Drag
Me To Hell

Alison Lohman stars as Christine Brown - a loan officer trying to get
promoted to assistant manager at her bank. As you can imagine,
it’s the type of job where she finds herself faced with some
dilemmas and tough decisions, especially when it comes to Mrs. Ganush
(Lorna Raver). This elderly gypsy woman begs Christine to give her
another extension to pay her mortgage and keep her home, but, to
impress her boss, the young loan officer decides against it, and has
the woman evicted from her humble abode. Out of spite and revenge, Mrs.
Ganush decides to put a curse on Christine. YIKES!
Will Christine be able to reverse the curse, or will the demons
summoned by Mrs. Ganush drag Christine to hell?
Drag Me To Hell is a movie that succeeds on each and every level, even
though you might not think all of these elements can work together.
Director/co-writer Sam Raimi and co-writer Ivan Raimi (yes, they are
brothers) have created a movie that is campy, frightening and one of
the most memorable of the summer because it is so different from
everything else. Unlike Terminator Salvation, you are SUPPOSED to laugh
at his movie, so go ahead and enjoy.
Director Raimi gives Drag Me To Hell the feel of a 70’s or
80’s melodramatic, low budget turkey that an insomniac like
me would watch on HBO at 2 AM. It is intentionally campy with
overwrought performances designed to elicit knowing giggles from the
audience. The cast might as well give the audience a wink to remind us
that they are in on the joke, too, especially Lohman, who becomes
kookier and weirder as Drag Me To Hell moves along to one of the best
endings I have seen in a long time.
Yet, Raimi exposes his true genius when it comes time to shock the
audience. In a way, he is using the laughter and comedy to get the
audience to lower its guard just enough for the shocks to make you
scream and squeal in fright and delight. He employs a fantastic use of
shadows, strange noises, knocking, screeching and more to make everyone
in the crowd feel like the devil is coming to getcha! You might want to
check under your seat, just in case.
Drag Me To Hell might not sound like the type of movie you would
normally check out, but give it a chance this weekend, and you might be
surprised.
Drag Me To Hell is rated PG-13 for
sequences of horror violence, terror, disturbing images and language.

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