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New Release Review - "The Toxic Avenger"

By Eric Hillis, TheMovieWaffler.com

originally published: 09/06/2025

Even as a schlock-obsessed kid I saw right through Troma's cynical attempts to manufacture prefabricated cult movies. Filmmakers don't make cult movies. Audiences make cult movies. Anyone who sets out to make a cult movie is on a hiding to nothing, but Troma thought they could game the system simply by giving their movies lurid titles and VHS artwork that the films inevitably failed to live up to, and in doing so they gave birth to the likes of The Asylum, with their endless Sharknado rehashes.

But in 1984's The Toxic Avenger Troma had a genuine cult movie on their hands, one that was discovered and lapped up by audiences hungry for something distasteful. It was the cinematic equivalent of the Heavy Metal and Rap albums that got so many conservatives' knickers in a twist in the '80s. It was the sort of movie that played by its own rules, where anything could happen on screen, and often did.

Remaking The Toxic Avenger in this era of bland, sanitised entertainment, where filmmakers are terrified at the thought of causing offence, seems like a folly. It's no surprise that writer/director Macon Blair's remake doesn't work. Sure, it has the gore (though, of course, it's CG rather than practical now) and even a few boobs, but it's all too tasteful. As though it doesn't believe a gory romp is enough, it injects surface level progressive politics so the audience can feel a little better about laughing at decapitations. In the original, children and animals were massacred to hilarious effect. Here it's only cartoonishly evil folk who suffer such a fate.

The original saw a bullied health club janitor transform into a hulking mutant superhero after falling into a vat of toxic acid. Here the janitor, Peter Dinklage's Winston Gooze, works for a pharmaceutical company run by the evil Bob Garbinger (Kevin Bacon). When Winston is given a year to live due to a brain condition, he pleads with Bob to fix his company insurance so he can afford the experimental meds that might reverse his condition. Laughed away by Bob, Winston decides to rob the company safe, which leads to him being caught by Bob's henchmen and tossed into a vat of acid.

Winston emerges as Toxie, though he's oddly no longer hulking, remaining at Dinklage's stature. This makes little sense as Dinklage isn't playing the role in Toxie form, simply adding his voice to another performer's (Luisa Guerreiro) work. Teaming up with JJ (Taylour Paige), a vigilante who wants to expose Bob's corrupt business practices, Toxie takes on big pharma, armed with his toxic mop.




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In the original, Toxie's main power was his ability to sense "evil" in people. This has been dispensed with, this version now making it clear to everyone that Bob is a wrong 'un. If the film really wanted to make a political statement it could have presented Bob as a charming businessman who has fooled everyone but Toxie into believing he has their best interests at heart.

There's a subplot that sees Winston looking after his stepson (Jacob Tremblay), whose mother passed away a year before the events of the film, but this attempt to add sentimentality sticks out like a radioactive thumb.

The original movie was parodying the vigilante thrillers of its era more so than superhero movies, but this version is very much influenced by the latter. Ironically it has more in common with James Gunn's recent superhero movies than the low budget efforts he made for Troma at the start of his career. Rather than mocking the modern superhero movie, it commits the very same sins of over-complicating what should be a simple plot and forcing us to spend the last half hour watching an overblown wrestling match. The jokes are woefully thin on the ground, with only Sunil Patel providing a few laughs as the doctor who breaks Winston's health news in highly insensitive fashion.

Directed by: Macon Blair

Starring: Peter Dinklage, Kevin Bacon, Jacob Tremblay, Taylour Paige, Julia Davis, Jonny Coyne, Elijah Wood

About the author:

Eric Hillis is a film critic living in Sligo, Ireland who runs the website TheMovieWaffler.com




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EVENT PREVIEWS

(SUMMIT, NJ) -- Vivid Stage, in residence at the Oakes Center, will host "An Evening with Dan and Laura" on Saturday, July 18, 2026 at 8:00pm. The evening will offer a behind-the-scenes look at the creation of Vivid's feature film: A Relative Comedy. Director Laura Ekstrand and Composer Dan Crisci will talk about what went into making the company's first feature.
The Trenton Film Society presents Kid Flicks: Celebrating Black Stories

The Trenton Film Society presents Kid Flicks: Celebrating Black Stories

(TRENTON, NJ) -- On Saturday, July 18, 2026, the Trenton Film Society will present a special program for children 8+, in partnership with the renowned New York International Children's Film Festival. Celebrating Black Stories spotlights Black narratives that transcend national boundaries, culture, and language. With roots in history and tradition, these films share the joy, determination, resilience, and complexity of being young and Black while underscoring the vibrancy of Black storytelling.
45th Bi-Annual New Jersey Film Festival will Take Place September 4th through October 4th

45th Bi-Annual New Jersey Film Festival will Take Place September 4th through October 4th

(NEW BRUNSWICK, NJ) -- The 45th Bi-Annual New Jersey Film Festival will be taking place between September 4 - October 4, 2026. As they have been doing the last few years, the festival will be presented as a hybrid with select in-person screenings at Rutgers University and most of the films available virtually via Video on Demand for 24 hours on their show date. The festival also be offering an Audio-Visual Concert featuring the bands Lawns and Hanging Coats as well as two FREE Filmmaking Workshops.
 

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