
Color, 1984, 82/87m.
Directed by Michael Herz & Lloyd Kaufman
Starring Andree Maranda, Mitch Cohen, Jennifer Babtist, Cindy Manion, Robert Prichard, Mark Torgl, Pat Ryan
Troma (UHD, Blu-ray & DVD) (US R0 4K/HD/NTSC), 88 Films (Blu-ray & DVD) (UK R0 HD/PAL) / WS (1.78:1) (16:9)
thousand drive-in bad taste comedies, The Toxic Avengers is the Rosetta Stone for understanding the crude, oddball aesthetic of Troma Entertainment,
the exploitation studio behind three decades of unlikely cult favorites ranging from Class of Nuke 'Em High to Poultrygeist. However, The Toxic Avenger remains their most popular hit, a major VHS and DVD favorite since the mid-'80s that spawned three official sequels, a cartoon series (The Toxic Crusaders), a stage musical, several songs, a remake, and a comic book series. This is also the project that really cemented the idea of "Tromaville," a ridiculous New Jersey town filled with loud, depraved people whose lives often devolve into a slimy, nasty mess at one point or another; not surprisingly, almost all of the official Troma releases have also taken place there.
up the streets, much to the annoyance of the corrupt, obese mayor (Ryan). How far can Toxie go to save the citizens of Tromaville?
R-rated tape versions from Vestron had '80s gorehounds seeking out the former version to bask in such highlights as a baddie's face turned into an impromptu "milkshake," a pretty spectacular (by Troma standards) violent car chase, and Toxie's climactic "gutsy" gesture to the local government, along with plenty of torn limbs and other outrageous nastiness. The fact that it's all played extremely over the top kept the film from getting into too much trouble with censors; everything basically boils down to a sick joke complete with terrible overacting and one-dimensional characters. Of course, in this case that's not a bad thing at all if you know what you're getting into.
What's most interesting is that each version contains a sampling of "deleted scenes," which were actually notorious back in the '80s since they were included as part of the longer, elusive 91-minute version released on Japanese VHS, complete with a different introduction featuring two Troma babes introducing a Q&A with the directors
(complete with Japanese subtitles). That extended cut became something of a gray market favorite, but it wasn't until the end of 2012 that it finally made an appearance in America on DVD. Promoted as The Toxic Avenger: The Japanese Cut, the DVD retains the dupey-looking intro in squished widescreen (along with hilarious subtitles translating the Japanese ones back into broken English) and marked the film's first 16x9 appearance, for what that's worth. (It really looks fine either way.) The quality here is best described as above average VHS; it's pretty soft and dated but definitely watchable and way better than the distorted bootleg copies. Keep your expectations in check though. The four extra minutes are back in place, including lots of additional dialogue and a different, extended fate for two female characters in the third act. Does it make a huge difference? No, not really, but Toxie fans should be delighted to finally have this sought-after variation finally available on legit video. Otherwise the extras are more modest than the shorter unrated DVD; you get trailers for all four films in the series, a slide show of production stills, the usual Radiation March, a random bit of nonsense called "Why is Lloyd Kaufman living in a refrigerator box?," and bonus trailers for Father's Day, The Taint, Mr. Bricks, Class of Nuke 'Em High, and Tromeo and Juliet. Be warned, anyone prone to seizures should also avoid looking at the menu screens for more than a few seconds!
Next we get to the 2014 revisit courtesy of a Blu-ray/DVD combo from Troma, which fares about as well as their other HD transfers: a huge jump in detail and film texture, much more accurate and vivid colors, a completely untouched transfer from the negative complete with minor specks and debris, and lossy Dolby Digital audio, which in this case isn't catastrophic given the nature of the original sound mix. It's the standard unrated 82-minute cut, of course, and comes with the older Kaufman audio commentary and a new commentary featuring villain actors Robert Prichard, Gary Schneider and Dan Snow, moderated by Troma's P.R. manager. Apart from some silent gaps here and there it's a pretty lively track as they swap stories about the cast members, point out the economical methods of shooting the driving scenes, and not particularly missing filming in Jersey City.