Samuel Marshall Raimi (born October 23, 1959) is an American film director, producer, and writer. He is best known for directing the classic cult-horror film The Evil Dead and the blockbuster Spider-Man films.
Raimi was born in Royal Oak, Michigan to a conservative Jewish family of Polish ancestry; his father was Leonard Ronald Raimi and his mother was Celia Barbara Raimi. His original surname was Rengewrtz, but was shortened Raimi after his grandfather immigrated to the United States. His father's close cousin was Harry Margolis who played for the St. Louis Cardinals in the 1941 season. He attended Michigan State University and majored in English.
In the 1990s Raimi moved into other genres, directing such films as A Simple Plan (1998) (starring Bill Paxton and Billy Bob Thornton) and For Love of the Game (1999) (starring Kevin Costner). Raimi achieved great commercial success with the blockbuster Spider-Man (2002), which was adapted from the comic book series of the same name. The movie has grossed over $800 million USD worldwide, and has spawned a sequel. Raimi is currently working on Spider-Man 3, and has expressed interest in doing a film adaptation of The Wee Free Men by Terry Pratchett afterwards. Prior to directing the Spider-Man films, Raimi lobbied to direct Batman Forever when Tim Burton was ousted from the director's chair, but was rejected in favor of Joel Schumacher, whose reputation at the time outshined Raimi's.
He has also worked in front of the camera with Miller's Crossing as an ill-fated gunman, Stephen King's The Stand as a dimwitted hitman who pays a fatal price for a mistake, John Carpenter's Body Bags in an unusual role as a gas station attendant, and Indian Summer in what is perhaps his biggest role as a bumbling assistant to Alan Arkin.
Other director trademarks include: a distinctive type of camera shot where the camera follows a moving object such as an arrow at high speeds in first person or side view; dolly zooms; and shots of smoke or fog in the first few minutes of most of his films. The montage effect he uses (choppy montage-style sequences to cover a lengthy set of actions in a short space of time) can be seen, like Sergei Eisenstein's methods of montage, to be both metric and rhythmic, therefore containing elements of the tonal and overtonal.
Raimi often borrows scenes and ideas from Hong Kong films, especially A Chinese Ghost Story for use in at least one of the Evil Dead movies and in some episodes of Xena. ***
As director:
1959 births | Living people | Jewish American film directors | Michigan State University alumni | People from Michigan | American film producers | American film directors | Evil Dead | English-language film directors
Sam Raimi | Sam Raimi | Sam Raimi | Sam Raimi | Sam Raimi | サム・ライミ | Sam Raimi | Sam Raimi | Sam Raimi | Sam Raimi
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