Ah, The Exterminator. A movie that sounds like it should star Arnold Schwarzenegger but instead gives you Robert Ginty, the human equivalent of a paper cut. If Death Wish was a seedy fever dream about urban decay and vigilante justice, The Exterminator is the gas station knockoff you regret watching—but somehow finish anyway, like a tainted hot dog you eat at 3 a.m. because you’re too drunk to know better.
Released in 1980, just as New York City was still one big roach motel with a skyline, this is one of those films that leans into the sleaze so hard, you can feel the VHS static buzzing in your ears. Blood, grime, crime, and lots of uncomfortable close-ups. This thing doesn’t have a plot so much as a series of blunt traumas stitched together with cigarette smoke and bad saxophone.
Let’s get into it.
Robert Ginty: Your Discount Vigilante
Our “hero” is John Eastland, a Vietnam vet played by Robert Ginty—a man with the screen presence of wet laundry. He’s got the thousand-yard stare of someone who’s seen terrible things. Or maybe he’s just bored. Hard to tell. Ginty walks through the film like he’s late to a dentist appointment and mildly irritated that he’s in an action movie.
Anyway, his best friend Michael Jefferson gets paralyzed by a street gang—because of course he does—and that’s enough to send Eastland into a slow, steady spiral into revenge. And when I say “slow,” I mean coma patient slow. The guy buys a flamethrower and starts setting lowlifes on fire. But he does it all with the energy of a substitute math teacher. You can practically hear him sigh before each kill.
The Kills: Creative but Clunky
You’ve got to give the movie this much: it tries to be creative. People get torched. Ground up in meat processors. Shot. Burned. Beaten. Left to rot in garbage piles. It’s like someone watched The Punisher and thought, “This needs more body parts and fewer brain cells.”
But the violence isn’t cool. It’s not even cathartic. It’s just greasy. You feel like you need a tetanus shot after every scene. There’s one part where Eastland ties a guy to a chair and slowly lowers him into a meat grinder. It’s played as some kind of grotesque justice, but really, it’s just sad and weird. The gore is impressive in a “practical effects by your uncle who owns a butcher shop” kind of way, but it’s not fun.
Even the flamethrower kills—which should be awesome—feel limp. Ginty lumbers in, pulls the trigger, and flames whoosh out while bad guys scream like they just sat on a hot car seat. It’s more barbecue than badass.
New York is the Real Villain
Much like Taxi Driver, The Exterminator treats New York like the last stop before hell. Trash in the streets. Hookers on every corner. Pimps, drug dealers, mobsters, and corrupt politicians. It’s a hellscape, and Eastland’s answer is to torch it all.
But unlike Taxi Driver, this film has no nuance, no psychological depth, and certainly no Scorsese. It’s all grime, no grace. The city looks so gross you can almost smell it—like hot dog water and despair. Cinematographer James Lemmo does manage to capture that dirty, neon-lit late-70s NYC atmosphere, but the movie doesn’t know what to do with it.
Is it an anti-crime message? A warning about urban decay? A fever dream? Who knows. The script’s too drunk to explain itself, and the direction is just pointing the camera at things and hoping something awful happens.
The Cop Subplot That Nobody Asked For
Christopher George plays Detective Dalton, the guy investigating the vigilante killings. He’s a straight-laced cop with a mustache so serious it deserves its own badge. And naturally, he’s got a love interest, a nurse played by Samantha Eggar, who exists only to give him someone to smile at between scenes of homicide.
Their subplot is like a soap opera spliced into a snuff film. Dalton investigates the murders. He has dinner with the nurse. He questions a guy. Kisses her. Talks about morality. Meanwhile, people are being roasted alive. The tonal whiplash is so bad you’ll think you missed a reel.
The Dialogue: Pulled From a Trash Can
The dialogue in The Exterminator is less “written” and more “grunted into a tape recorder during a hangover.” It’s full of tough-guy clichés, mumbled threats, and attempts at Vietnam flashback monologues that land like wet farts.
At one point Eastland says, “If you’re lying, I’ll be back.” Which would be cool if it wasn’t said like he’s ordering a sandwich. Another gem comes from a thug who says, “This city belongs to the pimps and pushers!” like it’s a campaign slogan.
You get the feeling the script was written in crayon on the back of a matchbook. There’s no rhythm, no style—just rage. Incoherent, chemically-induced rage.
Final Showdown and Predictable Doom
Eventually, Eastland goes too far—because of course he does—and the authorities close in. There’s a final shootout, some blood, some yelling, and then, bang. It’s over. The movie stumbles to a finish line like a drunk crossing the freeway.
And what did we learn? Nothing. Absolutely nothing. The movie doesn’t care about themes, character arcs, or redemption. It’s just one long howl of rage filtered through a flamethrower nozzle.
Final Thoughts: Trash Cinema, Embrace the Stink
The Exterminator is one of those films that probably looked amazing on the back of a VHS box. “He was a soldier. Now he’s a one-man army!” Sounds great. But watching it is like getting trapped in a broken arcade machine with a strobe light and the smell of old socks.
It’s violent, yes. Gory, yes. Sleazy? Absolutely. But it’s also slow, dumb, and oddly lifeless. It wants to be a gritty revenge flick, but instead it plays like a public service announcement from the NRA’s fever dream.
Robert Ginty does his best, but his best is a shrug with a flamethrower. There’s no charisma, no wit, no spark—just dead eyes and gasoline. And if that’s your thing, well… enjoy the burn.
1.5 out of 5 meat grinders.
Half a star for sheer grindhouse audacity. One full star for making me never want to touch a flamethrower.

