The Toxic Avenger
is an American cult classic comedy horror film first released in 1984 by Troma Entertainment, known for producing low budget B-movies with campy concepts. Virtually ignored upon its first release, The Toxic Avenger
caught on with moviegoers after a long and successful midnight movie engagement at the famed Bleecker Street Cinemas in New York City in late 1985.
The film has generated three film sequels, a stage production, and a children's TV cartoon. [1] Two less successful sequels: The Toxic Avenger Part II
and The Toxic Avenger Part III: The Last Temptation of Toxie
were filmed as one movie. Director Lloyd Kaufman realized that he had shot far too much footage for one movie, and reedited it into two. A third independent sequel was also released, entitled Citizen Toxie: The Toxic Avenger IV
. An animated children's TV series spin-off, Toxic Crusaders
, featured Toxie as the leader of a team of mutated superheroes who fought against evil alien polluters. The cartoon series was short-lived and it was quickly cancelled. New Line Cinema had planned a live action movie based on the cartoon, but the deal fell through.
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THE TOXIC AVENGER TICKETS
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Plot
Melvin Ferd (Mark Torgl) is a stereotypical 98-pound weakling. He works as a janitor at a health club in the fictional town of Tromaville,
New Jersey where the customers—particularly Bozo (
Gary Schneider), Slug (
Robert Pritchard), Wanda (
Jennifer Babtist) and Julie (
Cindy Manion)—harass him constantly. His tormentors get more and more violent until he is tricked into wearing a pink tutu and kissing a sheep. He is then chased around the health club by witnesses of the event where he eventually jumps out of a second story window. He lands in a drum of toxic waste and is irradiated and deformed by the accident. He suddenly lights on fire and runs down the street in a ball of flames. Melvin quickly takes a bath and mysteriously transforms into a hideously deformed creature of superhuman size and strength.
Later, a group of drug dealers, led by the criminal Cigar Face (Dan Snow), are harassing a police officer by the name of O'Clancy (Dick Martinsen), trying to buy him off. When he refuses to accept the money, Cigar Face and his gang prepare to
castrate Officer O'Clancy. Out of nowhere, a large creature comes and saves the day, showing in a brutally violent way that he does not like evil in any form. When he is done taking care of them he puts a mop on all their faces, which becomes his call sign. Officer O'Clancy is initially terrified of the creature but soon learns he was only trying to help and will not hurt him.
The officer's rescuer was the Toxic Avenger (Toxie), who is Melvin having been transformed by the incident. He then tries to return home but his mother is terrified of him and will not even let him in the house. The Toxic Avenger then goes to the junkyard and builds himself a makeshift home.
Elsewhere in
Tromaville, a gang of three men are holding up a Mexican food restaurant. The men kill one of the patrons, and then attack a blind woman named Sarah (Andree Maranda). They kill her guide dog and attempt to cornhole her, but not before The Toxic Avenger arrives. Toxie then has another bloody brawl with crime, taking care of the gang with unforgiving zeal. The Toxic Avenger sees that Sarah is beside herself by the loss of her dog and the traumatic experience. He takes her back to her home, where they begin to get to know one another and subsequently become involved.
When the Toxic Avenger goes back to his crime fighting ways, he makes way for the health club. There, he takes care of the popular girl Wanda who was involved in the plot that turned him into the creature he is now. He burns Wanda in a sauna by placing her on the heater. Afterward, Toxie is relieving himself in a back alley when a limo pulls up and a pimp tries to push a 12-year-old girl onto him. When he starts to fight back to save the girl, a group of men come out of the limo, in which he fights them all off and saves the girl. The Toxic Avenger returns to the health club and attacks the other tormentors who were responsible for what happened to him. He then confronts his archenemies Bozo and Slug, ending in Slug getting thrown out of a moving car and Bozo driving off the side of a cliff.
The leader of the crime ring in Tromaville, who turns out to be Mayor Belgoody (
Pat Ryan Jr.), is horrified of what is happening to his goons. He is worried that it will lead back to him and wants Toxie to be taken care of. A group of men, lead by none other than Cigar Face, surround Toxie all pointing guns at him. Right before they fire he jumps up to a fire escape and they end up shooting each other. When the Toxic Avenger kills a seemingly innocent old woman in a dry cleaning store (she is in fact a leader of an underground white slave trade), Belgoody looks at this as his opportunity and calls in the
National Guard.
Back in his junkyard home, the Toxic Avenger is terrified of what he has become. He and Sarah decide to move away from the city and take a tent into nearby woods. They are not there long before they are discovered. The Mayor and the National Guard come to kill him but the people of Tromaville will have none of it. The Toxic Avenger saved them on numerous occasions and they are now his friends. The Mayor's evil ways are revealed, and the Toxic Avenger proceeds to rip out Belgoody's organs to see if he has "any guts". The movie ends with a reassurance that wherever evil brews in Tromaville, you will find the Toxic Avenger.
Cast
- Mark Torgl as Melvin Ferd
- Andree Maranda as Sarah
- Jennifer Babtist as Wanda
- Cindy Manion as Julie
- Dan Snow as Cigar Face
- Robert Prichard as Slug
- Gary Schneider as Bozo
- Pat Ryan Jr. as Mayor Belgoody
- Dick Martinsen as Officer O'Clancy
- Chris Liano as Walter Harris
- David N. Weiss as Chief of Police
- Doug Isbecque as Knuckles
- Charles Lee, Jr. as Nipples
- Al Pia as Tom Wrightson
- Reuben Guss as Dr. Snodburger
- Sarabel Levinson as Melvin's Mom
- Mitch Cohen as The Toxic Avenger
- Matt Klan as Boy Hero
- Marisa Tomei as Locker Room Girl (Director's Cut)
Production
"The Toxic Avenger" was the film that "built the house of Troma,"
[2] and was Troma's first horror film. Previously the production company focused on sex comedies such as
Cry Uncle!
and
Squeeze Play!
. Subsequently Troma focused almost exclusively on horror films.
In 1975, Lloyd Kaufman had the idea to shoot a horror movie involving a health club while serving as the pre-production supervisor on the set of
Rocky
. At the Cannes Film Festival, Kaufman had read an article that said horror films were no longer popular, so Kaufman claims that he decided to produce his own version of the horror film. However, the film's final outcome was less a bona fide horror film and more of a campy comedy horror-spoof with extreme violence embedded through out. The setting of the movie in a health club and the movie was given a working title of
Health Club Horror
.
[3] Kaufman wrote the script with the help of writer Joe Ritter.
Reception
"The Toxic Avenger" received a 67% "fresh" rating from critic aggregator
Rotten Tomatoes.
[4]
In other media
The Toxic Avenger
has also been adapted to other media.
- In the 2005 parody film My Big Fat Independent Movie, Toxie is seen in the far back in the orgy scene.
- From April 1991 to February 1992, Marvel Comics published The Toxic Avenger
comic. The comic was written by Doug Moench, drawn by Rodney Ramos and Val Mayerik, and lasted for 11 issues. [5] The series focused on Toxie battling against the evil Apocalypse, Inc. and its demonic Chairman. The title was a mix of traditional superhero storytelling and satire, including the phrase "hideously deformed creature of superhuman size and strength" being repeated many times, and Toxie's "Tromatons" erupting when he was in danger similar to Spider-Man's spider-sense. Marvel's series also contained much in the way of "over-the-top," cartoonish violence. No other Marvel characters ever appeared in the series, and Toxie never made his way into any other Marvel comic, although a crossover with Marvel's Robocop title was planned before that series was cancelled. [6]
- In July 2000, Troma published an extremely rare comic book entitled The New Adventures of the Toxic Avenger
. This comic was offered to people who donate $75 or more to TromaDance 2007. [7]
- Lloyd Kaufman and Adam Jahnke wrote a novelization entitled The Toxic Avenger: The Novel
. It was released on May 10, 2006 and was published by Thunder's Mouth Press.
- It was also adapted as a musical, on three occasions.
:The first,
Toxic Avenger: The Musical,
debuted at Omaha's
Blue Barn Theatre in 2004.
[8] This production was written and directed by Rob Urbinati, with music by Kevin Saunders Hayes.
The movie was adapted as a musical a second time, as Toxic Avenger: The Musikill
, with lyrics by Ira Kortum, who also directed and starred in the production, which premiered in Portland, Oregon. The music was composed by Martin J. Gallagher, with the assistance of Marc Rose. [9] Kaufman reportedly had nothing to do with the production, although he did verbally support Kortum's adaptation and attended the production on Opening Night. Excerpts from Toxic Avenger: The Musikill are featured on the 21st Anniversary edition of the original Toxie. [10]
The most recent version is the rock musical "The Toxic Avenger" that had its world premiere at George Street Playhouse on October 10, 2008, directed by John Rando with music and lyrics by David Bryan and book and lyrics by Joe DiPietro.
- A graphic novel about Toxie and other Troma properties, Lloyd Kaufman Presents: The Toxic Avenger and Other Tromatic Tales
, was released in 2007 from Devil's Due Publishing. [11]
- A French electronica DJ has also dubbed himself 'the toxic avenger'.
- Australian band Regurgitator mention The Toxic Avenger in their song I Couldn't Do It
.
References
- Lloyd Kaufman
- The Toxic Avenger: The Unrated Director's Cut
- The Original Toxic Avenger
- The Toxic Avenger Movie Reviews, Pictures
- The Big Database of Comic Books
- LEE SULLIVAN ART Comics
- The 2007 TromaDance Film Festival >> Donate to TromaDance!
- The Lincoln Journal Star
- Toxic Avenger: The Musikill
- Read your own damn story - about making your own damn movie
- http://devilsdue.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=13|1