Product Description
-------------------
Unforgiving. Uncompromising. Unmerciful. Unrated.
The original version was reviled, condemned, and banned around
the world for its on-screen depictions of depravity and violence.
Now experience the accled remake that dares to go even
further: Jennifer Hills (a fearless performance by Sarah Butler)
is a big-city novelist who rents an isolated country cabin to
write her new book. But when she is brutally raped by a group of
sadistic rednecks, Jennifer has plans for more than mere revenge.
One-by-one she will find them. She will inflict horrific acts of
agonizing torment upon them. And no jury in America would ever
convict her. Jeff Branson (All My Children), Daniel Franzese
(Bully), Rodney Eastman (A Nightmare On Elm Street 3 & 4), Chad
Lindberg (The Fast and The Furious) and Tracey Walter (The
Silence of The Lambs) co-star in this graphic, shocking and
undeniably disturbing new take on one of the most controversial
films of all time.
.com
----
The 1978 edition of I Spit on Your Grave has been hailed as a
milestone of film terror and inspiration to the "Fangoria"
generation. It's also been vilified, denounced, and figuratively
spat upon not only for its hatefully misogynist premise, but also
for the laughable ineptitude of its technical
(under)achievements. In fact, the bloody disgusting and offensive
points it scores are pretty much off the charts. That's either a
positive or the nastiest kind of negative, depending on the
viewer's taste for bad moviemaking and a philosophically
repulsive center. This remake from 2010 remains mostly true to
the black soul of the original, but bumps up the style into the
most exquisite places of cinematography, art direction,
production design, and even acting. The story follows Jennifer
(Sarah Butler), a top-model-beautiful writer, as she ventures
into a Deliverance-esque backwater where she plans to complete
her next novel. Initially it's nothing but bucolic cabin views
and picturesque bog-and-bayou territory in which she pokes at her
laptop, drinks wine and smokes a little weed, and lounges around
in sweats, a bikini, or sometimes nothing at all. But those
headed rednecks at the station who she embarrassed with
her city-chick sass start chewing over ways to give her the
comeuppance she deserves for being an uppity know-it-all bitch.
With support from their local sheriff, who's an evil-hearted good
ol' boy too, they set out to terrorize her in every way possible,
which means repeated sexual humiliation to the nth degree. But
since payback is also a bitch, she seemingly rises from the dead
to come back and kill 'em all in the most gruesome ways and with
cleverly creative and sexually debasing skill. So in essence we
have a movie that satisfies the urge for violent retribution in
both men and women, makes the gore hounds squeal with delight,
and stands as another perfect target for people to deplore the
degradation of women in popular culture. As for those technical
highlights, there was clearly a reasonable budget to make I Spit
on Your Grave based on the producers' reasonable expectation that
it had a built-in audience, especially for the home video market.
The disc's special features include a few deleted scenes (even
for this "unrated" version), commentary from the director and
producer, and the featurette The Revenge of Jennifer Hills:
Remaking a Cult Icon, in which the stars talk about what "an
honor as an actor" it was to be part of the project, and the
"privilege that we got to go so deeply dark." Honor and privilege
or embarrassment and outrage? Between those extremes there's
something for everyone in I Spit on Your Grave. --Ted Fry