How EVIL DEAD BURN Connects to Every Other Movie in the EVIL DEAD Franchise
One of the things that has always made the Evil Dead franchise so much fun is that its continuity has never been locked into a perfectly straight line.
Every movie shares the same blood-soaked DNA, but each entry has also played with the mythology in its own way. Whether it was rights issues forcing a reimagined recap in Evil Dead II, alternate endings in Army of Darkness, or the more standalone approach of the modern films, the series has always left room for fans to connect the dots.
Evil Dead Burn changes that in a big way. While the sixth film still delivers everything you'd expect from an Evil Dead movie, including Deadites, gallons of gore, and plenty of twisted horror, it also serves as the franchise's most interconnected chapter yet.
Instead of sprinkling in a few Easter eggs, the movie builds its entire story around decades of established lore, finding ways to tie together every previous film in the series.
The biggest revelation revolves around Will, played by George Pullar, whose death sets the events of the film in motion. Before the nightmare really begins, viewers discover that Will and his brother Joseph come from a family with deep ties to one of the franchise's most important figures. Their grandfather wasn't just interested in the supernatural. He was actually a close friend of Professor Raymond Knowby.
Fans should recognize Knowby as the archaeologist whose recordings introduced audiences to the Necronomicon Ex Mortis in the original The Evil Dead and Evil Dead II. His recordings documented the horrifying consequences of reading from the Book of the Dead and awakening the Kandarian Demon.
Evil Dead Burn expands that history by revealing that Knowby and the brothers' grandfather worked together studying the Necronomicon. Throughout the family's home are audio recordings, research notes, pages copied from the infamous book, and even a sketch of the version of the Necronomicon that appeared in the 2013 Evil Dead reboot.
It's a clever way of acknowledging that every version of the cursed book exists within the same larger mythology.
The movie goes even further by introducing a secret organization called the Circle of Wise Men. According to the film, Professor Knowby and the brothers' grandfather belonged to this group, which dedicated itself to understanding the Necronomicon and discovering ways to fight back against Kandarian demons.
Fans of Army of Darkness will remember the Wise Man, the mystical figure who guided Ash Williams during his time in medieval England. Evil Dead Burn strongly suggests that his knowledge eventually evolved into this organization, creating one of the franchise's coolest lore connections.
The Kandarian dagger also becomes much more important than ever before. Joseph's grandfather possesses a special Kandarian dagger capable of killing Deadites, making his family the primary target of the demonic forces. Along the way, the movie reveals there isn't just one legendary dagger, but an entire collection of them.
There's even a fun joke for longtime fans. One of the daggers from Evil Dead II is used against a Deadite, who simply responds after being stabbed: "Wrong one."
It's exactly the kind of dark humor that feels perfectly at home in the franchise. Those connections already pull together the original trilogy and the 2013 film, but Evil Dead Burn also acts as the closest thing fans have gotten to a direct sequel to Evil Dead Rise.
The opening sequence follows the lake scene that framed Evil Dead Rise. Instead of moving to a completely different story, Burn returns to that exact location.
Two unsuspecting fishermen discover Caleb's severed head tangled on their fishing line before encountering Jessica, who remains possessed after the events of the previous movie. Rather than disappearing after Rise, Jessica has essentially claimed the lake as her own hunting ground.
She murders both fishermen, then patiently waits for another victim. When Will drives near the lake, Jessica steps into the road, causing the crash that ultimately leads to his possession and kicks off the rest of the film's story.
It's a surprisingly direct continuation that makes Evil Dead Burn feel like a hidden sequel while still telling its own standalone story.
The callbacks continue all the way through the credits. The mid-credits scene is mostly played for laughs as the possessed Grandma Polly steals a woman's legs so she can walk again, paying off an earlier joke from the film.
The post-credits scene, however, delivers one final connection to Evil Dead Rise. Back at the crematorium introduced earlier in the movie, the daughter of one of the employees examines several unclaimed urns. One bears a familiar name: Ellie.
It's a reference to Alyssa Sutherland's Deadite from Evil Dead Rise. As the girl looks into a mirror, she suddenly sees Ellie's reflection staring back at her. When she turns around, Ellie is standing right behind her.
After killing the child, Ellie leaves fans with one final tease: "Mommy's back." Considering Ellie was decapitated and later fed into a wood chipper in Evil Dead Rise, her return raises all kinds of questions.
More importantly, it opens the door for something fans probably never expected. If Ellie can somehow come back, then perhaps other iconic Deadites from across the franchise aren't gone forever either.
Of course, fans will have to wait to see where that mystery leads. Evil Dead Wrath has already been confirmed for 2028, but instead of continuing the story, it'll head back to the 1970s as a prequel set before the events of the original films.
If Evil Dead Burn proved anything, though, it's that this franchise has become far more connected than many fans ever imagined. What once felt like a collection of loosely linked horror stories is starting to resemble one sprawling mythology.
Between Professor Knowby, the Circle of Wise Men, multiple Necronomicons, Kandarian daggers, and the shocking return of Ellie, Evil Dead Burn turns decades of franchise history into one bloody, demon-filled puzzle that's only getting bigger.