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The Toxic Avenger Is the Hero We Need Right Now
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The Toxic Avenger
The Toxic Avenger Is the Hero We Need Right Now
Toxie is back to mop up all of society’s ills.
By Leah Schnelbach
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Published on August 29, 2025
Credit: Troma Entertainment
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Credit: Troma Entertainment
Speaking as both a former janitor and a current film critic, The Toxic Avenger is pretty much everything I want it to be.
This is a fun, gross, slapstick splatterpunk satire—splatire?—about the intersection between capitalism, for-profit healthcare, and the destruction of our environment—and it’s also about becoming a MUTATED FOLK HERO WHO DISPENSES BRUTAL JUSTICE, and it’s a great time at the theater. If you like squicky horror comedy, you should see the unrated version as soon as you can.
Winston Gooze is a janitor for BTH, a terrible company that spews toxic sludge into the environment with no remorse. Winston lives with his step-kid Wade, and it’s just the two of them since Wade’s mom, Sharon, died from cancer. Winston’s doing his best, but working in BTH’s Mop Shop doesn’t pay well, and there’s a teetering pile of bills from Wade’s therapy and grief counseling. Despite Winston’s best efforts, Wade is very aware of the bills.
I don’t think it’s much of a spoiler to say that the plot is kicked off when Winston finds out he has a possibly terminal medical condition and can’t get treatment for it, even though he’s on his health insurance’s Platinum tier, since Platinum doesn’t also cover things on the Gold tier, even though Platinum is better and any reasonable person would think that the Gold stuff would be included when they signed up for Platinum, and it’s especially frustrating, after you’ve screamed “SPEAK TO AN AGENT!” at an automated voice over the phone for what feels like forever, to learn, in the end, that you’re fucked.
But what’s he supposed to do, die and leave his grieving stepson alone in the world?
So Winston makes a series of rash choices that lead to his transformation into The Toxic Avenger, a reasonably bulletproof green-skinned mutant with a detachable red eye and superstrength.
Credit: Troma Entertainment
In Michael Herz and Lloyd Kaufman’s original 1984 The Toxic Avenger, Melvin Ferd is a bullied, nerdy janitor at a health club who fights crime after toxic sludge gives him superstrength. The original was Troma Entertainment’s biggest hit, and resulted in a series of films and a kid-friendly cartoon. The new one is probably not kid-friendly. (I mean, I would have loved it, but I’m not always the best judge of this stuff.) The Toxic Avenger was written and directed by Macon Blair, an actor/director who has appeared in Blue Ruin and Green Room, and directed 2017’s I Don’t Feel at Home in This World Anymore, a dark comedy/ thriller that starred Elijah Wood and Melanie Lynskey. Blair has turned Toxie into even more of a working-class hero than he already was. He not only centers the environmental and healthcare stuff, but makes Winston’s relationship with his depressed step-kid the driving force of the plot. Along the way he celebrates a scrappy punk ethos, and updates the ‘80s-style “slobs vs. snobs” plot by making it “terminally ill janitor vs. slimy rich snake oil salesman”. Blair also makes sure that Winston is proud to be a janitor, which, speaking as a former janitor, made me glow even though I am not a mutant. AND, he found a way to keep the pink tutu as an integral part of Toxie’s uniform, but he gave him a really touching reason to wear it.
The effects are fantastic—all glowing blue blood and gushing red blood and neon green waste and detachable eyeballs and flying rubber heads. Did I mention that Toxie’s urine is extremely corrosive? Or that there’s a mutated chicken that shows up to screech maniacally at key moments in the film?
Credit: Troma Entertainment
This is a film that lives and dies by the commitment of its people, and holy fuck is everyone committed. Peter Dinklage is fucking great as Winston Gooze, and as Winston/Toxie’s voice after he’s transformed. Luisa Guerreiro is great as Toxie in the excellent gross practical suit. Jacob Tremblay plumbs some emotional depth as Wade, and he continues to be one of my favorite young actors. Taylour Paige is excellent as J.J. Doherty, the intrepid journalist who’s the closest thing the film has to a straight man—you have to have a little grounding in reality. Kevin Bacon continues his run of great work as drug-pushing villains in Toma-adjacent filmmaking. While I think Super’s Jacques is even worse than Bob Garbinger, Bob’s plenty bad. He portrays himself as a man of the people, dispensing supplements and alternative medicine to those who need it, but he’s actually just a superrich snake oil salesman who profits off the pain of those poorer than him. (Again, there’s not a lot of nuance here, but our society has rejected nuance, and this is what we’ve got to work with.)
Elijah Wood is basically playing a shy, abused version of Danny DeVito’s Penguin. He just wants to manage his terrible Monstercore band, Killer Nutz, but nooo his brother Bob Garbinger keeps sending him out to “take care of” any pesky journalist who pokes around BTH. The Killer Nutz themselves are hilarious—one of them parkours into every situation, one of them speaks an inexplicable language that shows up as occult symbols in the subtitles, one of them is an enormous person with a chicken mask for a head—and their music fucking SUCKS.
Credit: Troma Entertainment
The Toxic Avenger isn’t my favorite thing Troma’s ever given us (that would be its U.S. distribution of Killer Condom, a dark queer German noir parody/AIDs parable featuring the titular condom, which was designed by HR Giger—I am not making one fucking word of that up) but I really enjoyed it. If I have a critique it’s that I wish the new Toxic Avenger was a little longer, and we got to see a bit more ground-level Toxic Avenging before the final battle with Bob Garbinger and his associates. I also have to say that this film, while gross, could have been even grosser. There are rumors that it took a while to find distribution because of the gore, but I’ll be honest—I’ve seen gorier.
But this Toxie is so perfect for today’s world. The fight against environmental poisoning and for-profit healthcare is, unfortunately, more relevant today than it was in the early ‘80s. It’s also worth noting that the company behind The Toxic Avenger, Cineverse, has partnered with the non-profit Undue Medical Debt to put part of their profit toward erasing medical debt. I hate living in a capitalist hellscape, but I love watching a mutated vigilante decapitate people with mops.
Credit: Troma Entertainment
At one point a character says “We’ve already killed the planet”, but Toxie replies “Why fight if you don’t think you can win?!” And, well, yeah. We have to do what we can, and act like we can win, so we might as well celebrate cartoonish violence and rubber prosthetics while we’re at it. And I need to make it clear that while I’m digging into the serious themes of the film, because I’m a film critic, none of this will be at the top of your mind while you’re watching it. This is a movie where a character saves an obviously stuffed cat from traffic (causing a horrific multiple-car-and-bike accident) and someone offscreen yells “MUTHERFUCKER SAVED THE CAT!!!”. This is a film where a mutant in a pink tutu disembowels an incel at a fast food joint. A film where the storefront church across the street from Winston’s apartment is called the Additional Holy Redeemer Church. A place where the town’s name, St Roma’s Village, is always obscured in some way to read “Tromaville”. A film where almost everyone is a mutant by the end.
I’ll also mention that between this and James Gunn’s Superman, fucking TROMA VETERANS are doing more for the citizens of this country than almost any elected official right now. They’re the ones who are standing up for journalism, the importance of caring for our environment, for stepdads who step up (and become superhuman mutants), and the power of empathy.
This is a movie for the freaks, and it’s a fucking joy to watch.[end-mark]
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