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The Evil Dead

“The ultimate experience in gruelling terror.”

7.3
1981
1h 25m
Horror
Director: Sam Raimi

Overview

In 1979, a group of college students find a Sumerian Book of the Dead in an old wilderness cabin they've rented for a weekend getaway.

Trailer

The Evil Dead - Official Trailer Official

Cast

Reviews

AI-generated review
Death in the English Eden

To view *Midsomer Murders* merely as "cozy crime" is to fundamentally misunderstand the nature of the beast. It is, in fact, one of the most enduring surrealist experiments in British television history. For over a quarter of a century, this adaptation of Caroline Graham’s novels has presented us with a vision of rural England that is less *Postman Pat* and more *The Wicker Man* filtered through a village fête. The genius of the series lies not in its puzzles, which are often labyrinthine to the point of absurdity, but in its tonal dissonance: the insistence that in the most manicured corners of the home counties, the human impulse toward violence is not just present, but baroque.

The deceptive tranquility of Midsomer County

The visual language of the series is a masterclass in deception. Directors throughout the show's run have maintained a rigid adherence to the "pastoral idyll" aesthetic. The saturation is dialed up; the greens of the cricket pitches are impossibly verdant, the thatched roofs pristine, the roses in the vicarage gardens fully in bloom. Yet, this aggressive pleasantness serves as a terrifying counterpoint to the carnage. Unlike the shadowy, rain-slicked streets of "Nordic Noir" or the gritty urban greys of London procedurals, *Midsomer* terrorizes us in broad daylight. The terror comes from the realization that the sunlight offers no protection. The theremin-heavy theme music—a stroke of brilliance that sounds more like a 1950s sci-fi B-movie than a police drama—signals immediately that this world is slightly off its axis, a parallel dimension where the laws of probability are suspended in favor of high drama.

Detectives navigating the absurd and the macabre

At the center of this maelstrom of crushed bodies and poisoned chutneys stands the Detective Chief Inspector, first Tom Barnaby (John Nettles) and later his cousin John (Neil Dudgeon). They are not tortured geniuses or alcoholic anti-heroes; they are stoic, almost aggressively normal civil servants. Their role is not just to catch the killer, but to act as the audience’s anchor to sanity. As they move through a gallery of grotesques—local aristocrats with incestuous secrets, obsessive hobbyists, and feuding bell-ringers—the Barnabys remain unfazed. This detachment is crucial. If the detectives were to react with genuine horror to a man being crushed by a giant wheel of cheese or drowned in a vat of wine, the show would collapse into tragedy. Instead, their dry, weary acceptance of these Grand Guignol deaths elevates the show into a dark comedy of manners. The "coziness" is a lie; the Barnabys are essentially patrolling an open-air asylum.

The tension of village life where everyone is a suspect

Ultimately, *Midsomer Murders* endures because it functions as a critique of the very nostalgia it seems to peddle. It presents the "Old England"—the England of tea shops, parish councils, and deferential class structures—and reveals it to be rotting from the inside out. The villains are rarely outsiders; they are the pillars of the community, driven to madness by the claustrophobia of tradition and the desperate need to maintain appearances. In this sense, the show is a subversive text. It suggests that the greatest danger to the English soul isn't urban decay or foreign influence, but the repressed, seething resentment festering behind the lace curtains of a cottage. It is a grim fairy tale where the wolf isn't in the woods; he is the chairman of the Neighborhood Watch.
LN
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