9. RETURN TO NUKE EM HIGH
There comes a time when every angry, juvenile, anarchist must grow up and become something that at least resembles a sensible adult.
Even though I've finally hit my thirties, I don't think I can honestly make any claim that I'm a rational man just yet.
But I know that I must finally be approaching some form of maturity.
Why?
Because I finally watched a Troma film that didn't make me laugh once.
A gang of adult men in diapers shooting up a school for the mentally handicapped post Columbine seemed like comedy gold when I was 18. A parody of Reagan era war films set in a nondescript third world country in the mid 80's where the biggest running joke makes light of the AIDS epidemic during the height of the disease's scare seemed brilliantly subversive at 15.
Troma was the nihilistic punk rock answer to Roger Corman productions, releasing schlocky, confrontational, intentionally offensive junk food that served as a brazen fuck you to the entire film industry.
But in the wake of the digital revolution where we now live in a culture of DIY entertainment where anyone with a few hundred bucks can make their own Tromaesque feature and self release it online, there's something both antiquated and archaic to Troma's existence today. Kaufman's singular brand of crazy has now inspired three generations of gonzo genre filmmakers who've taken what's come before, learned from it, and improved on it.
Filmmakers like Jason Eisner and the Astron 6 crew have taken the Troma formula and elevated to a new level.
Meanwhile, Lloyd has partially forgotten what made Troma so special in the first place, and he's been slipping downward for nearly 10 years. It's become difficult to go back and even revisit Citizen Toxie. To quote a friend who was one of the film's 11 or so writers, "Llyod took one of his most beloved characters and turned him into an ugly and mean spirited joke. I was done with the film the moment he rapes Toxie's girlfriend for a cheap laugh. "
Well, the entirety of Return to Nuke Em' High is based on a bizarre and unfunny rape joke. Sure, there are still plenty of titties, monster penises, and gallons of karo syrup often paired with those same bare titties, but the actual quality of the filmmaking has regressed even further past Troma's usual camp into the pure inept.
I'm not sure any transgressive filmmaker or artist can succeed with shock value alone anymore. I've always held an affinity for the politically incorrect, but the internet has mostly desensitized me to it. Even though the main plot and conflict in the film is centered around a young woman being raped with her radioactive pet duck, the attempts at offensive humor mostly falls flat. If you want to be shocked and offended, just read any comment thread on any conservative news site.
Watching Return to Nuke Em' High is kind of like going to one of those awful burlesque shows that have become the big rave at all of the cool urban dive bars. It's like being at a rowdy rock club where some girl next door type with gauges the size of silver dollars in her ears, a giant tattoo of Krang on her chest, and a visible c-section scar just kind of flops around on a small makeshift stage. She's not really dancing or doing anything particularly exciting. Hell, she's not even moving to the music, but with every article of clothing she takes off, the crowd is already expected to cheer.
It's a parade of mediocrity, and even worse, with the barely existent story and painful reliance on title cards for exposition and character set up, it's even more shocking to find out that Nuke Em' High ends on a fucking cliffhanger! The film's big conclusion should have been a plot point at the 20 minute mark instead of setting up a sequel I'll never watch. Lloyd, always the industrious entrepreneur, has decided to release this in two parts ala Kill Bill.
Lloyd Kaufman's Everything I Need to Know about Filmmaking, I Learned from the Toxic Avenger was one of my personal bibles in high school, one that sat alongside Robert Rodriguez's Rebel without a Crew.
I'm not particularly proud to admit that the Troma brand influenced a great deal of my earlier work, but I still hold a lot of affection and admiration for the small, grass roots company.
Like Nintendo, one can't fault Troma for milking its own reputation and image for all that's it worth, that's what Troma's known for. They're the punk rock Barnum and Bailey. They've always exemplified the purest form of exploitation on almost every level and it's been that ingenuity that's inspired so many of today's filmmakers. There would be no ABCs of Death without The Toxic Avenger, Sgt. Kabuki Man, and Tromeo and Juliet. We wouldn't be raving about Hobo with a Shotgun without the original Class of Nuke em' High.
It's a shame that this quasi sequel/reboot is just about unwatchable.