![]() ![]() Jordan and Cerina prove to very intelligent.Ī great track if you're a fan of either actress. Not much screaming like most Actress commentaries. It's more like an interview than a commentary. Jordan tells a story of how she got angry at James DeBello in one scene. Cerina also talks about how over protective she is of her little brother who has a cameo in the movie. Cerina tells the story of how she first met Eli's parents whilst she was naked in the bath. Jordan tells a story of how she took her top off in an interview with Eli. They explain how they got the roles and what their opinions on this movie are. Plenty of flirting and banter throughout. ![]() When it's time for Cerina's comments, we hear them in sing song "Hi Cerina, Hi Eli". Jordan and Cerina are recorded separately. Reviewed by mjduda on November 5th, 2006: The best of the 5 tracks.Ĭommentary 2: Writer/director Eli Roth and actors Jordan Ladd and Cerina Vincent I don't want repeat what the others reviewers said but this is a fascinating track. Film Details Notes Brief Synopsis Read More As a last hurrah after college, friends Jeff, Karen, Paul, Marcy and Bert embark on a vacation deep into the mountains. He talks about working on film sets and how most of the directors are horrible, bullying, ego maniacs. It's a shame he didn't put that on the DVD. He mentions that at film school, he made a film called "Restaurant Dogs" which involve Ronald McDonald and the Hamburgular killing each other. Karens skin starts to bubble and burn as something grows inside her, tunneling beneath her flesh. With the top down and the music up, they drive to a remote cabin to enjoy their last days of decadence after college. He talks about his influences, mostly Evil Dead and Texas Chainsaw Massacre. Jeff, Karen, Paul, Marcy and Bert embark on a vacation deep into the mountains. He starts off by saying that he went to see horror movies as a kid and he would vomit every time he saw one. He said you don't have to listen to all of them if you don't want to. Because everyone has a story to tell and to put all the info in one commentary wouldn't fit. He answers why this DVD has 5 commentaries and why would you watch all of them. Eli, if you didn't want that, why did you do the commentaries with them? Eli says at the start that this is HIS commentaries and no actors or producers can interrupt him. Eli is like Quentin Tarantino, he can take for hours about film. Five college buddies retreat to the woods for a little R & R and end up getting a horrific lesson in infectious disease in this low-budget shocker. If nothing else, the inclusion of these scenes at least speaks to Roth’s ability as a filmmaker-they’re not just sloppy mistakes on his part.Really interesting. These missing scenes actually provide a context for who that body is, even if it doesn't happen to be an important character. The theatrical version still contains a moment where the deputies discuss a body that's been found in the basement, but there are no further details provided. ![]() It solves the problem, but the scene also contained a wealth of viscera and gore all over the walls that were likely too much for an R-rating. Paul’s plan is shortsighted, and doesn't just take care of a threat he hopes to use this person to help prove his innocence through this bizarre situation.Ī follow-up deleted scene shows the cops taking no chances with the contents of the basement they blast the room full of shotgun fire, then set the whole thing ablaze. Two deleted scenes reveal that Paul (Rider Strong) holds one of the meddlesome locals that attacked them hostage. Cabin Fever does an admirable job at telling a fairly self-contained story, but there's a dangling plot thread involving a mysterious corpse in the basement of the cabin. The majority of these edits revolve around toning down the movie’s extreme violence, but some of the changes also happen to include important plot points. Despite how there’s a handful of alterations made to Cabin Fever, the unrated director’s cut version of the film is only two minutes longer than the theatrical cut. Deleted scenes are par for the course, especially for a director’s first movie. ![]()
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