Eli Roth Announces Surprise ‘Rotten Fruit' Reunion — Punk Claymation Series Now Streaming Unseen Episodes
We've seen horror director Eli Roth split open skulls before, but the jack-of-many-trades and (surprise!) stop-motion animator has never been stuck in your head like he will be with 'The Rotten Fruit.' Catchy bordering on torturous, the theme song for Roth's latest archival release goes a little something like…
♫ Rotten Fruit… We're The Rotten Fruit… The most popular band in the wooorld! ♫
More from IndieWire
'The Legend of Ochi' Review: A Stunningly Beautiful Fantasy Throwback Struggles to Sustain Its Magic
'La Chimera' Filmmaker Alice Rohrwacher Named 2025 Cannes Camera d'Or Jury President
Celebrating its 25th anniversary by finally making its streaming debut on the platform WeShort today, April 18, 'The Rotten Fruit' is a cult classic web series co-created by Roth and Noah Belson. A childhood friend of the gonzo filmmaker, better known to genre fans for his credit as Guitar Man in 'Cabin Fever,' Belson grew up making movies with Roth in Newton, Massachusetts. While living in L.A. trying to break into the industry together, the pair developed 'The Rotten Fruit' for the now-defunct Z.com in 2000.
Despite a lofty goal to become 'the HBO of the internet,' Z.com released just three of the eight episodes Roth, Belson, and their animation crew made on a shoestring budget. The other five installments have either never been released or remain completely unseen, until now. By the time these so-called 'new' episodes were posted online, the duo told IndieWire, the site had gone completely bankrupt.
'Even though it was limited in terms of who saw it, we had a lot of people contacting us asking about more episodes,' Roth told IndieWire. The director not only wrote, animated, and edited on the project but also composed and performed its outrageous songs; Belson and Roth voiced the shorts' cast together.
'We had a mailing list with thousands of people on it who were constantly asking, 'When are more 'Rotten Fruit' episodes coming out?'' Roth said. 'Now, it's like, 'We're working on it. Really.'
'Give us 25 more years, maybe,' Belson joked. 'But we'll get you some more.''
Speaking with IndieWire over Zoom, the reunited collaborators shared their hopes to revive 'The Rotten Fruit' as a modern satire soon. They also reflected on the ridiculousness of the original production — a 'crazy' quintessential SoCal summer that, for good or bad, sounds like the plot of its own movie. From the pitfalls of early web financing to a backyard pool filled with alligators, 'The Rotten Fruit' got as rock-and-roll behind the scenes as its edible punk rockers look getting sliced and diced on stage.
Running roughly three minutes each, all eight 'Rotten Fruit' episodes are free for anyone to watch during the raunchy (or should we say ranchy?) comedy's first week streaming on WeShort. The short film service is working in partnership with Roth's fan-owned media company and genre brand, The Horror Section. The following episode descriptions were provided to IndieWire:
Episode 1 — 'The Battle of the Bands'
The Rotten Fruit compete against the popular boy band C-5 in a battle of the bands. Suspecting they might lose, the Fruit use cutthroat tactics to ensure victory.
Episode 2 — 'Concert Riots'
After a stampede at one of their concerts resulting in the death of a fan, the band decide to put on a benefit show, with even more disastrous results.
Episode 3 — 'The Critic'
The Rotten Fruit take their biggest critic hostage to try and win him over.
Episode 4 — 'We Are the World'
Manager Guy The Pie Shapiro arranges a collaboration for a charity song, only for the band to learn it's with the newly re-formed C-5.
Episode 5 — 'Snackster'
The Rotten Fruit try to put an end to online piracy by personally going after the fans stealing their music.
Episode 6 — 'David Lunch'
The Rotten Fruit film a music video with legendary artist and surrealist director David Lunch.
Episode 7 — 'Room Service'
The Rotten Fruit trash a hotel room, then are tricked into cleaning it up.
Episode 8 — 'Cancer Boy'
The Rotten Fruit decide to record a benefit song for a young peach with cancer, only to realize that no good deed goes unpunished.
WeShort is now streaming 'The Rotten Fruit.' Check back for IndieWire's full interview with Roth and Belson.
Best of IndieWire
Nightmare Film Shoots: The 36 Most Grueling Films Ever Made, from 'Deliverance' to 'The Wages of Fear'
The 24 Best Vampire Movies Ever Made, from 'Nosferatu' to 'Sinners'
The 27 Best War Movies of the 21st Century, from 'Dunkirk' to 'The Hurt Locker'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
4 days ago
- Yahoo
How ‘Materialists' Finds True Love in New York City
Location work is not usually considered one of the 'creative' departments on a film. Of course, they work with the director and the production designer to find spaces that will work for specific scenes that can't or shouldn't be shot on a set, but theirs is the unsexy work of negotiating contracts with owners, securing all the needed permits, and handling the crew's impact on locations. Yet director Celine Song credits a great deal of the push-pull yearning of her second feature, 'Materialists,' to that location work. New York City is not the easiest place to shoot, but it was important to Song for the film to reflect the realities of what it's like to live in New York. The apartments and streets in which the characters fight and make up and make out are characters in and of themselves. 'Location management in this film is a creative position. We were talking pretty creatively — my DP, my line producer, my production designer, and my location manager — we're all trying to solve problems together,' Song told IndieWire on an episode of the Filmmaker Toolkit podcast. More from IndieWire 'Saw' Franchise Rights Acquired by Blumhouse, Reuniting James Wan with Horror Series A New Blu-ray Collection Opens the Warner Bros. Animation Vault - and Finds 50 Treasures Inside Location manager Joe Mullaney and his team even helped Song realize something about the characters that was embedded in the script, but no one had quite articulated. 'Joe was the first to notice — because he has to permit every time a character smokes — that Lucy [Dakota Johnson] never smokes with Harry [Pedro Pascal]. She only smokes with John [Chris Evans]. And of course eventually the actors figured that out, too, but Joe was the first,' Song said. 'It's a very specific perspective.' The perspective was an extremely important one for 'Materialists,' which is so specific to New York and yet contains a much wider historical scope. It begins with and then later checks in on a very early, prehistoric marriage, after all, and Song and Mullaney were delighted to find a corner of Central Park where a bridge could echo the sense of a cave, and visually merge the two storylines at the end. ' It requires Joe's lifetime, his whole career, of building trust in New York City. He needs to have a good reputation for being somebody who can be trusted to give you their space. So I'm relying so much on his work even before my movies, you know?' Song said. But something that pervades both of Song's movies, 'Materialists' and 'Past Lives' is how living in New York forces the characters to move through the echoes of millions of other people's lives. Visually, that sense was something no amount of B-Roll or establishing drone footage could create. The characters had to be in and of the city. It's part of the romance Song wanted to create. 'Public spaces in New York are the most romantic places, because you know that you're not the first couple to have an argument there. Like, [on] every corner of New York City, someone has peed there, someone has slept there, someone has had a huge argument there, and someone has kissed there,' Song said. 'We're shooting in New York City, which is expensive and difficult — just like living in New York City. But [it's] romantic and rewarding — just like New York City. We were sort of acknowledging, well, if you're doing it, you might as well do it.' That meant going all out on streets and stoops, especially in relation to John. His apartment isn't exactly conducive to heartfelt conversations, but Lucy's isn't that much better, either. And the fact that they can't be fully comfortable or private in the spaces they live changes how the characters move through the world and desire each other. ''Materialists' is about the way that the cynic and the romantic are in conversation, and in a bit of a tussle,' Song said. 'New York City is exactly that. To live in New York City, you have to be a romantic because the quality of living is not high enough for it to be possible for anybody who is not romantic in some way… but on the other hand, part of surviving in New York City is that you have to have a healthy dose of cynicism, too. [The city] just encapsulates that amazing balance. [So] it was always fundamentally a thing that we wanted to shoot in New York City.' 'Materialists' is now playing in theaters. To hear Celine Song's full interview, subscribe to the on , , or your favorite podcast platform. Best of IndieWire The Best Thrillers Streaming on Netflix in June, from 'Vertigo' and 'Rear Window' to 'Emily the Criminal' All 12 Wes Anderson Movies, Ranked, from 'Bottle Rocket' to 'The Phoenician Scheme' Nightmare Film Shoots: The 38 Most Grueling Films Ever Made, from 'Deliverance' to 'The Wages of Fear'
Yahoo
4 days ago
- Yahoo
‘Nobody Wants This' Season 2 Netflix Premiere Date Revealed, Creator Promises ‘Romantic and Funny' Outing
Netflix know that a lot of somebodies want this. The second season of 'Nobody Wants This' will premiere October 23. The show first dropped on the streamer last September to sparkling reviews, with IndieWire's Proma Khosla praising the chemistry between leads Kristen Bell and Adam Brody. The show, created by Erin Foster, finds Joanne (Bell, also an executive producer) and Noah (Brody) in a would-be conventional love story complicated by Noah's position as a rabbi. Popular podcaster Joanne isn't just not Jewish, she's also unreligious generally — as is her entire non-traditional family. As Noah and Joanne attempt to acclimate to each other's worlds, and Joanne explores converting, things get complicated — to put it lightly. More from IndieWire The Cast and Crew of 'St. Denis Medical' Found Joy and Warmth in the Show's Hospital Setting 'The Gilded Age' Season 3 Trailer: A New Generation Rises as Carrie Coon Tries to Secure Her Status in High Society 'Nobody Wants This' was renewed back in October, but the drop date was not revealed until the June 1 Netflix FYSEE L.A. Emmy event at the Academy Museum in Los Angeles. The evening featured a screening of the pilot followed by a live taping of Foster's 'The World's First Podcast' with Foster, Bell, Brody and fellow cast members Justine Lupe, Timothy Simons, and Jackie Tohn. Stephanie Faracy, Michael Hitchcock, Tovah Feldshuh, Paul Ben-Victor, Emily Arlook, Sherry Cola, and Shiloh Berman will also return for the next batch of episodes, and guests stars will include Miles Fowler, Alex Karpovsky, Arian Moayed, and Bell's 'Gossip Girl' co-star Leighton Meester. Foster based the series on her own life. The actress, writer and podcaster converted to Judaism after falling in love with her Jewish now-husband, Simon Tikhman. Last year, Foster discussed her experience with IndieWire. 'There were about 23 people [in my conversion class] and only three were converting for marriage, which tells you there was 20 very interesting stories going on in that room!' she said. 'And I thought it was just interesting. I hadn't ever seen anybody explore that area, and I thought it'd be cool.' Last month, Foster told IndieWire that Season 2 of 'Nobody Wants This' would be 'romantic and funny.' 'I'm not in the business of depriving people of what they want on a show like this, and making some like, artistic choice to rob you of what you want to see. I really tried to stay on point with Season 1, [it] was all these firsts, first kiss, first date, and this is going to be the next four to six months of the relationship what that looks like,' she said. Best of IndieWire Guillermo del Toro's Favorite Movies: 56 Films the Director Wants You to See 'Song of the South': 14 Things to Know About Disney's Most Controversial Movie Nicolas Winding Refn's Favorite Films: 37 Movies the Director Wants You to See
Yahoo
13-06-2025
- Yahoo
Adam Brody ‘Tried Really Hard' to Host ‘Blue's Clues' in the '90s: ‘I Would've Loved It'
Adam Brody had his own 'welcome to L.A.' moment. The actor recently reflected on first arriving in the city to start his screen career. Among the first roles he went out for? 'Blue's Clues.' Brody told THR in the below video that he 'tried really hard' to land the hosting gig for the kid's TV series. 'I really wanted 'Blue's Clues' early on when I first moved to L.A. I tried really hard. It's like 1999. I didn't get it. But I would've loved it,' Brody said. More from IndieWire Ron Howard Loses His Sh*t in His Favorite 'The Studio' Scene Celine Song to Develop HBO Series 'Damage' Set in the World of E-Sports Steve Burns famously was cast instead, with Donovan 'Joe' Patton and Josh Dela Cruz later hosting additional iterations of the iconic series. 'Blue's Clues' premiered in 1996. Brody also recalled auditioning for 'Dawson's Creek.' 'There's an early 'Dawson's Creek' role. It really made me nervous to read with Scott Speedman. I was sweating,' he said. 'I believe [the role] went to Michael Pitt. They wanted pouting lips.' Pitt appeared in Season 3 of the series, which aired in 2002. Brody, of course, went on to have his breakout role in 'The O.C.' as Seth Cohen. The teen-centric ensemble drama premiered August 5, 2003. Brody thematically continued the Seth-ness he has become synonymous with for Netflix rom-com series 'Nobody Wants This.' 'We are in a tense moment of massive upheaval, and there doesn't seem to be many romantic comedies, period,' Brody told Variety about why the series became an overnight hit. 'I'm pinching myself a little bit.' 'Nobody Wants This' was renewed for a second season, which will premiere October 23, 2025. Series creator Erin Foster told IndieWire that Season 2 will be 'romantic and funny,' much like the first viral season of the show. 'I'm not in the business of depriving people of what they want on a show like this, and making some like, artistic choice to rob you of what you want to see. I really tried to stay on point with Season 1, [it] was all these firsts, first kiss, first date, and this is going to be the next four to six months of the relationship what that looks like,' she said. Adam Brody says he auditioned for #BluesClues and really wanted it during the Comedy Actor #Emmys #THRRoundtable | #OffScript debuts Friday on @IFC and @AMCplus and Sunday on and YouTubeLocation: The Luckman Club at Soho House West Hollywood — The Hollywood Reporter (@THR) June 13, 2025 Best of IndieWire Guillermo del Toro's Favorite Movies: 56 Films the Director Wants You to See 'Song of the South': 14 Things to Know About Disney's Most Controversial Movie Nicolas Winding Refn's Favorite Films: 37 Movies the Director Wants You to See