There is a great deal of excitement and fun to see through an exciting adventure by Ashe. Ashe returns to the Middle Ages, where he is captured by Lord Arthur in the most dangerous adventure in Ashe's life. Ash begins his interest by helping Deadly Chainsaw, who became his only friend, out of danger to recover the Book of the Dead, a powerful book that gives its author the power to summon an army of ghouls that carries many dangerous clashes and events.
More than anything, Army of Darkness is a tribute to the Ray Harryhausen adventure epics (Clash of the Titans, Sinbad, and the like) that Sam Raimi grew up loving.
Containing less of the blood soaked insanity of the previous two instalments, Army of Darkness comes off as more of an adventure film with a horror element attached to it.
Sam Raimi's Army of Darkness delivers a great conclusion to what is one of the most unique trilogies in cinema history, providing a ton of laughs and plenty of exciting action in the process.
Raimi turns his back on the horror genre that brought him fame in the first place and delivers instead a cartoonish sword-and-sorcery fantasy, albeit one with some pretty cool monsters and special effects.