Month: February 2024

A red band teaser trailer for writer/director Macon Blair’s remake of the Troma cult classic The Toxic Avenger (watch it HERE) was unveiled back in September – you can watch it at THIS LINK – but we’re still waiting to hear of a release date for that one. In the meantime, AHOY Comics has announced (via The Hollywood Reporter) that they are bringing the Toxic Avenger character back to the world of comic books for a five-issue mini-series they’re planning to get out into the world this fall! The first issue is expected to reach store shelves on October 9th.

The Hollywood Reporter notes that Matt Bors, the Pulitzer Prize finalist who founded the daily online political comics publication The Nib, and artist / caricaturist Fred Harper are working on the mini-series, which will be taking its cues from the 1984 version of The Toxic Avenger, not from the upcoming remake… but will also be giving the character a new origin story.

In the original movie, the Toxic Avenger starts out as a 98-pound janitor named Melvin Junko who, after falling into an oil drum filled with toxic waste, becomes an unlikely vigilante in his New Jersey town. In this comic book mini-series, Junko is a teen who is helping his parent run a junkyard in their boring New Jersey town, until train derailment of toxic waste transforms Melvin into a hideously deformed creature of superhuman size and strength. He will fight the corporation named Biohazard Solutions, also known as BS, and its PR-spewing chairwoman, uncovering a vast conspiracy more far-reaching than he could have ever imagined as his faith in humanity doing the right thing tested in ways he never thought possible.

AHOY Comics’ editor-in-chief Tom Peyer told The Hollywood Reporter that he “believes the comic will give fans of Toxie, as the character is endearingly called, what they yearn for in such a story while still keeping one foot rooted in the franchise’s origins of environmentalism.” Peyer said, “The series has violent action, gross mutations, bursting pustules, eye-popping visuals, and trenchant humor.

Bors provided the following statement: “This series will combine elements of the original films with the Toxic Crusaders cartoon and characters in familiar ways, updated to tell a story of environmental devastation, corporate control, and social media mutation. The Toxic Avenger is first and foremost an environmental satire, one about a small town and its unremarkable people trapped and transformed by circumstances they don’t control. The story Fred Harper and I are telling is about people frustrated by authorities telling them not to worry about their life, that things are fine, even as their dog mutates in front of their eyes. And at its core it is about a powerless boy, Melvin, who finds out he can be incredibly strong, hideously mutated, well-admired, and incredibly heroic… but still ultimately powerless over human behavior.

Back in the early ’90s, there was a Toxic Avenger comic book from Marvel Comics that only lasted for eleven issues. In 2008, Troma teamed up with Devil’s Due for Lloyd Kaufman Presents: The Toxic Avenger and Other Tromatic Tales.

Will you be checking out the new The Toxic Avenger comic book mini-series from AHOY Comics? Let us know by leaving a comment below. Here’s a look at one of the covers:

The Toxic Avenger

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david zaslav, flops, superman

James Gunn has been sharing his excitement for the upcoming start of Superman: Legacy this week. Previously, he shared a photo of him showing the stars of Peacemaker, Jennifer Holland and Freddie Stroma, the set of the film. He also shared a cast photo at the table read of the film. The caption on the photo read, “After the table read with the #Superman cast. Eve, Mr. Terrific, Superman/Clark, Otis, Lex, producer Peter Safran, Jimmy, Metamorpho, Lois, Hawkgirl, me, Guy, The Engineer all together for the first time! What a wonderful day.” The photo also showcases Nicholas Hoult’s new bald look for playing Lex Luthor in the film.

The DCU inaugural film is due to start shooting next week, and one person who is ecstatic about it is Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav. According to Variety, Zaslav gave a fourth-quarter earnings call this morning, which touched on a lot of the studio’s upcoming projects, like the Harry Potter TV series on Max. Besides Barbie, Warner Bros. is definitely feeling the impact of flops from the past year, but the CEO is confident about this new Man of Steel incarnation. He states, “Bottom line, the studio has really been underperforming — including at the end of the year where we had some real struggle — but we’re very optimistic about this year, and it has given us the chance to have a lot of upside in the next two years.”

Warner Bros. Discovery’s CFO, Gunnar Wiedenfels, also chimed in to say, “On the film side, obviously this is going to continue to be a hit-driven business. Just last year was a great example, with the greatest success in the film studio’s history, and some real challenges across the industry on the superhero side.”

Superman: Legacy also added John Murphy as the film’s composer. Murphy’s previous work includes musical arrangements for The Suicide Squad, Peacemaker, The Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special, and Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3. Gunn made his enthusiastic announcement on Instagram about working with him again, “Happy to announce that my frequent collaborator @johnmurphycomposer is scoring #SupermanLegacy. John was one of the first people I called when I finished the script many months ago as I knew how incredibly important the score was to this production. John has been working tirelessly since, creating hours worth of music that we’ll play on set as we shoot & use in the edit & that will eventually be recorded with a glorious symphony for all of you. Welcome to the DCU, John!”

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After being delayed several months by the writers strike and the actors strike, season 5 of the hit Netflix series Stranger Things finally went into production at the start of the year – but if you were hoping that might mean the new episodes will be available to watch on Netflix by the end of 2024, or even at the beginning of 2025, new cast member Linda Hamilton is here to dash those hopes. While speaking to Business Insider, Hamilton said Stranger Things season 5 will be filming for an entire year!

Hamilton said, “It’s a year of shooting, so I couldn’t be happier. Their season takes a year to shoot, which is just an unheard-of luxury of time. But the size of their day is also so beyond any scale that we’re used to.

We’ve never gotten any details on the character Hamilton will be playing in the new season, and Business Insider mentions that fan speculation has ranged from an older version of Eleven or an older sister of Joyce to a CIA operative. Hamilton told them, “All of it’s true. I confirm everyone’s theory is correct. That’s all I can share. They’re all right!

Hamilton has previously said that she has been a fan of Stranger Things up to this point, but she won’t be watching season 5 because she’s in it.

Created by the Duffer Brothers, Stranger Things has the following synopsis: A love letter to the ‘80s classic genre films that captivated a generation, Stranger Things is a thrilling drama set in the seemingly normal Midwestern town of Hawkins, Indiana. After a boy vanishes into thin air, his close-knit group of friends and family search for answers and are pulled into a high-stakes and deadly series of events. Beneath the surface of their ordinary town lurks an extraordinary supernatural mystery, along with top-secret government experiments and a dangerous gateway that connects our world to a powerful yet sinister realm. Friendships will be tested and lives will be altered as what they discover will change Hawkins and possibly the world — forever.

Here’s the list of the cast members and the characters they played in season 4: Winona Ryder (Joyce Byers), David Harbour (Jim Hopper), Millie Bobby Brown (Eleven), Finn Wolfhard (Mike Wheeler), Gaten Matarazzo (Dustin Henderson), Caleb McLaughlin (Lucas Sinclair), Noah Schnapp (Will Byers), Sadie Sink (Max Mayfield), Natalia Dyer (Nancy Wheeler), Charlie Heaton (Jonathan Byers), Joe Keery (Steve Harrington), Maya Hawke (Robin Buckley), Priah Ferguson (Erica Sinclair), Brett Gelman (Murray), Cara Buono (Karen Wheeler), Matthew Modine (Dr. Brenner), Paul Reiser (Dr. Owens), Jamie Campbell Bower (Peter Ballard), Joseph Quinn (Eddie Munson), Eduardo Franco (Argyle), Sherman Augustus (Lt. Colonel Sullivan), Mason Dye (Jason Carver), Nikola Djuricko (Yuri), Tom Wlaschiha (Dmitri), Myles Truitt (Patrick), Regina Ting Chen (Ms. Kelly), Grace Van Dien (Chrissy), Logan Riley Bruner (Fred Benson), Logan Allen (Jake), Elodie Grace Orkin (Angela), John Reynolds (Officer Callahan), Rob Morgan (Chief Powell), Amybeth McNulty (Vickie), and Freddy Krueger himself Robert Englund (Victor Creel).

Stranger Things is produced by Monkey Massacre Productions and 21 Laps Entertainment. Series creators The Duffer Brothers serve as executive producers alongside Shawn Levy and Dan Cohen of 21 Laps Entertainment, Iain Paterson, and Curtis Gwinn.

10 Cloverfield Lane and Prey director Dan Trachtenberg will be directing an episode, likely sometime before he heads off to make the new Predator movie Badlands in July.

Are you looking forward to Stranger Things season 5, and are you surprised to see Linda Hamilton say that it’s going to be filming for an entire year? Let us know by leaving a comment below.

Linda Hamilton

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Tom Green has cancer. It is early 2000, and he is about to go under for surgery, and guess what? He’s recording the whole thing because he would like to educate you on the world of testicular cancer, and if you can see his internal organs while doing so, so be it. And so there he is at 28 years old in a hospital gown, making jokes while medical professionals get ready to chop off one of his nuts. “This is going to freaking suck,” he says. But, if we know anything about him, nothing is off limits for Tom Green. It was the ultimate combination of tragedy and comedy; you have a young man in his prime facing death while telling the world’s greatest testicle joke. This comedian turned cancer into performance art, which made me believe God might have a twisted sense of humor… kinda like Tom Green himself.

The dude revolutionized a breed of comedy that borders on anarchy, using the boob tube to reveal just how wild and crazy the world can be… all you need is a warrior clown poet willing to go beyond the punch line. The comedy stylizing of Tom Green consists of gross-out reality-based chaos with flare from old-school hip hop and energy from punk rock skateboard culture. But are these jokes still funny? Was Tom Green misunderstood and ahead of his time? Was he trying to tell us something about the human condition through tom foolery and disgusting shenanigans? Is this man still out there influencing the masses? So yeah, WTF Happened to…Tom Green?

But to truly understand what the heck happened to Tom Green, we go back to the beginning. And the beginning began when he was born on July 30th, 1971, in Ontario, Canada, to Mary and Richard, who would be the butt of so many of their baby boy’s pranks. And Tom Green was a skater boy who loved pranks, stemming from a sort of anger against authority, using over-the-top and sometimes vile antics to get a laugh and make us think.

tom green charlie's angels

But he would soon find out that just because something was funny in high school didn’t mean it was funny in front of strangers. At least not yet. In college – not long after launching a go at stand-up as a teen, performing at Ontario’s famed Yuk Yuk’s – Green honed his skills with a college radio show. This he spun into a late-night call-in show with eventual MTV sidekick Glenn Humplik.

In its earliest iteration, The Tom Green Show premiered in 1994, airing only in Canada for years until MTV picked it up, debuting in January 1999. MTV was on the cusp of a major transition, nearly ditching the “M” in favour of reality shows. So here was the new standard, and it didn’t take long for Tom Green to make a name, love or loathe him. One week he’s putting a decapitated cow head in a bed; the next, he’s commandeering mall PA systems; the next, he’s putting crap on a mic head; the next he’s repainting the family car into the “Slutmobile”, the next he’s banging an animal carcass, the next he’s sucking milk from a cow’s udder. Tom Green would do anything for a laugh…even if you weren’t laughing. For their part, TV Guide would name The Tom Green Show one of the 50 worst programs ever.

But look at the legacy. Jackass and Billy on the Street and The Eric Andre Show (which he appeared on in 2012) all owe their greenlighting and success to Tom Green. Hell, Jackass even directly stole bits from Green, who was at least smart enough not to mess with a bull.

But none of these had the ill-rhyming skills of Tom Green. Whereas the Jackass boys relied on The Minutemen for their theme, Tom Green performed his own. And in 1999, he released “Lonely Swedish (The Bum Bum Song)”, wherein he sang about and executed putting his butt on everything from a step to some cheese. The year prior he had released a 1998 meta album under the pseudonym MC Face, in which he mocked Tom Green…He wouldn’t dabble in music again until 2005 with the album “Prepare for Impact” with songs like “I’m an Idiot” and “Don’t Mess with a Man (After He Takes a Big Poo Poo” (2008’s “Basement Jams” would follow).

freddy got fingered

In early 2000, Tom Green dressed as Hitler at a bar mitzvah–OK, so that didn’t happen, but many believed that led to the end of The Tom Green Show (and it wasn’t entirely out of the realm of possibility). In actuality, it was a bout with testicular cancer – documented in a widely commended TV special – that cut the cord.

Tom Green would soon cut the umbilical cord…with his teeth in Freddy Got Fingered (2001). This was the feature that would solidify Tom Green (by way of the movie) as “offensive”, “witless”, “tragically awful”, and below the creativity of a sideshow act. But what does Tom Green care about critics? He was going to the Razzies! Freddy took home five Razzies that year: Worst Picture, Actor, Director, Screenplay, Screen Couple (Green and the animals he abuses). And yes, he accepted those honors (wearing his wedding tuxedo), having to be taken off the stage because he wouldn’t stop playing the harmonica. Anything for a laugh. But thanks to the dudes at Red Letter Media, people are now looking at this film in a whole new way. This may be a brilliant social commentary on how the Hollywood studio system operates when a new silly man becomes popular. They give these goofballs millions and let them totally mess around, and mess around is what Tom did. Some call it anti-comedy, some call it satirical genius, and some call it stupid, but sometimes you gotta be smart to be stupid.

Before Freddy Got Fingered, Green landed an oddball supporting part in Road Trip (2000), where he got to lick a mouse, and Charlie’s Angels (2000), playing boyfriend to real-life girlfriend Drew Barrymore. After a marriage stunt on SNL when Green hosted, the two actually did wed in July 2001…filing for divorce that December. But somehow, he would be trusted to co-lead another movie post-Freddy, Stealing Harvard (2002) alongside Jason Lee.

Maybe the film medium wasn’t for Tom Green. He would play the occasional lead, as in 2005’s Bob the Butler (which premiered on Disney Channel of all places!). Still, he mostly stuck to supporting roles that even most Green aficionados probably couldn’t rattle off: 2008’s Shred (a skate shop owner), 2016’s Total Frat Movie (reversing roles as the responsible one), 2017’s Bethany (a horror flick where Green plays a doctor), 2019’s Iron Sky: The Coming Race (as a cult leader)…But the small screen was his forte.

And so Tom Green settled behind the desk not long after his cancer battle subsided, leading The New Tom Green Show in 2003. Here, he leaned more into his admiration for Letterman (although his biggest guests were WTF faves Marilyn Manson and Andy Dick…); He even got the shot to guest-host for The Late Show icon in June of that year. Interestingly, he would later end up working for rival Jay Leno as a correspondent, which is pretty good considering he got shitfaced on Jagermeister during a 2002 appearance. The New Tom Green Show lasted just three months.

But we saw a more mature Tom Green – and we’re hesitant here, but it’s not inaccurate – mature Tom Green. Gone were the days of destroying drug stores and rubbing his butt on strangers. This was a man who went on USO Tours in 2003 (Kosovo) and 2004 (Persian Gulf). He is no Bob Hope, but it was admirable to use his comedy skills in such a way.

The small screen got even smaller for Tom Green – but not because his fandom had died down. He invited us into his home for 2006’s Tom Green’s House Tonight (starting as Tom Green Live), filming in his living room. For this go at an interview program, he won a coveted Webby for Best Variety Show. He would later host a podcast.

It turns out that maybe people like seeing Tom Green or at least want to know what he might do now that his shtick has mellowed. But he also can’t help himself. When he appeared on season eight of Celebrity Apprentice (2009), he was fired in the third episode for showing up late after an all-night bender with Dennis Rodman. When he partook in Celebrity Big Brother 2 (2019), he was almost refined in his odd antics, still wacky but slightly less perverted, I guess. What, really, could we expect? This guy has had so much fun being himself…even when he’s a cyborg version of himself, as he was on Workaholics (2013).

But there’s nothing outrageous anymore – even his America’s Got Talent stunt where Green becomes engulfed in flames was revealed to be a stuntman. How can he be? Where has our Tom Green gone? This is the man who brought the obnoxious jerk with no limits back to the mainstream, pre-dating those idiotic TikTok pranks that have gotten people shot. Social media has sucked out the artistry and the punk rock edge of prank videos. Nowadays, pranksters seem motivated by views and clicks, but Tom was motivated by his love of comedy. Performance art is dead, taken over by desperate “internet clout.” They won’t have legacies, and you probably don’t know their names, but you will never forget the name Tom Green.

And not to put him on some golden pedestal, but Tom Green, the little udder-sucker that could, remains. He even continues stand-up to this day, tossing in variations of past MTV bits and movie scenes. But it seems now that podcasting is really his thing, and it seems to really make him happy. His dedicated fans still tune in to hear this man’s hilarious, wise words, broadcasting from his farm… that’s right, Tom Green is a farmer now… as foretold in his brilliant satire Freddy Got Fingered.

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