“Evil Dead Burn,” produced by Sam Raimi, Rob Tapert and Bruce Campbell, includes end- and post-credits scenes that suggest what might be ahead for the “Evil Dead” franchise.

The stars of the upcoming Evil Dead film talk to Hindustan Times about life, death, zombies, and more. | Hollywood

"Evil Dead Burn" producers Sam Raimi and Rob Tapert discuss the continuation of their "Evil Dead" franchise and

“Evil Dead Burn,” the latest film in producers Sam Raimi, Rob Tapert and Bruce Campbell’s reimagined “Evil Dead” franchise, has sparked some positive reviews from Rotten Tomatoes…

"Evil Dead Burn," in theaters Friday, remains faithful to the original mythology while contributing clever new gory ideas to the horror franchise.

Ultra violence and slapstick humour continue in Evil Dead Burn, the latest instalment of the hit horror franchise that started in 1981.

The latest new chapter in Sam Raimi’s classic franchise goes harder than ever before but there’s something missing

“Evil Dead Burn,” produced by Sam Raimi, Rob Tapert and Bruce Campbell, includes end- and post-credits scenes that suggest what might be ahead for the “Evil Dead” franchise.

Evil Dead Burn has cemented the Evil Dead series as a Rotten Tomatoes record holder given its scores and how long the series has run.

“Evil Dead Burn” is new in theaters this weekend, but for viewers who want to see the film on streaming, they can expect to wait the standard amount of time it takes for the film…

Here's what the deal is (without spoilers).

The latest addition to the 'Evil Dead' universe ties the three modern horror films together

The latest film in the Sam Raimi horror franchise has two end credits scenes. Here's the breakdown.

Surprise! A major fan-favorite character is back in the post-credits scene of \

"Evil Dead Burn" director Sébastien Vaniče breaks down bringing his brand of French brutality to Sam Raimi's long-running horror franchise.

"Evil Dead Burn" producer Rob Tapert says that one of the most brutal scenes in the new hit horror thriller had to be trimmed several times before the film could get an R rating.