‘The Toxic Avenger’ review: A sludgy antihero wants corporate payback

‘The Toxic Avenger’ review: A sludgy antihero wants corporate payback


Nostalgia for extreme tackiness is surely one of the funnier outcomes of a cult filmโ€™s success. (Does one sigh wistfully at such memories or smile through a grimace?) The gleeful cine-garbage factory Troma is, at 50 years and counting, now a hallowed name in outsider movie circles, with much of its reputation stemming from an โ€™80s output that seemed appropriate for the Reagan era. That especially goes for its 1984 monster comedy โ€œThe Toxic Avenger,โ€ about a head-smashing vigilante forged from green chemical sludge. It was antipollution if you wanted to be charitable, but really, it was anti-everything. Haste plus waste, made for very bad taste.

Now, of course, we all recycle trash in our daily lives. But does it work as a film principle? Troma aficionado Macon Blair, a key on-and-offscreen collaborator of Jeremy Saulnier (โ€œBlue Ruin,โ€ โ€œHold the Darkโ€) and a Sundance-winning writer-director in his own right (โ€œI Donโ€™t Feel At Home in This World Anymoreโ€), has taken up the challenge with his own โ€œThe Toxic Avenger,โ€ starring Peter Dinklage as this versionโ€™s mutant hero, Toxie, and maybe the worst thing one could say about it is that itโ€™s well-made.

Cue the disconnect when, expecting to be offended by garish, cheap filmmaking, one realizes that so much of the Troma style โ€” gratuitous gore, filthy mouths, blunt-force parody โ€” is ubiquitous to any regular genre diet in film or TV. That leaves matters of artistic character and thereโ€™s no getting around the fact that Blair has made the conscious decision that his โ€œToxic Avenger,โ€ though rude, violent and goofy to a fault, wouldnโ€™t look bad. Itโ€™s even got appealing stars: Kevin Bacon, Elijah Wood, Taylour Paige. Is nothing sacred?

But when even the biggest-budgeted movies now look terrible, everythingโ€™s already upside-down. What Blair has assembled, then, is diverting homage-schlock: a one-joke Halloween costume youโ€™ll never wear again. Only this time, it asserts its environmental consciousness like a middle finger. The storyโ€™s Big Pharma outfit, called BTH, is a full-on villainous entity now, run by rapacious CEO Bob Garbinger (Bacon) whoโ€™s pumping consumers with harmful lifestyle drugs when he isnโ€™t hiring a dim-witted punk band to kill a journalist (Paige) trying to expose him. (A muckraking mentor, seen only at the beginning, is called Mel Ferd, a shout-out to the original Toxieโ€™s name.)

And yet things are also, in Blairโ€™s setup, anchored in emotional sincerity (gasp). Dinklageโ€™s affectingly drawn Winston Goose is no mere browbeaten BTH janitor โ€” heโ€™s a soft-spoken widower struggling to raise a stepson (Jacob Tremblay). Winston has also been diagnosed with a terminal illness and medical insurance wonโ€™t cover it. His Kafkaesque phone call about his employee plan is almost too realistic to find funny.

Trying to rob his employer one night with a mop dipped in toxic muck, Winston is shot and thrown into said slop. Instead of killing him, though, it transforms Winston into a disfigured creature (performer Luisa Guerreiro does the post-mutation suit work) with a removable eye, blood running blue, and โ€” in a Tromatic touch โ€” acid for urine. His gory dispatching of criminals notwithstanding, the mop-wielding Toxie becomes a community hero for calling out BTH as โ€œruiners.โ€ But it also puts a target on his splotchy, misshapen head, especially when Garbinger senses in his nemesis an exploitable biofuel.

Whether poking at superhero cliches (thereโ€™s a choice post-credit scene) or trying to be kill-clever, itโ€™s all in dopey, gruesome fun, although, to reiterate, a โ€œToxic Avengerโ€ even normies can enjoy doesnโ€™t exactly sound like a true Troma tribute. Which may explain why its trashmonger founder (and original โ€œToxicโ€ co-creator) Lloyd Kaufmanโ€™s cameo, late in the film, is him crankily muttering next to Blair, who looks just as peeved. They probably had a blast filming it.

‘The Toxic Avenger’

Not rated

Running time: 1 hour, 42 minutes

Playing: In wide release Friday, Aug. 29

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