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An exclusive interview with “Cabin Fever” director Eli Roth By now, readers of this site are familiar with charismatic director Eli Roth and his quest to bring “Cabin Fever” to the big screen. But do you know his entire story? Didn’t think so. We caught up with Mr. Roth to unearth even more details about the auteur’s love for DVD, fighting rejection and why this country still needs a horror movie enema. It took a long time for you to raise the money for Cabin Fever. At some point, during all of the rejection, you must have questioned whether or not it was going to happen. |
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Will Cabin Fever’s profit margins prove to other producers that the movie-going public has a deep desire to see more of the red stuff? Yes, and other directors have told me as much. “House of 1,000 Corpses” has a lot to do with this too. It’s a very bloody, dark, violent movie. Same with “28 Days Later.” Clearly, when people go to see a horror movie they want to be scared. Even if the executives don’t understand why people want that, they’re not afraid of it anymore. Before, there was a wave of movies like “The Ring”, “The Others” and “The Sixth Sense” which were all PG-13. That’s when everyone said R-rated horror is dead which is bullshit. If you make a good movie it doesn’t matter what it’s rated. |
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Being that you’re such a gung-ho horror nut, I was expecting the “Cabin Fever” DVD to be, like, a five disc box set extravaganza. Why only one disc? Most of the stuff we shot is in the movie, especially the gore. There is a longer cut and I would eventually like to do a director’s cut DVD. My feeling is this: Sure we could’ve done five discs but what are those five discs going to be made up of? Along those lines, there are five different commentaries on the “Cabin Fever” DVD. Are people going to listen to all five commentaries? No way. But there’s plenty of there to choose from depending on what you’re most interested in. The guys at Third Sector did an amazing, amazing, AMAZING job with the “Cabin Fever” DVD. They really care about making DVDs that make directors happy. When I sat down with them, I said I want to do this thing called “Chick Vision”, five commentaries, and an Easter Egg on the menu selection screen. There wasn’t anything they couldn’t handle. |
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marketing. Because the MPAA won’t let you do certain things in a poster or trailer, you can’t really show these movies for what they are. You go to every other country in the world and you’ll soon notice that they celebrate genre films. They are treated like an art form. Brussels International Film Festival, Fantasia, Montreal, Stiges Festival in Spain, they’re all serious about their love for genre films. Stiges, for example, hailed “Beyond Re-Animator” as a work of genius. They love and embrace these movies. There is such fucking snobbery in this country against horror movies that if you say you’re making a horror movie; it’s like you’re saying that you’re making porn. Studios sent out press materials for the “Texas Chains Massacre” telling journalists to not refer to it as a horror film. It’s a big problem. You’re not allowed to call a horror movie a horror movie. Thrillers scare you while they’re happening, you find out the twist, it’s over, then it’s not scary anymore. Horror resonates. It gets into your psyche and disturbs you. The best horror movies conjure images that stick with you for years. That’s horror. |
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