Ash Williams

Ash Williams
Evil Dead character

First appearance The Evil Dead
Created by Sam Raimi
Portrayed by Bruce Campbell
Voiced by Bruce Campbell
Danny Webber (Poker Night 2)
Information
Gender Male
Occupation Houseware clerk at S-Mart and Value Stop
Deadite hunter
Exorcist
Family Cheryl Williams (sister)
Brock Williams (father)
Significant other(s) Linda (The Evil Dead and Evil Dead 2)
Sheila (Army of Darkness and comics series)
Jenny (video game)
Amanda (Ash vs Evil Dead)

Ashley James "Ash" Williams is a fictional character and the protagonist of The Evil Dead franchise. Created by Sam Raimi, he is portrayed by Bruce Campbell and is the only character to appear in each entry of the series, including an after-credits scene appearance for the remake-continuation film. Throughout the series, Ash has to face off against his loved ones inside an abandoned cabin as they are possessed by "deadites", the evil souls of the dead. In 2008, Ash was selected by Empire magazine as the 24th greatest movie character of all time,[1] and in 2013, was voted by Empire as the greatest horror movie character ever.[2]

Appearances

As well as appearances in the films, Ash has been featured in various comic book series and video games.

Films

In The Evil Dead, Ash and his girlfriend Linda, sister Cheryl, and friends Scott and Shelly stay at a log cabin in the woods, where they find the "Naturon Demonto" (renamed or possibly translated to Necronomicon Ex-Mortis in the sequels), the "Book of the Dead", along with a tape recorder. The tape is a recording made by the cabin's owner Professor Knowby, who was translating a passage of the book. By playing the tape, the group unknowingly awaken the Kandarian Demon (the titular "Evil Dead") which can possess the living. They are possessed and killed one by one, until only Ash remains. He finally destroys the Necronomicon by throwing it in the fireplace, and in doing so causes the possessed bodies of Scott and Cheryl to rapidly decay and "die". However, the film ends with Ash being attacked or possibly overtaken by the Kandarian Demon.[3]

Evil Dead II continues the story from the previous film, after an alternate recap, where within a few minutes we see Ash and Linda go to the same cabin. Ash finds a reel to reel player and plays the tape. He releases the evil spirits and Linda gets possessed. Ash decapitates her with a shovel and buries her. Then the evil chases Ash through the cabin and attacks Ash (just like the end of the first film). From this point, the film continues the story from where the first film left off. Carried a good distance by the demon, Ash is slammed against a tree and falls in a puddle of water; he becomes a deadite, but shortly afterwards is released from the spirit by the light of dawn, only to pass out. Ash regains consciousness moments before sunset. Deciding to get out of there as fast as he can, he climbs into his car and drives to where the bridge was, only to find it completely destroyed by the evil force. As the sun quickly sets, said force starts climbing up the cliff, and Ash hops into his car, driving away as fast as he can and as a result, crashing right into a tree stump that sends him flying through the windshield.

With the evil close behind him, he runs into (and through) the cabin, trying to hide, and ducks into the trapdoor leading to the fruit cellar, waiting until the evil force leaves. After it does, Ash comes out, only to find himself stuck at the cabin with the spirits of the Evil Dead for yet another night. Shortly after, the evil toy with his mind and his reflection in the mirror comes to life. After this, a deadite possesses Ash's right hand, resulting in him having to cut it off at the wrist with his chainsaw. Later, the cabin owner's daughter, Annie Knowby and three others arrive to discover what became of Professor Knowby. They arrive at the cabin and initially believe that Ash killed Knowby which results in them locking him in the fruit cellar. However, after finding Knowby's research they soon realize that demons are behind the events that transpired. Eventually Ash works with them to survive the demons attempts to kill them. However soon the others are killed off, leaving only Ash and Annie.

Ash, having no other option, becomes a slightly braver character and begins fighting the deadites pro-actively, rather than cowering from them. Ash also gets his famous chainsaw in place of his right hand, with the "boomstick" to match. Annie reads passages from the missing pages of the Necronomicon which she had retrieved for her father, the first passage to force the evil to manifest physically, and the second to open a space-time vortex to banish the now-corporeal demonic spirits. However, Annie is stabbed by Ash's possessed disembodied hand; as she dies, Annie continues to read the last passage, but succumbs to her wound and is unable to close the vortex after the now-corporeal evil entity has been sucked away. The film ends with Ash being sucked into the vortex after the evil entity, and is sent traveling back in time to 1300 AD Europe, where the locals claim, according to their prophecies, that he is "the man that falls from the sky" who will save them from the deadites.[4]

Army of Darkness continues where Evil Dead II left off, with Ash landing in a medieval European kingdom. Ash is accidentally transported to 1300 A.D., where he must battle an army of the dead and retrieve the Necronomicon so he can return home. Ash must also defeat his alter-ego known as "Bad Ash", who is leading the Army of Darkness to re-steal the Necronomicon. Ash constructs a mechanical prosthetic hand out of a gauntlet from a suit of armor, using it throughout the film in place of the chainsaw when it is not needed.[5] The film is split into two endings: The first and intentional ending resulted in Ash defeating the Army of Darkness and being given the potion to sleep until his time. However, distracted by a sudden movement in the rocks, Ash drinks too much and awakens in post-apocalyptic London. The film then cuts straight to black and his insane laughter is heard. The second ending, and one more familiar with US and Australian audiences, consists of Ash simply riding off into the distance and returning to the present. Here, he boasts of his victory to his co-workers at the S-Mart where he and Linda had worked at, but is suddenly interrupted by the possession of a female customer. After killing it, Ash is hailed a hero and he kisses a newfound love interest.

Ash made a cameo appearance in the post-credits for the 2013 remake Evil Dead, in which he says his iconic line "Groovy", then looks at the camera. Campbell reprises his role in Ash vs Evil Dead, the television sequel to Army of Darkness.[6]

Television

In 2015, an older Ash appears as the main character in Ash vs Evil Dead, a horror comedy series for Starz. The show continues Ash's story long after the film trilogy. Three days before the series' premiere, Starz renewed it for a second season. In an interview with Entertainment Weekly, Campbell stated, "Ash has survivor's guilt. You could have a heyday with his PTSD. He's a war vet. He doesn't want to talk about it, and he'll lie about that stump on his hand to impress the ladies. This is a guy who's got some issues. He's emotionally stunted. But, he's the guy you want in the foxhole next to you" (all of which he masks with Narcissism).

Near the end of the first season, it is referenced that after the events of the film(s), after the Kandarian Demon had been banished through a space-time rift by a dying Annie Knowby, Ash was finally was able to escape the cabin via a back road; after which he would spend the next 30 years traveling down the country in his "Oldsmobile" and a mobile home (an "Airstream"), never staying long, going from stock-boy job to stock-boy job at different branches of the same hardware store. It is also mentioned that Ash tried numerous methods to destroy the Necronomicon.

At the beginning of the second season, it is revealed that, after escaping from the cabin initially, Ash had first returned home, to his hometown of Elk Grove, Michigan, only for no one (even his own father) to believe him about the Deadites (instead they believed that Ash had killed his little sister, Cheryl, his girlfriend, Linda, his best friend, Scotty, and Scotty's girlfriend, Shelly), earning him the nickname "Ashy Slashy", and driving Ash to leave town, to move on from town to town (and leading up to the events at the beginning of the first season), his only companion for some time being his pet lizard, Eli.

In the first season of Ash vs Evil Dead, the character is forcibly sprung back into action once more upon accidentally releasing the deadites. He is now accompanied by Pablo Bolivar and Kelly Maxwell, two young coworkers who cross paths with him after the evil is unleashed. While the trio search for a way to stop the evil, Ash is being hunted by Amanda Fisher, a Michigan state trooper who blames Ash for the death of her partner. She later teams up with Ruby Knowby who blames him for the death of her family thirty years ago. Ash eventually discovers that the key to dispelling the evil is to return the book to the cabin and bury it within its grounds. Along the way to the cabin, Ash confronts Amanda who after a brief struggle realizes that Ash is trying to stop the deadites rather than looking to unleash more of them.

Eventually, Ash, Pablo, Kelly, and Amanda reach the cabin to undo the evil. However Ash's decomposed severed right hand grows into an evil duplicate of him that interferes with their efforts and kills Amanda, who then resurrects as a deadite. After defeating the duplicate Ash then meets Ruby Knowby who claims that using the kandarian dagger to tear the books cover will destroy the Necronomicon and stop the evil from destroying humanity. After Ruby defaces the book she then reveals herself to be the original author of Necronomicon. Ruby then uses Pablo's body as a conduit to release one of the demons (one of her own children) from the book within the cabins fruit cellar. Ash kills the deadite Amanda and defeats Ruby's released demon, but is unable to save Pablo from being a gateway for the demons to enter the mortal world.

Ash gets the upper hand on Ruby by using the kandarian dagger to wound her. But before he finishes her off, Ruby notes that Ash can't save Pablo or Kelly, and offers him a compromise. If he allows her to release the demons as well as lord over them, then she will not only spare Pablo and Kelly but also fulfill his dream of living a normal life with his friends in Jacksonville, Florida. Ash accepts, much to the dismay of Pablo and Kelly. They drive off from the cabin while Ash delights in the idea of finally living a normal quiet life. However a radio broadcast reveals sinkholes are erupting across the country, suggesting that Ash's envisioned normal life will be short lived.

Season two opens with Ash's partying buzz in Jacksonville being cut short when Deadites show up. Revealing that Ruby has sent them, one of them calls him 'Ashy Slashy' which was a nickname he is uncomfortable with from his younger days. It is soon revealed that Ash left his hometown of Elk Grove, Michigan because he was accused by the locals of being crazy, having dismembered everyone at the cabin on that fateful night and then run out of town. Ash, Pablo and Kelly then search the town for Ruby's whereabouts and in the process, Ash is reunited with his estranged father Brock Williams. Who disowned him because he believes Ash killed his sister Cheryl at the cabin thirty years ago. Eventually the three find Ruby in the town crematorium after Pablo has a vision of her being there (a side effect of Ruby using him as a gateway last season) where she reveals that her children have betrayed her and attempted to take possession of the book themselves, in return Ruby hid the book in an unknown location. They are then all attacked by Ruby's demon spawn. After killing them, Ash and his friends form an alliance with Ruby to retrieve the Necronomicon to send the loose demon spawn back to hell.

Ruby deduces that her spawn are attempting to use the book to summon a demon known as Baal into the world. Ash and Kelly retrieve the Necronomicon from the town morgue and place it in the backseat of Ash's Oldsmobile. However, after another visit with Ash's father, the Oldsmobile is stolen by a young group of teenagers with the Necronomicon inside it. To get the book back, Ash comes up with the idea to throw a party in hopes of attracting the kids that stole his car and the book. It is at this party Ash reunites with his old friend Chet from high school. Brock shows up as well and even steals a girl Ash was flirting with (a common habit of his) much to Ash's annoyance. It becomes apparent to Ruby that Ash's plan to find the book is going nowhere and leaves the party with Kelly who she convinced to come with her. Brock's over-competitive attitude towards his son starts an argument between the two which ends when Ash saves his father from a Deadite that arrives at the party. Outside, Brock admits he was wrong about his son being a killer and in a touching moment calls his son a hero. Brock begins to tell Ash that he had kept a secret from him, a secret that could change his entire life. When suddenly Ash's Oldsmobile possessed by demonic forces runs Brock over, killing him instantly.

Ash mourns the sudden loss of his father and takes Chet with him to track the possessed Oldsmobile down. Eventually they do so and Pablo throws the Necronomicon into a portal to hell that opened up in the trunk of the car. Believing that with the book gone, the evil has been dispelled. However unbeknownst to them the book was the only thing keeping Baal from the mortal world. With it gone, Baal returns to the mortal world. Baal uses his ability to possess human bodies to toy with and turn Ash, Ruby, Kelly and Pablo against each other. It soon becomes apparent that Pablo, due to once being used as a portal to hell for Ruby's spawn, is now binding with the book and slowly becoming a new Necronomicon. Therefore, Pablo is the only thing capable of sending Baal back to hell.

With this information, Ash and the rest return to Brock's house in an attempt to use Pablo to stop Baal. However Baal has manipulated the town sheriff to incite a riot outside of Ash's home. Ruby attempts to use Pablo to find the spell that can send Baal back to hell. During this process, a demon uses a photo of Ash's sister Cheryl and becomes a deadite manifestation of her. Ash and Chet combat the returned deadite Cheryl who kills Chet. The fight takes Ash and Cheryl outside the home where crowds of townsfolk have been rioting. The appearance of the deceased deadite Cheryl convinces the towns people that Ash was indeed a hero who killed demons and not the chainsaw serial killer they thought he was. Ash defeats and kills Cheryl a second time when suddenly Baal appears and knocks him unconscious.

Awakening in an asylum, Baal (under the guise of a doctor) tries to convince Ash that their were no demons but instead "delusions". Ash repeatedly brushes him off however as time goes on Baal appears to drive Ash insane with illusions of his friends and convinces him to kill Pablo, who has binded with the Necronomicon and is the only thing that can send Baal back to hell. Ash attempts to destroy the Necronomicon (Pablo) when he sees the real Ruby, Kelly and Pablo pulling up a car outside the asylum. Ash succeeds in capturing Pablo and brings him to Baal. Much to everybody's shock, Ash reveals he was tricking Baal the whole time to get Pablo in the same room so they could send the demon back to hell. Lacey (who was a Deadite all along) and Emery the sheriff are killed, but Linda survives, eager to avenge the deaths of her loved ones. Pablo reads the spell to return Baal to hell. During the process Pablo's body is ripped and torn a part as Baal is forcibly sent back to hell; Pablo then collapses dead moments after.

Video games

In the 2000s, Bruce Campbell voiced Ash in a trilogy of video games. The first was Hail to the King released in 2000 on PlayStation/Dreamcast/Windows. This game continues after Army of Darkness. Ash is dating Jenny, a fellow S-Mart employee, his continual nightmares of what he's lived through convinces her to get him to come back to the cabin to face his fears, but his severed hand (from Evil Dead 2) replays the tape and sets the evil loose again. The second game was A Fistful of Boomstick released in 2003 on Xbox/PlayStation 2. In this game Ash mentions Jenny died in a bus accident previous to this game. Ash watches TV in a bar in Dearborn, Michigan, where a local TV show, "Mysteries of the Occult," reads the passages from the Necronomicon setting the evil loose and possessing most of the town. Ash has to find his weapons, fight the deadites and find a way to stop the evil. Over the game you play through several time periods including colonial times and civil war times. The third and final game was Evil Dead: Regeneration, released in 2005 on Xbox/PlayStation 2/Windows. This game plays through an alternate history; instead of being sucked into the vortex at the end of Evil Dead II, Ash has been placed in a mental institution for the criminally insane (as a result of the events of The Evil Dead and Evil Dead II). His doctor has gone mad and obtained the Necronomicon and releases the deadites once again.

Ash Williams also makes an appearance as a player in the side-scroller action game Broforce, as well as Telltale Games' "Poker Night 2" where the player participates at a poker tournament, along with characters from several other franchises, namely GLaDOS from Portal, Sam from Sam & Max, Claptrap from Borderlands, and Brock Samson from The Venture Bros.. [7]

Comics

In 1992, Dark Horse Comics released a three-issue miniseries written by Raimi himself. Accompanying it is Evil Dead (2008), a comic retelling the story of the events of the original film.[8] In this version of the tale, Cheryl is not Ash's sister, but just a friend of his girlfriend Linda, and the book is called "Nacheron De'manto". The professor and his wife are depicted as younger adults rather than the middle-aged version seen in the film. The only character in the book that looks like their film counterpart is Ash; every other character has been completely redesigned for this "expansion".

Dynamite Entertainment has made their own line of comics featuring the character. Army of Darkness: Ashes 2 Ashes (2004) a four-issue miniseries that picks up directly after the film's ending, taking place on the very day Ash and his friends travel to the cabin, and leads into Army of Darkness: Shop Till You Drop (Dead) (2005) a four-issue miniseries. Another mini-series, Army of Darkness vs. Re-Animator (2005), featuring Ash confined to a mental institution and forced to go up against Doctor Herbert West and his zombie minions, came out in 2005. In 2006, Dynamite started releasing an ongoing series, showing the events after the Re-Animator crossover. The ongoing series ended in 2012.

Ash appeared in Marvel Zombies vs. The Army of Darkness (2007) which takes place in the Marvel Zombies universe. The series serves to fill in certain gaps left in the Marvel Zombies storyline that even Dead Days didn't flesh out fully. The crossover lasts several issues, with Ash finally returning to his own world (and own comic) with Army of Darkness: From the Ashes (2007). Dynamite has created several crossovers and side stories of their own. Tales of the Army of Darkness (2006) is a one shot comic featuring several stories about Ash and the Necronomicon. Darkman vs. Army of Darkness (2006), a four-issue miniseries features Ash teaming up with Darkman to stop the Deadites. Ash then starred in Freddy vs. Jason vs. Ash (2007), a six-issue miniseries from Wildstorm and Dynamite Entertainment where Ash must face off against the horror icons, and then Freddy vs. Jason vs. Ash: The Nightmare Warriors (2009), in which Ash joins forces with a support group for people who have both faced and survived Freddy Krueger and Jason Voorhees, consisting of previously established characters from their respective franchises, to defeat the two for good. Ash appeared in a crossover comic series with "Danger Girl" Abbey Chase, with the first issue released in April 2011.[9] In 2013, the main series ended with a final crossover with the "Re-Animator" in a one-shot comic, and a 7-issue crossover with Hack/Slash during late 2013 to late 2014. At Comic-Con 2013, Dynamite announced a reboot of the title called "Ash and the Army of Darkness", which was released in Nov. 2013. Like Dynamite's Ashes 2 Ashes story from 2004, it picks up after the final frame of Army of Darkness.

Concept and creation

According to Sam Raimi, Ash's name is a reference to his originally intended fate at the end of Evil Dead, stating "that's all that was going to be left of him in the end." Campbell, however, suggested the name was short for "Ashley". When creating Army of Darkness, Raimi toyed with giving him the full name "Ashley J. Williams",[10] which was later used by video games and comics involving the character. Campbell later confirmed in Cinefantastique that the full name was official.[11] The character is also referred to as "Ashley" by his sister Cheryl in the original Evil Dead. Ash is again called "Ashley" by numerous deadites in the new Ash Vs. Evil Dead show. In the Army of Darkness comics, it is revealed that the "J" in Ashley J. Williams stands for James, and that it comes from his grandfather James Williams, who was a fictitious member of The Untouchables led by Eliot Ness in 1929 Chicago.

Bruce Campbell has stated Ash is incompetent at everything except fighting the Evil Dead.[12] Campbell also added that Ash is "a bad slow thinker and a good fast thinker". He knows some degree of hand-to-hand combat techniques, and shows prowess with a variety of weapons in various situations.[13] His main strength seems to be his ingenuity: although he is repeatedly noted in the audio commentaries for The Evil Dead and Evil Dead II for his stupidity and ignorance, he has from the second film on been shown creating such things ranging from his chainsaw bracket and shotgun harness, gunpowder from mainly referencing its elemental makeup in a chemistry book, a fully functional prosthetic hand from a metal gauntlet, and the short-lived "Deathcoaster".

His invention and ingenuity are further expanded on in the games: in Evil Dead: Regeneration, he creates fully functional weapons such as a flamethrower and a harpoon gun from spare parts that are merely laying about; and in Evil Dead: A Fistful of Boomstick, the inventiveness seems to run in Ash's family, as his blacksmith ancestor in the Colonial Dearborn level is quickly able to make a flamethrower and a Gatling gun from spare parts Ash finds for him, when Ash says those things "haven't even been invented yet". In the 1992 comic adaptation of Army of Darkness written by Sam and Ivan Raimi, Ash says that he has a degree in engineering from Michigan State University.

Ash's personality and state of mind change drastically throughout the franchise. In The Evil Dead and the beginning of Evil Dead II, he is something of a laid-back everyman, but by the middle of Evil Dead II and into Army of Darkness, he has grown into a much braver person, and becomes the voice of encouragement and confidence in Arthur's castle. It is at this point that Ash becomes known for his one-liners, and his personality takes on a more cynical, embittered tone. Raimi has said that he feels Ash's personality transformation in Darkness was very out of character.[14]

Characteristics

Deadite Ash in Evil Dead II. Deadite Ash is a demonically possessed evil twin of Ash.

In The Evil Dead, Ash is portrayed as being cowardly and incapable of dealing with the horrors presented to him. Over the course of the film, Ash gradually overcomes his fears and manages to fight off his possessed friends. Also, he is shown to take his predicament very seriously in the first film, rather than in a comedic manner, as in the subsequent films. Evil Dead II portrays Ash as a braver character. Campbell commented that in the film Ash is more than capable at fighting off monsters. The character gradually became more of an antihero within Evil Dead II and its sequel, Army of Darkness. Ash's most defining characteristic is the chainsaw attached to Ash's right nub, placed after cutting off his possessed hand in Evil Dead II.

Since Army of Darkness, Ash has been portrayed consistently as in Bruce Campbell's words "A guy who doesn't know anything, a big talker". Ash rarely takes situations seriously and is very incompetent as a hero or protagonist. Often causing the conflict that drives the story forward rather then solving it. At the same time having a selfish, self serving attitude towards others. In Ash vs Evil Dead, many of his neighbors call him an "asshole" and complain about his narcissistic cocky attitude while his boss frequently hounds him for making up excuses for getting out of work. At the same time Ash has been portrayed as a womanizer and in the television series has been show to flat out lie and invent sympathetic anecdotes to sleep with women at local bars. Ash vs Evil Dead reveals that his father Brock Williams was often over competitive with him as a child and it seems that many of Ash's traits have originated from his father's behavior. Despite his immature conceited attitude Ash has been shown to have a softer, more heroic side. In Army of Darkness he chooses to stay behind and help the people of Arthur's castle fight the deadite army despite having nothing to gain from doing so. Over the course of the television series, Ash does bond with Pablo and Kelly. At one point calling Kelly the "daughter he never had."

Ash's dark side manifests itself as a separate entity, referred to as "Bad Ash". This persona first appears in Evil Dead II, where Ash experiences a hallucination wherein his reflection torments him over dismembering their girlfriend Linda with a chainsaw, and proceeds to try to choke him, only for Ash to realize he is choking himself. This side of him later splits off his body in Army of Darkness after a battle with "Tiny Ashes", becoming "Bad Ash". Ash seemingly kills his doppelganger and buries him, but "Bad Ash" is revived after Ash incorrectly recites the Necronomicon incantations. "Bad Ash" later leads the Army to King Arthur's castle to retrieve the Necronomicon, even corrupting Ash's then-love interest Sheila. He battles "Good Ash" for the Necronomicon, gets burnt with a torch, and continues fighting as a Skeleton. As Henry the Red's troops arrive to assist in the battle against the undead and break their ranks, Ash coincidentally cuts off his alter ego's right hand and catapults him into the sky on a lit sack of gunpowder, which explodes and destroys Bad Ash.

A new version of Bad Ash appears in the television series Ash vs Evil Dead, spawned from Ash's dismembered hand from Evil Dead II. While essentially exactly the same character, he has more in common with Ash in terms of personality, and even sharing old injuries and ailments which Ash uses to his advantage during their fight. Rather than being overtly evil and openly hostile, this version is more subtle and comes across as a psychopath, being friendly and flirty towards Amanda at first but becomes unstable and aggressive when she rejects and hurts him by calling his decayed hand disgusting.

In popular culture

A pre-order bonus for the video game Lollipop Chainsaw, a game that revolves around zombie slaying, was an Ash Williams skin for the game's protagonist, Juliet Starling.[15][16]

The 1997 video game Blood was heavily based on the Evil Dead films, and its protagonist uses many of Ash's one-liners throughout the game.

The character was parodied in an episode of the Canadian CGI-animated series ReBoot, in which a game based on the Evil Dead series (parodically titled Malicious Corpses) was being played. Additionally, in the American animated series The Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy Ash, as well as Snake Plissken from Escape from New York, were parodied in the form of the character Hoss Delgado, voiced by Diedrich Bader.[17]

A fan film parody titled Ash vs. Lobo and the DC Dead made an appearance on YouTube in January 2016 in which Ash battles the DC Comics character Lobo.[18]

Experimental pop artist Eric Millikin created a large mosaic portrait of Ash out of Halloween candy and spiders as part of his "Totally Sweet" series in 2013.[19][20]

Adventure Quest Worlds makes references to Ash, with one of the special events called "Ebil Dread". It features Artix, one of the main NPCs, losing his hand and replacing it with a chainsaw, as well as undead monsters referred to as "Pink-ites".

Ash appears in the 2015 video game Broforce, named Ash Brolliams.

Many songs mention Ash or are directly about The Evil Dead series in general; such songs include:

Reception

Ash ranked eleventh on UGO.com's Top 100 Heroes of All Time list, describing him as "an egomaniacal, complaining, misogynistic goon", but also the best "demon and zombie killer ever to be portrayed on the silver screen". They additionally praised the character for his humility at the conclusion of Army of Darkness, in returning to his own time.[22] Empire ranked him the 24th Greatest Movie Character on their list of 100, calling him a "truly iconic horror hero", and a "delirious, delicious, dimwitted" parody of action heroes.[23] He was also ranked number 77 on Fandomania's list of the 100 Greatest Fictional Characters,[24] and number one on WatchMojo.com's Top 10 Horror Movie Heroes.[25]

The Evil Dead films and the character of Ash influenced many 1990s first-person shooters such as Doom, Duke Nukem 3D, and Blood. Duke Nukem quotes so many lines from Ash that Bruce Campbell stated that he was angered by not being paid for them.[26][27]

Another notable video game character influenced by Ash is Alisa Bosconovitch. In an interview, Tekken project director and chief producer Katsuhiro Harada said, "Alisa's quite popular overseas as well. Personally, I didn't think we would get much of a following. We usually do research for new characters, but Alisa was something we created based on internal staff feedback. We really wanted a character with chainsaws on her arms."[28] Scriptwriter Dai Satō then asked, "Influenced by Ash by any chance?"[28] Harada replied, "Exactly. (laugh) I'm a huge fan of Sam Raimi's Evil Dead. I just didn't think Alisa would catch on, considering her vast differences from the other characters."[28]

References

  1. Sciretta, Peter (1 December 2008). "Empire's The 100 Greatest Movie Characters of All Time". SlashFilm. Retrieved 12 October 2016.
  2. Vijay, Amar (24 October 2013). "The 666 Greatest Horror Characters Of All Time". Empire. Retrieved 12 October 2016.
  3. Sam Raimi (director) (1981). The Evil Dead (Film). New Line Cinema.
  4. Sam Raimi (director) (1987). Evil Dead II (Film). De Laurentiis Entertainment Group, Renaissance Pictures.
  5. Sam Raimi (director) (1992). Army of Darkness (Film). Universal Pictures.
  6. "Ash vs Evil Dead". IMDB. 1 March 2016.
  7. "Telltale Games - Poker Night 2".
  8. "Dark Horse Solicitations for January, 2008". Comic Book Resources. October 5, 2007.
  9. "Danger Girl And The Army Of Darkness Comic". Deadites Online. January 12, 2011.
  10. Warren, Bill (2001). The Evil Dead Companion. Macmillan. (2001). ISBN 0-312-27501-3. p. 181
  11. Clarke, Frederick S. (1991). Cinefantastique 22-23: p. 29
  12. Audio commentary for Evil Dead II, Bruce Campbell: "As dumb as Ash is, he's actually a capable guy with dealing with monsters"
  13. In Army of Darkness, Ash trains the people of King Arthur's kingdom in martial arts
  14. Sam Raimi's comments on the DVD audio commentary for the Army of Darkness Director's Cut.
  15. Turek, Ryan (2 February 2012). "Pre-Order Lollipop Chainsaw Video Game, Get An Evil Dead Ash Outfit". ComingSoon.Net. Retrieved 21 October 2016.
  16. Webb, Charles (2 February 2012). "'Lollipop Chainsaw' Gets 'Evil Dead' Preorder Bonus, Soundtrack Announcement". MTV. Retrieved 21 October 2016.
  17. Felix Vasquez (26 June 2012). "Our Ten Favorite Bad Ass Monster Hunters". Cinema Crazed. Retrieved 21 October 2016.
  18. Barkan, Jonathan (8 January 2016). "It's "Ash vs Lobo and The DC Dead"!". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved 21 October 2016.
  19. Burkart, Gregory. "Get a Taste of Eric Millikin's Totally Sweet Candy Monster Mosaics". FEARnet. Retrieved 9 November 2013.
  20. Millikin, Eric. "Eric Millikin's totally sweet Halloween candy monster portraits". Detroit Free Press. Retrieved 9 November 2013.
  21. "The Lemmings Band - Zen Baseball Punk Rock Music".
  22. "Top 100 Heroes of All Time". UGO.com. UGO Networks. Retrieved 2008-12-13.
  23. "The 100 Greatest Movie Characters". Empire. Retrieved 2009-07-26.
  24. "The 100 Greatest Fictional Characters". Fandomania.com. Archived from the original on 12 June 2010. Retrieved 2010-05-21.
  25. "Top 10 Horror Movie Heroes". YouTube. WatchMojo.com. August 10, 2013.
  26. One on One with Bruce Campbell verbosity.wiw.org
  27. November 5, 1999 IGN For Men Interview: Bruce Campbell
  28. 1 2 3 As quoted in The Art of Tekken Hybrid (Namco Bandai Games Inc., 2011), 26.

External links

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