O Vingador Tóxico cai numa armadilha e parte ao Japão em busca de seu pai, a quem nunca conheceu. Sua partida abre espaço para a atuação da Apocalypse Inc., uma corporação que pretende trans... Ler tudoO Vingador Tóxico cai numa armadilha e parte ao Japão em busca de seu pai, a quem nunca conheceu. Sua partida abre espaço para a atuação da Apocalypse Inc., uma corporação que pretende transformar Tromaville em um depósito de lixo tóxico.O Vingador Tóxico cai numa armadilha e parte ao Japão em busca de seu pai, a quem nunca conheceu. Sua partida abre espaço para a atuação da Apocalypse Inc., uma corporação que pretende transformar Tromaville em um depósito de lixo tóxico.
- Prêmios
- 1 indicação no total
- Shôchikuyama
- (as Shinoburyu)
Enredo
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesActing debut of Michael Jai White.
- Erros de gravaçãoIn the first Toxic Avenger movie, Melvin's blind girlfriend's name is Sarah. Her name is changed to Claire in Part II.
- Citações
Toxic Avenger: At first I found it hard to believe that my father was Japanese, and that I was part-Japanese. But that would explain why I've always had these strange, non-American urges to work very hard, save money, and live without credit cards.
- Cenas durante ou pós-créditosTelephone operator: Buzz E. Signal Telephone operator: Juan Morering Best Lay: Selma Feltathigh Golf Grip: "Keep Thumbs Locked" Key Gripe: "The Food Stinks" Key Grope: John's Left Buttock Sushi Chef: Ginger N. Mustard
- Versões alternativasThe only uncut version of this film is available on VHS in Japan. All other releases (including US "Director's Cut" DVD) contain less violence and gore. It also exists on Japanese DVD totally uncut - cat. # BBBF - 1646.
- ConexõesFeatured in Gorgon Video Magazine (1989)
- Trilhas sonorasIt Don't Mean a Thing if It Ain't Got That Swing
Composed by Duke Ellington and Irving Mills
Published by Filmtrax PLC / Belwin Mills Music Publishing Corp.
Start to finish, TOXIC AVENGER PART II is just a series of excuses to engage in fight scenes and give the Toxic Avenger chances to get creative in how he murders villains. The first twenty minutes or so of the movie are one giant action sequence when the movie's villains, Apocalypse Inc., unleash a small army of thugs on the Tromaville Home for the Blind in hopes of running off/killing its inhabitants and turning it into yet another toxic waste disposal site. Of course, the Toxic Avenger works there with his girlfriend Claire (Phoebe Legere) and the deaths of his blind friends sends him into a rage. It's an excessive opening sequence where he slaughters all manner bizarre henchmen including a martial artist, a cross-dresser (of course, because it's Troma), a little person (of course, because it's Troma), some sort of man/dog mutant, gangsters, a man in Native American garb, etc. Each one getting their own bloody mutilation. At more than 20 minutes, it's like sitting through a low-budget special effects company's sizzle reel. Remember, this is before the movie even really officially begins. Once we finally into what passes for an inciting incident, Apocalypse Inc. devises a plan to lure the Toxic Avenger away from Tromaville long enough to get their stranglehold on the population and ruin the environment (or something like that). They use the Toxic Avenger's psychiatrist to convince him he needs to travel to Japan and find his father, and the movie finally starts trudging forward.
Most of the movie's runtime is devoted to the Toxic Avenger maiming his way through Tokyo. With a higher budget and a positive response to the original film in Japan, Kaufman saw the chance for some production value. He throws in any local culture he can with the Toxic Avenger and his new friend Masami (Mayako Katsuragi) acting as our tour guides. But again, it all serves one purpose: get us to the next fight sequence. The new locale lets the filmmakers have some fun with our hero taking on ninjas, kabuki men, another cross-dresser (this one in school girl garb because Japan?), and some bizarre fish-man hybrid. I don't know, man, it's just weird. Whereas the first movie was still pretty grounded in the real world, PART II dives into goofy cartoon territory. In addition to those dog and fish mutants, Kaufman and crew make the deaths less brutal with the utter stupidity in the fight sequences. A little person compressed into a basketball, decapitated men dancing through the frame, the Toxic Avenger using starfish and swordfish as weapons in a street fight; the movie is loaded to the brim with this stuff. It's a far cry from the more hard-hitting brutality of the first movie where he'd drop gym weights on a drug dealer's head or rip a robber's arm off and beat him with it. The reason I enjoy PART II over the (arguably superior) first is because of this excess though. It knows what it is.
THE TOXIC AVENGER PART II is not a good movie. It's not even really a movie. It's somehow less of a movie than the first was, but it seems to understand that "plot" and "progression" aren't its strong points so it overcompensates with the craziness. It distracted me from the fact that absolutely nothing of interest happens in this movie by throwing a series of over-the-top fight scenes at me until the end credits. It helps you accept that the Toxic Avenger is done with a crappy rubber mask this time and that all of the dialogue is dubbed (badly). This movie is overwhelmingly dumb and it could've ended about twenty minutes sooner but, as far as my experiences with Troma are concerned, it's more entertaining.
- brando647
- 28 de jan. de 2017
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- The Toxic Avenger Part II
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- Orçamento
- US$ 2.300.000 (estimativa)
- Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 792.966
- Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 28.950
- 26 de fev. de 1989
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 792.966