A plastic tube, roughly 6 inches in diameter, that supplied ambient fog or smoke as background for the graveyard scenes was 100 feet in length, and referred to by the crew as "the tube of death."
Written, shot, and produced between Oct. 16 and 19 as part of the annual 72-hour Portland horror film competition festival, GuignolFest 2020. Cast and crew gathered and took breaks at executive producer Robin Jacobson's home near the graveyard, and observed covid-safe masking, social distancing, and disinfecting practices in the staging area and between takes on location.
The title is a parody of and tribute to the classic 1959 horror feature I Spit on Your Grave (1959) and all its spinoffs.
Writer / director / editor Demerath managed a total of 8 hours of sleep over the 72 hours between the start of the film competition and deadline for turning in the completed footage.