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Does his best film overall fit within one of those categories? Are those the only types of movies he’s knocked out of the park? Let’s find out.
16) For Love of the Game

There have been a few Raimi films that played like director for hire movies, because they were. But even in those there was a personal connection he felt with the material.
That includes the Kevin Costner vehicle For Love of the Game, which Raimi made because he liked the script and had always loved baseball. But no moment of the movie feels distinctly Raimi’s, and of all the sports movies Costner has made his bread and butter, this is the stalest. On the upside, it did establish his working relationship with J. K. Simmons.
Stream For Love of the Game for free with ads on YouTube.
15) Crimewave

The Coen brothers have a long history of working with Raimi. They even included Bruce Campbell in The Hudsucker Proxy, Intolerable Cruelty, The Ladykillers, and Fargo (in which he pops up on a TV in the background at one point). Joel Coen was an assistant editor on The Evil Dead, Raimi sought their advice when making A Simple Plan, the list goes on.
They also collaborated on Crimewave, which the Coens wrote alongside Raimi. The result is undoubtedly inferior to what you might expect from a collaboration between the three. But a lot of that can be blamed on Embassy Films Associates, because this is definitely a case of a tampered-with product. It’s too zany by half, but at least that’s more memorable than For Love of the Game.
Stream Crimewave for free with ads on Tubi.
14) Oz the Great and Powerful

Raimi took on Oz the Great and Powerful because he wanted to make a full-on family film. The closest he’d come was the Spider-Man movies. Unfortunately, it’s just another one of those Raimi movies that doesn’t show many signs of his fingerprints. It’s just a bland, glossy, too-saccharine and ultimately unnecessary prequel to The Wizard of Oz. 99 times out of 100 people are going to choose Wicked if they want that (the play existed a full decade before the Great and Powerful landed in theaters).
The CGI overtakes any personality the film attempts to have. It’s not unlike fellow Disney turkey John Carter from the previous year. And, while Taylor Kitsch was fine enough in that movie, James Franco’s casting here feels like a total misfire. Thankfully, Mila Kunis, Michelle Williams, and Joey King turn in performances that at least help buoy what is overall a very skippable $215 million motion picture.
Stream Oz the Great and Powerful on Disney+.
13) Spider-Man 3

Were it not for Spider-Man 3, Raimi’s Spidey trilogy would be one of the best of all time. Granted, now that there’s about 20 years between its release and now, the blow has been cushioned a bit, but it is still undoubtedly a massive step down from the trendsetter first one and the masterful second one.
It’s problems are the stuff of legend by this point, from the idiotic Saturday Night Fever dancing to the fact Raimi was forced to shove Venom into the narrative. It’s so stuff that nothing really lands. Thomas Haden Church was wonderful as Sandman, though. He should have been the primary of two villains (with the other being Hobgoblin, even if James Franco’s performance in this movie is…off).
Stream Spider-Man 3 on Disney+.
12) Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness

After being developed by the first film’s director, Scott Derrickson, for a few years, Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness ultimately went to Raimi. It wasn’t long after that when the film went in front of cameras. And to a degree that switch and rush helps explain why Multiverse of Madness feels as tonally unsure as it does. It’s not really anybody’s vision, it’s just a requisite catch-up with Doctor Strange and conclusion (?) to Scarlet Witch’s arc.
On the upside, there are definitely some Raimi touches here. The set-piece where Wanda is trying to make her way through reflective surfaces is perfectly him, the Zombie Strange sequence feels right out of Evil Dead, and the scene where the back of Black Bolt’s head blows out (not that we really see blood there) feels far more Raimi than standard MCU. Plus, you know, Pizza Papa. Regardless, while it’s incredibly cool that we got a Raimi-helmed MCU movie (or a Raimi-helmed superhero movie at all after the divisive reaction to Spider-Man 3), Multiverse makes us yearn for a Raimi MCU movie that is his from the very beginning. Marvel is notoriously controlling over directors on these movies, but this one showed them willing to step out of the way and let Raimi do his thing. It would be interesting to see what that would look like if he was doing so from moment one of development.
Stream Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness on Disney+.
11) The Gift

The Gift is of that The Sixth Sense and Stir of Echoes brand of horror-dramas. And while it’s nowhere near as compelling as either of those films, at least it has an intense lead role (her first in a U.S. film, two years after breaking through via Elizabeth).
This is the type of psychic vision thriller that you would find frequently playing on basic cable, probably right before or after a screening of What Lies Beneath. It’s very much in line with that glossy, star-studded Robert Zemeckis movie because, while it has a lot of talent behind it, it’s ultimately just a hollow package that you won’t remember long after it’s done.
Stream The Gift for free on Kanopy.
10) The Quick and the Dead

Some might argue that The Quick and the Dead is more director for hire Raimi than passion project Raimi, but it’s still definitely Raimi. It’s energetic, features a ton of extreme close-ups, and focuses on a character who has suffered greatly.
Is Quick as good as Gene Hackman’s other big ’90s Western, Unforgiven? No, but it’s also not really trying to be as deep as that film. Instead, it’s just a well-paced, highly entertaining Saturday afternoon movie with a simple premise (showdown competitions) put to great use.
Stream The Quick and the Dead on MGM+.
9) Army of Darkness

Some people love Army of Darkness, and more power to them on that front. It does make a good deal of sense why it’s so different from the first two movies. After all, Evil Dead II was really just an intentionally corny version of the straightforward horror narrative of film one.
So, Army of Darkness‘ strategy is to make it an action comedy with a few horror elements. And when those horror elements pop up it’s a good bit of fun, especially with the two-headed Ash scene. But the whole Medieval soldiers versus cackling skeletons finale is just a bit too far into wacky territory. It just doesn’t feel like Evil Dead anymore. Then again, if you feel this one should be a spot or two higher up, that’s not at all disagreeable. It is a nice display of Raimi’s sensibilities and Campbell’s rubber-faced genius.
8) Darkman

After three micro-budgeted films, Darkman represented a step up the studio ladder for Raimi. It was also his first time working with a superhero film, and while it’s certainly no Spider-Man, it’s impressive in its own right. For one, the title character was entirely original, it was a story thought up by Raimi himself. Two, it predated Taken by about 20 years in terms of making Liam Neeson a leading man action star.
Darkman is the early indicator that the director was as adept with superhero material as he was with straightforward horror or, especially, comedy-horror. This is the happy medium between his two great strengths, with a title hero that has leapt from the Universal Monsters world as the pages of a Marvel comic. The result is a high-concept entertainer with a great villain performance by Larry Drake and a runtime that doesn’t allow the film to overstay its welcome.
Stream Darkman on Philo.















