
To that end, here are a few observations I made. And by exploration, I don’t mean the thoughtful examining of an event but a brutal and raw presentation which we are left to make our own decisions. The point of the exploitation film ISN’T to edify us with its art but to shock us with its exploration of taboo.
FULL MOVIE I SPIT ON YOUR GRAVE 2010 MOVIE
Then I remembered the kind of movie I was watching: there wasn’t going to be any character development. At first, I spent some time at the beginning of the film lamenting the lack of character development. Unlike many other remakes, “I Spit On Your Graves” stays relatively faithful not just to the story, but also to the genre of exploitation films. Several violent gang rapes later, Jennifer is left for dead and a month later, comes back to take bloody revenge on her attackers.

Unfortunately, she’s captured the attention of a group of local men with ill intentions. A lone woman, Jennifer, (Sarah Butler) travels to an isolated camera in the woods. “I Spit On Your Grave” is a remake of the highly controversial 1978 film (also known as “Day of the Woman”) and with only minor changes, the plot is the same as the original. Whether it is the extraordinary circumstance of war or simply the addition of anonymity and its accompanying impunity, it sits waiting, purring, like a black cat in front of our heart’s hearth. While I’m inclined to believe in the inherent goodness of man, I also tend to believe that in each of us is a nugget of darkness, a seed of the foulest evil that simply needs circumstance to water it.

Starring: Sarah Butler, Jeff Branson, Rodney Eastman, Daniel Franzese, Andrew Howard, Chad Lindberg
