

Audiences are eager to feel the nostalgia they did watching movies of yore. Supplements include a trailer and a 10-minute making-of featurette that will make you realize that some cast members weren't even teenagers when the original film was released. published 30 January 2016 Hollywood is a world of remakes at the moment. Its been a long 13 years since Eli Roths directorial debut, Cabin Fever, so fans of the film are finally getting the remake theyve always wanted.Kidding aside, yes, the remake of Roths horror.


No wonder the end product feels so uninspired.Ĭabin Fever is now available on Blu-ray courtesy of Scream Factory & IFC Midnight. A remake of Roths 2002 film of the same name and the fourth overall installment in the Cabin Fever franchise. This just feels like opportunistic producers who ran out of ideas to keep milking their franchise. Fresh out of college, five friends (Nadine Crocker, Matthew Daddario, Samuel Davis) face the horrors of a flesh-eating virus while staying at a remote cabin. Cabin Fever is a 2016 American horror film directed by Travis Zariwny (under the pseudonym Travis Z) and written by Eli Roth. It’s tempting to say that every generation deserves its own Van Sant Psycho, but at least that had the air of a master filmmaker performing some kind of purposeful experiment. A Cabin Fever remake is about to go into production in Portland using the exact same script Eli Roth and Randy Pearlstein co-penned for the 2002 original. You can see some chops that could make him a great director, but his version of Cabin Fever isn’t directed so much as it’s competently guided. Just about the only thing I’ve learned about the newcomer director here is that he has an eye for capturing atmospheric landscapes (the approach to the backwoods is scored by bars from The Shining theme, which is a nice little touch) and an obvious devotion to practical effects.
