ to F scale. [36]
Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly gave the film an "A" rating, stating that "Raimi has made the most crazy, fun, and terrifying horror movie in years." [37] Betsy Sharkey of the Los Angeles Times praised the film, writing that it "should not be dismissed as yet another horror flick just for teens. The filmmakers have given us a 10-story winding staircase of psychological tension that is making very small circles near the end." [38] Michael Phillips of the Chicago Tribune described the film as a "hellaciously effective B-movie [that] comes with a handy moral tucked inside its scares, laughs and Raimi's specialty, the scare/laugh hybrid." [39] Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun Times gave the film 3 out of 4 stars, and stated that the film "is a sometimes funny and often startling horror movie. That is what it wants to be, and that is what it is." [40] In a positive review, Variety said of the film: "Scant and barren of subtext, the pic is single-mindedly devoted to pushing the audience's buttons... Still, there's no denying it delivers far more than competing PG-13 thrillers." [13] Bloody Disgusting gave the film four and a half stars out of five, with the review calling it "quite simply the most perfect horror film I've seen in a long, long while... [It's] a blast and moved quickly from start to finish [and] is well on its way to becoming an immediate classic." [41] The film was then ranked thirteenth in Bloody Disgusting's list of the 'Top 20 Horror Films of the Decade'. [42]
Rex Reed of The New York Observer thought that the plot wasn't believable enough, [43] and Peter Howell of The Toronto Star disliked Lohman's performance and thought the film was "just not very funny". [44]
Some reviews considered the film a comedy horror in the style that Raimi is known for. The film "blends horror and humor so well that viewers don't know whether to laugh or scream", noted TV Guide , which also hailed it as "a popcorn film that aims to entertain—nothing more, nothing less—and it achieves that goal admirably. Few films, horror or otherwise, can boast such a claim, making Raimi's self-described 'spook-a-blast' an excellent example of a film where ambition and execution come together in perfect harmony." [45] Vic Holtreman of Screen Rant stated that the film blends comedy and horror in a similar fashion to the way Army of Darkness does. [46] According to a reviewer at UGO Networks, the film is primarily a comedy rather than a horror, and this is consistent with Raimi's directing style, which has not included any "true horror" films. [47]
The film was nominated for "Choice Movie: Horror/Thriller" at the 2009 Teen Choice Awards, which the film lost to Friday the 13th (2009). [48] [49] At the 2009 Scream Awards show, Drag Me to Hell won the awards for Best Horror Movie and Best Scream-play. [50] [51]
In March 2023, Raimi revealed that Ghost House Pictures was actively trying to come up with ideas for a potential sequel for the film. [52]
Bruce Lorne Campbell is an American actor and filmmaker. He is known best for his role as Ash Williams in Sam Raimi's Evil Dead horror series, beginning with the short movie Within the Woods (1978). He has also featured in many low-budget cult movies, such as Crimewave (1985), Maniac Cop (1988), Sundown: The Vampire in Retreat (1989), and Bubba Ho-Tep (2002).
The Evil Dead is a 1981 American independent supernatural horror film written and directed by Sam Raimi. The film stars Bruce Campbell, Ellen Sandweiss, Richard DeManincor, Betsy Baker, and Theresa Tilly as five college students vacationing in an isolated cabin in the woods, where they find an audio tape that, when played, releases a legion of demons and spirits. Four members of the group suffer from demonic possession, forcing the fifth member, Ash Williams (Campbell), to survive an onslaught of increasingly gory mayhem.
Samuel M. Raimi is an American filmmaker. He is best known for directing the first three films in the Evil Dead franchise (1981-present) and the Spider-Man trilogy (2002-2007). He also directed the superhero movie Darkman (1990), the revisionist western The Quick and the Dead (1995), the neo-noir crime thriller A Simple Plan (1998), the supernatural thriller The Gift (2000), the supernatural horror Drag Me to Hell (2009), the Disney fantasy Oz the Great and Powerful (2013), and the Marvel Studios film Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness (2022).
Theodore Raimi is an American character actor, director and writer. He is known for his roles in the works of his brother Sam Raimi, including a fake Shemp in The Evil Dead, possessed Henrietta in Evil Dead II, and Ted Hoffman in the Spider-Man trilogy. He later reprised his role as Henrietta in the television series Ash vs. Evil Dead, in which he also played the character Chet Kaminski. He is also known for his roles as Lieutenant JG Tim O'Neill in seaQuest DSV, his recurring role as the merchant in Legend of the Seeker and Joxer the Mighty in both Xena: Warrior Princess and Hercules: The Legendary Journeys.
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Alison Marion Lohman is an American actress. She began her career with small roles in short and independent films, and starred in the sitcom Tucker (2000–2001) and the soap opera Pasadena (2001). She received critical attention for the drama film White Oleander (2002), the fantasy film Big Fish, and the dark comedy film Matchstick Men, winning accolades at the Hollywood Film and Young Hollywood Awards. She also lent her voice to the 2005 redub of the animated film Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind. After appearing in the action film Beowulf and the drama film Things We Lost in the Fire, her highest-grossing release came with the horror film Drag Me to Hell (2009), which earned her nominations at the Detroit Film Critics Society, MTV Movie and Saturn Awards.
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We were racing to start production so that we could accommodate [Elliot's] schedule. But like so many other productions trying to start before the potential SAG strike date, this one needed more time and we had to push back the start of production.