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Troll 2
(1990)
Director: Drago Floyd
Cast:
George Hardy, Margo Prey, Connie McFarland
Oh my God! Troll 2 is an incredibly bad movie.
It's so bad, one has to think what the hell they were thinking of. Normal
human minds couldn't have made such a godawful movie like this in the 1990s.
Yet I see the video box in front of me, I see the video itself, and I see
the visions onscreen. Oh, the visions. I won't be able to shake them out
of my head for a long time. And that's actually a good thing, because Troll
2 is not only bad, but it's hilariously bad. It takes a
place right beside movies like Plan 9 From Outer Space and
Robot
Monster - movies that are so inept, they become classics. So it's
true - they do make 'em like they used to! Not very often, yes,
but they are out there.
Don't worry if you've never see the original Troll. For
one thing, while the first movie flirted with competence and had a few
good moments, it's overall a pretty forgettable movie, and I'm glad I waited
until it popped up on late night television. Another reason is that there's
no connection between the events in this sequel and what happened in the
first movie. The biggest difference between the two movies centers around
the small town young Josh and his family travel to for a vacation. Over
the phone, his father tells someone they are going to "Nilbog...You spell
it N-I-L-B-O-G." For those who haven't got it yet, Josh himself deducts
near the end of the movie, "[Nilbog] - It's 'goblin' spelled backwards!"
Yes, there are no trolls in Troll 2! What we have instead
are a bunch of goblins, played by potato sack-clad midgets wearing stiff
and unmoving masks that look like they were made by fifth graders. Perhaps
realizing how ridiculous they look, the goblins are usually morphed in
a variety of human disguises. There's "Sheriff Gene Freak", a local preacher
who gives out sermons like, "Symbol of original sin, which has consumed
and caused the fall of the human race, which is so dear to us. Flesh! And
by flesh, I mean all that stinking, disgusting meat!" (Congregation: "Blech!")
"Hamburgers, steaks that stink! Sausages and hot dogs!" ("Ugh!")
And there is Creedence, a bespecled female druid with pale makeup and black
clothing. She can't stop gliding from one end of the room to the other,
while keeping her eyes open as wide as she can as she somehow manages to
outdo William Shatner both in general hamminess and in stop/start speaking.
The actress who plays her is named Deborah Reed, and that's a name you
should take note of. Though whether it's a name to look out for or avoid
is a different matter. Her performance is so outrageous, that it somehow
manages to outdo the terrible acting from everyone else introduced before
her, though the actress who plays Josh's sister Holly, comes this close
to
matching her awfulness.
How does the family react to all of this? Well, since they are pretty
slow to interpret "Nilbog", they don't seem to notice anything at first.
On the trip to the town, Mother gets the family to sing her favorite song,
"Row Row Row Your Boat," and she later tells the (typically) bitchy daughter,
"Josh is not a little s**t, he's just very sensitive." Father doesn't think
anything about exchanging house keys with the zombie-like Nilbog family
they are exchanging houses with. Josh has his own troubles, with his only-visible-to-him
Grandfather returning from the dead and warning Josh that he and his family
are in great danger. Though Grandfather tells his grandson that Josh has
to save his family on his own, it's fortunate for Josh that Grandfather
forgets this rule, and helps his grandson from time to time by doing stuff
like freezing time, or resurrecting himself and bringing back items like
Molotov cocktails from the afterlife.
This movie is bad in so many ways, that I can't even begin to make a
complete list of its hilarious stupidity. Let me tell you more. Among other
things, you can sometimes see where the goblin masks end and real human
flesh begins. The same Goblin masks used in a dream or a fairy tale sequence
(the latter scored by an 80s-like rock-n-roll instrumental) are recycled
in the present day going ons. There's a tip of the hat to Ed Wood, when
a scene starts out in the middle of the day, switches to night in one shot,
then turns back to daytime in the subsequent shot. There are sidesplitting
moments when people start to sweat chlorophyll green (you'll have to see
how it comes out yourself.) A scene where we see what happened to a nerd
after Creedence got her hands on him had me rolling on the floor and begging
for mercy. And there is the infamous scene (for those who have seen the
movie) when Joshua urinates on contaminated goblin food on the dining room
table so his family won't eat it.
It's hard to believe that a movie like this exists, but I saw it for
myself. It's for real, all right. But is this movie really serious in its
intentions, or was it an intentional comedy? I was puzzling over this when
I wasn't laughing at what I was seeing. There are a few scenes played so
broadly (especially the scenes with Creedence) that it seems that the actors
are in on a joke. But the rest of the movie is played so earnest, so serious,
that looking back on it, I can't say this was a spoof at all. Of course,
this leads to the question, What were they thinking???? My God,
this movie actually exists! They were serious about it! I think I'll have
to see it again to make doubly sure that I didn't have an hallucination.
Not only should you rent this movie, but you should make sure you rent
it at a place that gives out weekly rentals. You'll need that extra time.
UPDATE: "Jonah" sent this along:
"Actually,
the film during production was called Goblins.
However, the low budget turkey couldn't find a
distributor until the company that did Troll
thought, "Hey! Let's call it Troll 2 and
get what few people who saw the first one to
watch this one!"
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See also: Blood
Freak, Crawlspace,
The Devil's Rain
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