For me, getting IIS 8 to serve .cshtml pages was simply a matter of selecting the right Windows Features to install on Windows 8.
From the control panel, search for "features". Then click on "Turn Windows features on or off". Of course, you have to have "Internet Information Services checked (installed). I think you also need to consider checking:
- Internet Information Services / Application Development Features / .NET Extensibility 4.5
- Internet Information Services / Application Development Features / ASP.NET 4.5
- Internet Information Services / Application Development Features / ISAPI Extensions
- Internet Information Services / Application Development Features / ISAPI Filters
- Internet Information Services / Application Development Features / Server-Side Includes
I might have included an extra feature. I know I left out some nice-to-haves such as logging and tracing to help debug.
If IIS still does not serve the Razor Syntax pages (.cshtml), then look for more IIS features to install because I think ALL I had to do was pick the right IIS features.
Another mistake I made was in setting up the binding for the website, I thought I should put a name in the Host box. But this makes IIS go out to the Internet to that web site, if it can find it. So, for a simple setup, leave Host blank. The website name is handled elsewhere. And that elsewhere is the Domain Name Server (DNS) at your domain name registrar.
So, this answer might help in addition to considering the other answers.