The Deadites are back, and this time, terror comes wrapped in grief, family ties, and vows that refuse to stay buried.
Evil Dead Burn, the latest installment in the long-running horror franchise, brings audiences into a secluded family home where mourning quickly turns into mayhem. Fresh, ferocious, and emotionally charged, the film offers a new nightmare for longtime fans while pushing the beloved series into more intimate and unsettling territory.
Watch the Official Trailer:
Rated R-18 with no cuts, Evil Dead Burn opens in Philippine cinemas on July 8.
A Widow’s Grief Becomes a Deadite Nightmare
In Evil Dead Burn, a recently widowed woman stays with her in-laws at their isolated family home to grieve the loss of her husband. What begins as a painful reunion soon spirals into a savage fight for survival when members of the family are possessed one by one and transformed into Deadites.

Trapped in the home, surrounded by people who were supposed to share her sorrow, she discovers that love, death, and evil can form a horrifying bond. Worse, the promises made at the altar may not end at the grave.
By centering the story on a widow and her in-laws, the film turns familiar Evil Dead chaos into something more personal. The fear is not only in the blood, fire, and violence. It is also in the silence of grief, the tension of a broken family, and the terrifying feeling of being trapped with people who are no longer themselves.
Sébastien Vaniček Brings Fire, Fear, and Fresh Energy
French director Sébastien Vaniček, who earned international acclaim for his skin-crawling horror film Vermines, known globally as Infested, steps into the franchise with a bold vision. Together with co-writer Florent Bernard, he takes on one of horror cinema’s most iconic worlds with both reverence and nerve.

For Vaniček, the experience of making Evil Dead Burn was as wild as the film itself.
“It starts with an idea in your apartment in Paris,” he laughs, “and then cut to a crew of 200 in front of three people on fire, in front of a house on fire. It’s pretty crazy, but I’m surrounded by people who are really professional and very good at what they do, so I’m in good hands.”
Oh, and with that kind of scale, the film promises not just scares, but spectacle. Fire, chaos, and practical intensity fuel the director’s take on a franchise known for going all in.
Honoring Evil Dead Without Playing It Safe
While Evil Dead Burn carries the bloody spirit of the franchise, Vaniček was determined not to simply copy what came before. For him, respecting the fans meant understanding the rules, then daring to twist them.

“There’s obviously an immense respect for the franchise and the fans. That’s where it all begins. But I know I wasn’t offered this role to simply do what the audience expects. Respect is also understanding that Evil Dead is not just about blood and chainsaws. There is so much more to explore in this world. And that’s what I was determined to do. Understand the rules and twist them. Try to bring a new vision, a unique vision to this amazing world. I think that’s why Evil Dead is still alive today – because it gives directors freedom to do new things.”
That freedom is what keeps the franchise burning. With every new filmmaker comes a new way to unleash the Deadites, and Vaniček appears ready to deliver a chapter that feels unmistakably Evil Dead while carving out its own wicked identity.
A More Violent, More Emotional Kind of Horror
For co-writer Florent Bernard, the challenge was clear: find a way into the story that did not feel like a repeat. Instead of another group of friends, the film looks at a woman uprooted by loss and forced to face horror alongside the family she married into.

“The biggest challenge was avoiding too much repetition of what had already been done. That’s why we decided not to use a group of friends or people of the same age. But a woman uprooted and stuck with her in-laws—especially after a loss that affects them all—carried real narrative promise. Sébastien didn’t want to make the bloodiest Evil Dead, but definitely the most violent one.”
It is a chilling promise. Rather than chasing gore for gore’s sake, Evil Dead Burn builds its terror from emotional pressure, physical danger, and the painful ties that bind people together even when evil tears them apart.
The Deadites Return to Philippine Cinemas
Brutal, bold, and built to shake audiences, Evil Dead Burn aims to give horror fans a theatrical experience that is scary, funny, emotional, and deeply uncomfortable in all the right ways.

“If audiences walk out of the theatre feeling like they’ve experienced a horror-action film that’s emotional and funny, as well as uncomfortable and exhilarating,” says Bernard, “that’s what we’re aiming for.”
With no cuts and an R-18 rating, Evil Dead Burn is set to unleash its full force on the big screen. Fearless fans can catch the Deadites when the film opens in Philippine cinemas on July 8. Distributed locally by Columbia Pictures PH.