Filmed in early 2009 and scheduled for release in May 2010, and then
delayed until January 2011 for 3D conversion, Drew Goddard's directorial
debut of a Joss Whedon script, The Cabin in the Woods, fell
eventually to MGM's financial woes that lead to the companies bankruptcy
that put the film in limbo. Then in April of last year, MGM announced a
distribution deal with Lionsgate, and there had been hopes the film
would be out for Halloween 2011. But eventually, in July of 2011,
Lionsgate acquired the film wholly and announced an April 2012 release
date.
For me, it was a very clever, very self-aware attempt at parodying the
horror genre, without really saying they're parodying the horror genre.
Whedon and Goddard borrow every trope of the horror genre, which
included a mysterious cabin in the woods, five college kids on break
-the jock, the slut, the virgin, the book smart geek and the stoner- a
stop over at what appears to be an abandoned gas station, but has a
creepy owner who spouts politically incorrect things.Oh, and the
Winnebago standing in for Scooby-Doo's Mystery Machine.
Then, as audiences familiar with the genre know, once the Scooby gang
arrives at the cabin, all hell is going to break loose. And it does, and
it's pretty funny.
For viewers of Whedon's Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel
TV series, you'll see him borrow a lot themes and ideas (along with
various cast members of those shows and Whedon's other series, Dollhouse).
The cast is wonderful, especially Bradley Whitford, Richard Jenkins and
Fran Kranz as Shaggy. Well, not really, but very close. Then, of
course, there is the surprise cameo that even I, Mr. Pop Culture Nerd,
did not know about.
There are plot holes, and very little explanation of how the whole thing
really works, but for any Whedon follower, that's not important. So
those confused by the film (and I heard a guy say this to his girlfriend
as they passed us), expecting a typical horror film like the ones made
in the last few years, will be disappointed by it.
Of course, I still think they should see it, if only because it pokes
fun at the genre without insulting the viewing audience. It's fresh,
fairly original and fun.
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