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The Cabin in the Woods V2

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The Cabin in the Woods V2

  • Artwork by Abrar Ajmal
  • Printed on our super soft 4.5oz 100% pre-shrunk ringspun cotton shirts
  • Custom Printed on Demand 

About The Cabin in the Woods (2012)

Drew Goddard's The Cabin in the Woods (2012) was written in three days by Goddard and Joss Whedon as a love letter to and deconstruction of the entire horror genre, revealing that every horror movie scenario is actually orchestrated by a secret underground facility that sacrifices young people to appease ancient gods. The film sat on a shelf for nearly three years after MGM's bankruptcy delayed its release, and when it finally arrived, audiences discovered a film that works simultaneously as a genuinely scary horror movie, a razor-sharp comedy, and a profound commentary on why we watch horror in the first place. The film's climactic "purge" sequence, where every monster in the facility is released simultaneously, required an enormous amount of practical creature effects and represents one of the most ambitious set pieces in modern horror. Sigourney Weaver's uncredited cameo in the final scene serves as a perfect meta-commentary, linking the film's themes directly to the history of the genre itself.

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From $12.60

Original: $36.00

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The Cabin in the Woods V2—

$36.00

$12.60

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  • Artwork by Abrar Ajmal
  • Printed on our super soft 4.5oz 100% pre-shrunk ringspun cotton shirts
  • Custom Printed on Demand 

About The Cabin in the Woods (2012)

Drew Goddard's The Cabin in the Woods (2012) was written in three days by Goddard and Joss Whedon as a love letter to and deconstruction of the entire horror genre, revealing that every horror movie scenario is actually orchestrated by a secret underground facility that sacrifices young people to appease ancient gods. The film sat on a shelf for nearly three years after MGM's bankruptcy delayed its release, and when it finally arrived, audiences discovered a film that works simultaneously as a genuinely scary horror movie, a razor-sharp comedy, and a profound commentary on why we watch horror in the first place. The film's climactic "purge" sequence, where every monster in the facility is released simultaneously, required an enormous amount of practical creature effects and represents one of the most ambitious set pieces in modern horror. Sigourney Weaver's uncredited cameo in the final scene serves as a perfect meta-commentary, linking the film's themes directly to the history of the genre itself.