But what will get every nation talking
positively about Army of Darkness the extensive
use of Introvision, raves Raimi.
"A good third of the picture
relies on Introvision [ creating believable
plate backgrounds for seamless foreground
action]. It's state of the art stuff. Those
guys were incredible geniuses and knew just what
to do. Sam needed a castle background. He got it. He needed a windswept plain.
He got it. We were dragged to this dumpy Hollywood studio and got taken through
this creaky door. And there would be this massive castle set-up plus big
effects rigs which could make us look like we were anywhere Sam wanted. That
made for a very slow shoot . Well , that and the fact everything is on a much
grander scale . The first Evil Dead was set up and shoot it. The second was set
up, worry about this, that and the other, and shoot it. Army of Darkness was
set up and whoaaa...."
But working for Sam is a dream according to his brother.
" I know exactly what he wants .
We grew up watching the same movies, so we have the same visual vocabulary. '
Give me that Captain Kirk punch right over there,' he'd say. The other actors
would look puzzled, but I knew exactly what he meant."
And how does he think Sam has grown as a director?
"Oh, about an inch,"Comes the deadpan reply." Actually his style has
become so slick and sophisticated in terms of camera movement ,dialogue , and
the actors he chooses . Yet he still retains that wonderful rawness which was
always one of his best qualities. He'll never lose that , even though he'll
move onto more interesting , bigger and complicated tales."
There's nothing in Army of
Darkness that worried Raimi as much as the stunt he had to do in Darkman
though.
"I played Rick, the curly haired
mobster, who burns Liam Neeson's face." When he returned as Darkman, he
shoved me up through a manhole cover and truck squashed my head flat. There I
was in an L.A. street at two in the morning with trucks driven by stunt drivers
buzzing past my head. ' Are you sure you know how to drive these vehicles?' I'd
Tremble. ' Oh yeah, we've been doing it for years. Don't worry'. It was very
scary".
Would he be an actor if it weren't for his brother?
"Truthfully I can't say. Sam's
career did narrow the choices down, I suppose, but I'm such a show off it was a
natural vocation for me. Sam helped by becoming a director first as it softened
Mom and Dad's attitude towards the film industry. It's difficult living in his
shadow sometimes, because he's so famous. I can't step out on my own without
being compared to him . But I'm an actor, he's a director, so we don't compete
on that level,. We just have a similar style. He does behind the camera what I
do in front of it."
And ten years after Sam an Co. hit the big time, does he
think the industry still views the Renaissance Pictures personnel as upstart
Young Turks?
"Sam never really conformed
because he was never really let in. The big boys never wanted to know us . So
we said, to heck with you guys , we'll start our own club. And we did. That's
where the unusual Ren Pics style comes from- that sense of angst of not being
part of the Hollywood in-crowd. We were never ' The Angry Young Men'. We were
'The Whiny Young Boys' because we were never given the chance to be anything
else"