
Instead of talking about the intruders and the flesh-eating virus, he continuously encourages Paul (Strong) to party. He arrives to inspect the crisis and seems to make light of everything. One of my favorite characters is Deputy Winston played by Giuseppe Andrews. My husband and I are calling it “the Showgirlsof horror”! It just didn’t get the recognition it deserves. Although Cabin in the Woods (2011) is the modern meta-commentary on cabin-in-the-woods films, I’m fairly confident that Cabin Feverpulled it off 9 years prior. The first bro in the film is a cameo by the filmmaker himself, Eli Roth, who I believe to be a wink to the audience letting us know that there is something more here. But similar to the first time I watched The Room, I find it really hard to believe that all of this was done by accident.

Things are “gay”, sexual consent is not inquired, and the second douchiest bro in the film sports a shirt citing “Ripe On 6-13-06”, a nod to when the Olsen twins would turn 18. This time around, “problematic” is the first word that comes to mind and I kind of hate that term.
#CABIN FEVER 2002 STREAMING FREE TV#
I originally saw this film in the early 2000s mostly because it stars Rider Strong from the widely beloved TV show, Boy Meets World.

After a couple days I began to embrace the feeling of being alone in the woods, disconnected from technology, feeling present, and-even for a moment-safe from coronavirus. It’s fascinating how tied to the internet we’ve all become. It seems to help safely escape the treacherous reality while trying to make sense of the epidemic.

However, there’s been something therapeutic about watching quarantine themed films while, in reality, humanity quarantines. Stumbling into this getaway that lacked WiFi and a neighbor was scary. How we watched this film while actually quarantining during a global pandemic at an off-the-grid cabin, I will never know (see photo below). Their true colors show as they attempt to survive, grasping the attention of locals. One by one they become prey to a flesh-eating virus. A handful of friends stay at a secluded cabin in the woods for the week. So after a day of skiing near our most recent, admittedly very eerie Airbnb rental, we hit the thrift store and were able to snatch B ody of Lies (2008), Ghost Rider(2007), Laws of Attraction(2004), and what this article will focus on, the piece de resistance, Cabin Fever(2002).Ī quick synopsis.
#CABIN FEVER 2002 STREAMING FREE MOVIE#
Browsing the shelves of films, trying to establish just how your Saturday evening would look it lacks the frustration of flicking through Netflix’s mediocrity.ĭid you know there are still stores that offer that service? They usually cost between $1 and $3 a rental, there are NO late fees, and if you decide you want to just add the movie to your home collection, you can! They’re called thrift stores and they’re everywhere. With many other casualties of COVID, that store has sadly closed, but it reminded us how fun video rentals can be. My husband and I used to be fortunate enough to still have an active video rental store in our neighborhood. There are some getaway locations, as we have unintentionally discovered, that although fully equipped with a TV and DVD player, do not have internet nor a DVD collection. I challenge you, go to a family-oriented Airbnb with a collection of movies available andI would be surprised if they don’t have: Pirates of the Caribbean, Harry Potter, Fast and the Furious, Mean Girls, 10 Things I Hate About You, The Departed, or Fight Club. Like pouring through the CD stacks at a used record store, there is a definitive era exhibited in these libraries, usually films spanning from around 1998 through 2010.

One common thread we have found amongst the less “curated” destinations has been the eclectic DVD selection. They allow us to get away and scratch that travel itch, yet still be responsible by social distancing. Throughout the pandemic, my fiancé (now husband) and I have taken a number of trips to rural Airbnb locations.
