FORMAT: BLU-RAY (REWATCH)
ORIGINAL REVIEW:
(As posted on November 9th, 2022)
Bloody Muscle Body Builder in Hell is basically a low budget, hour-long, shot-on-video Japanese remake of Evil Dead 2. After reading that sentence, you should already know if you are the target audience for this sort of thing. Even if you didn’t dig it as much as I did, you have to admit: It has one of the greatest titles in movie history.
Shinji (writer/director Shinichi Fukazawa) is a bodybuilder who takes his girlfriend and a psychic to investigate his father’s supposedly haunted house. Before long, the vengeful spirit of his father’s former lover possesses the psychic and uses his powers to lock the couple in the house. After being tormented endlessly by the possessed psychic, our hero eventually uses his love of weightlifting to smash the demon once and for all.
Some scenes follow Evil Dead 1 and 2 pretty closely, and the recreations are quite impressive considering the time and resources that were available. Fans of Sam Raimi’s trilogy will enjoy these moments to be sure (everything from the headless corpse attack to the iconic “Groovy” scene is here), but I was even more impressed by Fukazawa’s original flourishes and twists on Raimi’s standbys just as much. The eyeball stabbing scene is great, and the part where a necklace comes out a person’s mouth and digs into their eye is kind of freaky. The film even manages to one-up Raimi when the dismembered hand fuses together with a severed head, creating a Bride of Re-Animator-esque creation. Also, those who were always incensed that Evil Dead 2’s poster boy, the skull with human eyes, was nowhere to be found in that movie will be pleased that a very low budget version shows up here.
In front of the camera, Fukazawa mimics Bruce Campbell’s performance rather closely and nails many of his facial tics. Weirdly enough, this was his only movie, and it’s sort of a shame. Even though it’s clearly a riff on Evil Dead (I hesitate to call it a “rip-off” as it’s more of a homage than anything), his own unique spins on Raimi’s films are enough to make you curious what he might’ve been able to do with a completely original premise.
“Sayonara, baby!”
AKA: The Japanese Evil Dead.
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