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  • Troma’s War (1988): A Slime-Covered Assault on Cinema

Troma’s War (1988): A Slime-Covered Assault on Cinema

Posted on August 26, 2025 By admin No Comments on Troma’s War (1988): A Slime-Covered Assault on Cinema
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Prologue: Anything with Lloyd Kaufman Attached…

There are two universal truths in this world: slugs are slow, and anything Lloyd Kaufman touches oozes like a boil on the backside of cinema. Troma’s War (1988) is no exception. Marketed as Troma’s grand statement on Reagan-era militarism, what we actually got was a 90-minute dumpster fire where the dumpster is filled with chicken guts, melted latex, and a sense of irony so forced it makes clowns look dignified.

This is the “most expensive Troma film to date” (a cool $3 million), which is kind of like bragging you bought the fanciest porta-potty at a demolition derby.

The Premise: Gilligan’s Island with Gonorrhea

The film begins with a plane crash, stranding a group of survivors on an uncharted island. Sounds promising, right? Wrong. Because this is Troma, the island isn’t filled with mystery or suspense but with terrorists — a hodgepodge of Nazis, drug dealers, and people who look like they got lost on their way to a Halloween parade.

When one woman surrenders, she’s immediately shot — Troma’s idea of “political commentary.” The survivors then realize they’ve landed on what amounts to a terrorist training camp. Cue explosions, nudity, and dialogue so wooden it could be used to build a canoe.

The terrorists? Oh, they’re led by Señor Sida — yes, Mr. AIDS. Because subtlety, like hygiene at Tromaville, has no place here. There are also conjoined Nazi twins, because apparently even Kaufman couldn’t resist raiding the carnival sideshow for inspiration.


The Characters: Tropes in Human Flesh

  • Parker (Michael Ryder): A slightly unstable Vietnam vet who solves problems by shooting them. He’s basically Rambo if Rambo were played by your high school gym teacher.

  • Taylor (Sean Bowen): The “everyman” who is so bland he makes unbuttered toast look spicy.

  • Lydia (Carolyn Beauchamp): Exists to complain, then make out with Taylor when the script runs out of ideas.

  • Señor Sida (Paolo Frassanito): Leader of the AIDS brigade. Yes, they literally named him Mr. AIDS. This isn’t satire; it’s a hate crime in screenplay form.

  • The Conjoined Nazi Twins: Sharing one brain cell between them, they symbolize… well, nothing. They’re just gross for grossness’s sake.

  • Cooney (Ara Romanoff): The timid, obese passenger who somehow becomes the final “hero.” Watching him drive a truck of explosives into a terrorist boat is less triumphant and more like watching someone throw cheesecake at a battleship.


The Gore: Latex, Ketchup, Repeat

Troma built its name on cheap gore effects, and Troma’s War doubles down like a drunk at a blackjack table. Heads explode, limbs are severed, intestines are yanked out like overcooked spaghetti — all of it so unconvincing you half-expect to see a boom mic dripping with fake blood.

There’s a scene where Señor Sida gets shot in the crotch with a crossbow bolt. It should be shocking. Instead, it looks like someone popped a ketchup packet at Taco Bell.

When women aren’t being gratuitously killed, they’re being sexually assaulted, because nothing says “biting political satire” like treating female characters as props for exploitation.


The Tone: Satire by a 12-Year-Old

Supposedly, Troma’s War is a critique of Reagan’s America, a parody of how the government glamorized armed conflict. That’s cute. What it actually plays like is a fever dream written by a middle schooler who just discovered Mad Magazineand thinks AIDS jokes are edgy.

The film shouts “political commentary!” while simultaneously reveling in the very exploitation it claims to mock. It’s like protesting fast food while shoving McNuggets up your nose.


The Pacing: Endless Slime March

Clocking in at nearly two hours, Troma’s War feels like actual war — endless, pointless, and leaving you shell-shocked by the time it’s over. Scenes drag as characters argue about nothing, then suddenly explode into action that looks like it was choreographed by a drunk marching band.

By the third act, when Cooney becomes the unlikely savior, you’re not cheering. You’re begging for credits like they’re reinforcements.


The Dialogue: Pulitzer-Worthy Garbage

Sample lines include:

  • “America will never surrender!” (screamed while covered in slime).

  • “We must spread AIDS to the American people!” (a real line, not a parody).

  • “They’re Nazis… but they’re twins!” (no explanation necessary).

Every line is delivered with the conviction of a hostage video. You could create a drinking game out of this script, but you’d be dead from alcohol poisoning by minute 15.


The Politics: A Dumpster Wrapped in a Flag

Here’s the thing: Troma’s War pretends to be a political film. It waves the flag, mocks the military-industrial complex, and tries to satirize America’s obsession with violence. But in doing so, it becomes the very thing it’s parodying.

It’s gory, misogynistic, exploitative, and about as nuanced as a brick to the face. It’s not “meta.” It’s just dumb.


The Production: $3 Million Well Wasted

Troma reportedly spent $3 million making this — their most expensive production ever. On screen, you’d guess maybe $300 and a few coupons for free hot dogs. The sets look like abandoned playgrounds, the explosions are recycled stock footage, and the acting feels like everyone was paid in expired deli meat.

If The Toxic Avenger was their cult crown jewel, Troma’s War is the cubic zirconia knockoff at the bottom of a clearance bin.


The Ending: “America!”

After two hours of incoherent carnage, the survivors scream “America!” in unison, as if patriotism can wash away the sins of the preceding sludge. It’s not triumphant. It’s not funny. It’s the cinematic equivalent of farting during the national anthem.


Final Verdict: Tromageddon

Anything Lloyd Kaufman touches sucks ass. Troma’s War proves it beyond a shadow of a doubt. It’s not satire. It’s not clever. It’s not even fun bad. It’s just bad-bad — a festering swamp of cheap gore, offensive stereotypes, and a script that thinks naming a villain “Mr. AIDS” is biting wit.

At best, it’s a curiosity for masochistic cult-film fans who want to punish themselves. At worst, it’s a reminder that some wars should never be fought — especially ones against good taste.

If you see Troma’s War on a shelf, do your civic duty: douse it in gasoline, light a match, and scream “America!” as it burns. That’s the only appropriate ending this mess deserves.

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