8/13/2023 0 Comments Cabin fever full movie youtube![]() Shame they were servicing a movie that was, largely, not very good. It was really impressive for what, essentially, was a low-budget direct-to-video affair. I wouldn't go out of my way to say that that was a good movie, but I felt that it had tremendous practical special and make-up effects. I'll be honest, the only other Cabin Fever movie I watched (there's two more, if you weren't aware), was Patient Zero. No one had anything positive to say about this movie. I'm honestly surprised that, out of 28 reviews on RottenTomatoes, there was not a single positive one. ![]() The pointof the matter is that this really is an absolutely unnecessary update of the original movie and, quite frankly, it's worse than the original. I only watched it the one time in the theaters and I would welcome a re-watch. Honestly, as much as I've enjoyed some Eli Roth movies, as far as I remember, I wasn't that big of a fan of the original Cabin Fever. That would actually be a pretty cool idea. Which, I'm assuming, has a big cult following and it can be a merging of two different generations of horror fans, those who watched the movie when it first came out (I was a part of that, I was 14 when the original came out) and those who want to experience it for themselves for the first time because they may have been too young to watch it. If the idea was to bring the Cabin Fever story to a new generation of horror fans, given that, again, at that point, almost half a decade had passed between movies, then why not just do a re-release of the original. Quite possibly the most unnecessary horror remake in quite some time. And then, a couple of days after that movie, I end up watching this. I remember talking, in my Mad Money review, about how, while there are still remakes left and right in Hollywood, they aren't as bad or as prevalent now as they were in the past. I think that's just way too short of a time to wait for a remake, to be perfectly honest. Stay tuned for casting news (as well as a firm debut date) while we await Fright Krewe’s spooky arrival on Peacock and Hulu.įeeling the pull for more DreamWorks Animation? Peacock’s the place to catch a ton of DreamWorks classics, including the original Shrek, Puss in Boots: The Last Wish, The Prince of Egypt, and Flushed Away.At the point of this movie's release, 14 years had passed between the original movie and its remake. The voice cast for Fright Krewe hasn’t yet been revealed, though Dreamworks gave fans a first-look image peek, shown above, at the animated five-member team of New Orleans teens who’ll be tempting voodoo-infused fate to save their city. He’s also at the wheel for Lionsgate’s upcoming feature film adaptation of the hilariously slapstick post-apocalyptic Borderlands video game series. The same can’t be said of Roth, of course, who’s been plumbing the depths of terror for years - most recently as the director of the upcoming serial-killer slasher Thanksgiving. Mitchell Smith and animator Shane Acker also will serve a co-executive producers.įor DreamWorks, it’s the first time the iconic studio behind animated classics like Shrek and How to Train Your Dragon (which itself is getting a live-action movie remake) has intrepidly dipped a toe into the horror genre. Creators Roth and Frey also serve as the show’s executive producers, alongside Joanna Lewis and Kristine Songco, who’ve previously teamed as co-producers on Jurassic World: Camp Cretaceous for Netflix. “But, honestly? Saving the world might be easier than becoming friends.” DreamWorks Animation's First Horror Projectīound for both Peacock and Hulu, the 10-episode series is set to arrive sometime later this year. “An ancient prophecy and a Voodoo Queen put misfit teens in charge of saving New Orleans from the biggest demonic threat it’s faced in almost two centuries,” teases DreamWorks. RELATED: How to Train Your Dragon Moments We Can't Wait to See in Live Action ![]() Created by Roth and A Million Little Pieces author James Frey, the story centers on a squad of adults in-the-making who might just have a harder time bonding together than they will dispatching an age-old evil. What does a horror master like Eli Roth do for a present-day encore after a creative career spent helming fright classics like Hostel, Cabin Fever, and The Green Inferno? How about getting the kids in on a little scare action - this time in a tense but toned-down way - with a DreamWorks animated horror series?ĭreamWorks Animation has just revealed the upcoming Fright Krewe, which, as the name playfully hints, takes a page from New Orleans’ historic carnival culture in spinning a terror tale about teens taking on demons in the Big Easy.
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