The post ‘The Toxic Avenger’ Director Talks Reintroducing Cult Favorite IP appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Luisa Guerreiro as “Toxie” in the action, comedy, horror film, THE TOXIC AVENGER, a Cineverse release. Courtesy of Yana Blajeva/Legendary Pictures. In our modern age of environmental devastation, omnipresent microplastics, and a floating landmass of garbage twice the size of Texas, only one superhero truly represents the sign of these dire times — the Toxic Avenger! The reboot, starring Elijah Wood and Peter Dinklage, is now in theaters. May his melting countenance smile upon us all and may his ever-smoldering mop of justice continue to wipe crime off the smudged linoleum floor of society. That’s right, turtles. You no longer have a monopoly on chemical waste! Of course, “Toxie” doesn’t fit into the mainstream superhero mold, but that’s just fine by writer-director Macon Blair (I Don’t Feel at Home in This World Anymore), who guided the contaminated crusader back to the big screen. “I think there’s plenty of room for all different shapes and sizes and weirdness quotients,” he tells me over Zoom. “And so, if this is just in that general universe, but it occupies a space that maybe hasn’t been utilized as much before, then I’m delighted with that.” In rebooting Troma Entertainment’s cult favorite icon, the filmmaker didn’t want to stray too far from the source material — at least in terms of overall tone. “I really wanted to stay true to the vibe and texture of the original Toxie, which is to say a kind of juvenile sense of humor. I say that with great affection,” the filmmaker says of his vision for the unrated film headlined by Game of Thrones alum, Peter Dinklage. “Very silly and kind of sweet. There’s not a lot of irony in those early ones.” His guiding light, of course, was the 1984 original, but also the gag-centric outings from Jim… The post ‘The Toxic Avenger’ Director Talks Reintroducing Cult Favorite IP appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Luisa Guerreiro as “Toxie” in the action, comedy, horror film, THE TOXIC AVENGER, a Cineverse release. Courtesy of Yana Blajeva/Legendary Pictures. In our modern age of environmental devastation, omnipresent microplastics, and a floating landmass of garbage twice the size of Texas, only one superhero truly represents the sign of these dire times — the Toxic Avenger! The reboot, starring Elijah Wood and Peter Dinklage, is now in theaters. May his melting countenance smile upon us all and may his ever-smoldering mop of justice continue to wipe crime off the smudged linoleum floor of society. That’s right, turtles. You no longer have a monopoly on chemical waste! Of course, “Toxie” doesn’t fit into the mainstream superhero mold, but that’s just fine by writer-director Macon Blair (I Don’t Feel at Home in This World Anymore), who guided the contaminated crusader back to the big screen. “I think there’s plenty of room for all different shapes and sizes and weirdness quotients,” he tells me over Zoom. “And so, if this is just in that general universe, but it occupies a space that maybe hasn’t been utilized as much before, then I’m delighted with that.” In rebooting Troma Entertainment’s cult favorite icon, the filmmaker didn’t want to stray too far from the source material — at least in terms of overall tone. “I really wanted to stay true to the vibe and texture of the original Toxie, which is to say a kind of juvenile sense of humor. I say that with great affection,” the filmmaker says of his vision for the unrated film headlined by Game of Thrones alum, Peter Dinklage. “Very silly and kind of sweet. There’s not a lot of irony in those early ones.” His guiding light, of course, was the 1984 original, but also the gag-centric outings from Jim…

‘The Toxic Avenger’ Director Talks Reintroducing Cult Favorite IP

2025/08/30 02:45

Luisa Guerreiro as “Toxie” in the action, comedy, horror film, THE TOXIC AVENGER, a Cineverse release.

Courtesy of Yana Blajeva/Legendary Pictures.

In our modern age of environmental devastation, omnipresent microplastics, and a floating landmass of garbage twice the size of Texas, only one superhero truly represents the sign of these dire times — the Toxic Avenger! The reboot, starring Elijah Wood and Peter Dinklage, is now in theaters.

May his melting countenance smile upon us all and may his ever-smoldering mop of justice continue to wipe crime off the smudged linoleum floor of society. That’s right, turtles. You no longer have a monopoly on chemical waste!

Of course, “Toxie” doesn’t fit into the mainstream superhero mold, but that’s just fine by writer-director Macon Blair (I Don’t Feel at Home in This World Anymore), who guided the contaminated crusader back to the big screen. “I think there’s plenty of room for all different shapes and sizes and weirdness quotients,” he tells me over Zoom. “And so, if this is just in that general universe, but it occupies a space that maybe hasn’t been utilized as much before, then I’m delighted with that.”

In rebooting Troma Entertainment’s cult favorite icon, the filmmaker didn’t want to stray too far from the source material — at least in terms of overall tone.

“I really wanted to stay true to the vibe and texture of the original Toxie, which is to say a kind of juvenile sense of humor. I say that with great affection,” the filmmaker says of his vision for the unrated film headlined by Game of Thrones alum, Peter Dinklage. “Very silly and kind of sweet. There’s not a lot of irony in those early ones.”

His guiding light, of course, was the 1984 original, but also the gag-centric outings from Jim Abrahams and Zucker brothers, David and Jerry. Otherwise known as ZAZ, the trio was responsible for Airplane!, Top Secret!, and The Naked Gun trilogy.

“That’s really what I wanted it to be [like],” Blair notes. “Even though you could think, ‘Well, it’s sort of a superhero,/vigilante movie,’ I said, ‘Look, this is never going to out-action a Marvel movie. It’s never going to have the special effects spectacle of a Star Wars movie. Let’s just treat it straight up like a comedy from the beginning … just think of it as one of those ZAZ movies.’ Those were definitely our North Star.”

When Legendary first acquired the rights to the IP back in late 2018 and put out the call for pitches, however, Blair found himself reluctant to throw his hat into the ring, “because the first one is so singular and it just seemed like, ‘What’s the intention of doing a new one?’” he explains. “In the background of my mind, I was kind of worried that maybe they wanted a PG-13 family-friendly version or something like that.”

But like a mutated moth fluttering toward a radioactive flame, Blair simply could not resist a chance to revisit a character that inspired him to make movies in the first place.

“I was in sixth grade or something, and it really made a lasting impression,” he says. “That was right around the time we were starting to make our own movies, and that influenced how my little group of friends and I we were making [them]

with a VHS camera. So I took a swing at pitching on it, just because it seemed like a way to return to how we made movies when we were 12-years-old. That was the spirit I went into it with, with no expectations. But little by little, they kept responding to my broad pitch and then my more specified pitch — and it was like a snowball. It just kind of gained momentum and eventually, we were shooting.”

Directed by Troma co-founders Lloyd Kaufman and Michael Herz, the original Toxic Avenger centers around Melvin (Mark Torgl), a scrawny and awkward teenager who works as custodian at a local gym and is quite literally bullied straight into a frothing barrel of toxic waste. The accident leaves him horrifically disfigured, but also gifts him with enhanced strength.

Assuming the persona of a vigilante (Mitch Cohen), Melvin decides to fight crime and clean up the seedy town of Tromaville, New Jersey run by the corrupt Mayor Belgoody (Pat Ryan). “There’s something about an underdog that gets to f*** up the powers of corruption that never goes out of style,” Blair says of the original’s rise to cult status. “There’s dozens of movies from all different eras that follow the same pattern. I think that’s something people always relate to.”

There’s also the fact that the OG Toxic Avenger is flat-out bonkers (in the best way possible) and unlike any other film being made at the time. For one thing, it was produced for half a million dollars, resulting a charmingly schlocky and handmade product that greatly appealed to kids hoping to get into the business one day.

“I was really fascinated by movies, but they were all very big and they seemed very expensive and very technical,” Blair adds. “This was kind of the first time — at least that I could remember — of watching a movie and feeling like, ‘Oh, this is just some buddies that got together and did it in their own town.’ It didn’t need to be super-expensive or have big, famous people in it. That aspect of it was very inspiring to myself and my group of friends at that time.”

While it maintains the janitorial element and Toxie’s signature mop and tutu costume accoutrements, the reboot provides an entirely new backstory for the character, reimagining him as a put-upon stepfather named Winston Gooze (Dinklage).

“I felt like there wasn’t much use in recreating the exact story of a teenager who works at a health club and gets picked on by bullies,” Blair explains. “That had been done so precisely in the first one, that I felt like if we did the exact same story again, it would really put a spotlight on it in a redundant way. And so, I felt like, ‘If we keep the tone and vibe of it intact, but do a new story, a new character, and a new, situation, that would be the way to go.’”

Thankfully, Lloyd Kaufman, who served as producer on the reboot, was entirely supportive of this new direction and even agreed to make a little cameo appearance. “I met with him early on, before I even started writing the script,” remembers Blair. “He went out of his way, very demonstratively, to say, ‘I’m not going to tell you what to do. This is yours.’ At the time, I was kind of [skeptical], like, ‘Yeah, we’ll see…’ But that’s exactly what happened. He was largely hands-off and had a few suggestions for little gags here and there. I don’t remember how he phrased it — and this is a very reductive way to say it — but he was like, ‘Just make sure that it’s fun for the audience.’”

L-R: Macon Blair with ‘Toxic Avenger’ co-creator Lloyd Kaufman

Courtesy of Legendary

As a downtrodden custodian at a shady, pollution-happy pharmaceutical company run by Bob Garbinger (Kevin Bacon), Gooze is unable to pay the exorbitant medical bills required to treat his vaguely fatal illness. He tries to steal the money from his employer, but accidentally falls in a pool of toxic waste and emerges as the deformed hero (physically played by Luisa Guerreiro), ready to take on an unjust system of financial inequality and complete disregard for the health of our planet.

“The whole thing about poison in the environment is very hard to disagree with. That comes straight from the original. It’s called ‘The Toxic Avenger.’ You know that’s going to factor into it on some level,” the director says. “It’s not a nuanced movie.”

Prior to writing the script, Blair insisted that the character could not be a CG creation, lest they defile the spirit of the ’84 original. “I was like, ‘It’s got to be a dude in a suit, it’s got to be rated R, and it’s got to be silly,’” he reveals. “In other words, it can’t be a gritty, street-level version. It has to be light and goofy. That was the founding principle.”

After going through a number of concept designs — some of which were “very melty, very decayed, and very grotesque” — the production settled on a less flamboyant interpretation that emphasized Winston’s human features.

“We started to walk it back and and looked at the original makeup from Part I, as well as the softer, friendlier version from the Toxic Crusaders cartoon, which is where the green skin tone came from,” Blair says. “It was a blend of those two, [in addition to] Peter’s facial features.”

A lot of the action set pieces involving dismemberment, disembowelment, and general maiming were also practical, albeit with some light digital touch-ups in post-production.

Getting to work with so many squibs and fake blood made Blair feel like “a kid in a candy shop,” once again bringing the director back to his childhood, when special effects, not storytelling, served as the gateway into making movies (just think of the kids from Super 8).

“The initial way into it was effects and gore effects, how to kill people in cool ways on screen,” emphasizes the director. “It really was like getting to go back to seventh grade. Filling up a rubber with Carrow blood, taping it to your chest, putting a firecracker on it, and now you’ve got a squib. A lot of that was just a lot of fun to see on set, getting to see the technique of the prosthetics, the pneumatics, or however we were doing it. Some of this stuff was enhanced with digital effects, which was a whole new thing for me. But it was all [like] getting thrown back in the briar patch.”

Peter Dinklage as “Winston Gooze” in the action, comedy, horror film, THE TOXIC AVENGER, a Cineverse release.

Courtesy of Yana Blajeva/Legendary Pictures.

Despite nabbing acclaim at its Fantastic Fest premiere two years ago, The Toxic Avenger didn’t land a distribution deal until earlier this year via Terrifier 3 label, Cineverse, which agreed to release the unrated version currently playing in theaters nationwide. “It’s not exactly a mainstream movie,” concedes Blair. “I think it’s a crowd-pleaser, but for a particular type of crowd, and it just had a hard time finding a home.”

He later continues: “Legendary was able to connect with Cineverse at the right time. They were just coming off the big success of Terrifier 3, they knew how to release a movie that appealed to a niche audience, and they had this upward momentum going on. In hindsight, if we had to wait a couple of years to land with the perfect partner like them, I’m happy to do it. I wouldn’t say I was totally relaxed while it was happening, but on the other side of it, I couldn’t be happier that that’s how it went.”

Should the reboot perform well at the box office, the writer-director has an idea or two for subsequent entries. Why not? The original movie spawned three sequels, the aforementioned cartoon, and a video game based on that aforementioned cartoon.

Nothing is confirmed just yet, but Blair quite likes the idea of time travel and the introduction of “an evil twin” adversary. “There’s any number of possibilities,” he finishes, “because science doesn’t matter and we can do whatever we want.”

To paraphrase Frank Herbert: “Let the toxic ooze flow!”

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/joshweiss/2025/08/29/the-toxic-avenger-director-on-reintroducing-toxie-to-modern-audiences–why-it-took-so-long-for-the-reboot-to-come-out/

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.
Share Insights

You May Also Like

Best Altcoins to Buy as XRP Defies Market at $2.62 – Here’s What Whales Are Accumulating

Best Altcoins to Buy as XRP Defies Market at $2.62 – Here’s What Whales Are Accumulating

What to Know: $XRP is holding $2.65 with critical support at $2.62 and resistance at $2.75. Experts predict a potential run to $3 if the key resistance level is broken. XRP ETF approval hopes and Fed rate cut fueling market optimism. Smart money is flowing into utility-focused presales ahead of altcoin season. $XRP is once again ignoring the broader market while Bitcoin and Ethereum decline red. Currently hovering above $2.65 with a cheeky 1.5% gain, $XRP didn’t get the memo that everyone else is having a bad time. According to crypto expert CRYPTOWZRD, $XRP needs to stay above the $2.62 support level, as breaking through the $2.75 resistance could lead to a surge toward $3. $XRP whales are accumulating at levels we haven’t seen before. While retail investors are doom-scrolling through red candles, smart money is quietly loading its position. Add in the potential XRP ETF approval and the Fed’s expected 25 basis point rate cut, and you’ve created a perfect storm brewing. If you’re not positioning yourself in the best altcoins to buy now, you might be late to the party. Again. While everyone’s watching $XRP test support levels with the focus of a hawk, let’s discuss three presale altcoins that could surge during this altcoin season. 1. Best Wallet Token ($BEST) – The Infrastructure Play Whales Are Quietly Loading Prioritize hardware support, swaps/bridges, EVM + non-EVM, and strong security (audits, phishing alerts, biometrics, social recovery/MPC). Skip custodial risk and outdated add-ons, choose speed, safety, and full control. Best Wallet is more than a wallet; it’s a comprehensive DeFi and NFT hub with a presale launchpad on the horizon. It speaks multi-chain fluently, which matters when altcoin season arrives and every chain comes to life. Remember juggling seven wallets last cycle? Yeah—Best Wallet turns that chaos into one clean, connected stack. Best Wallet token ($BEST) holders get exclusive access to early presale opportunities, reduced trading fees, and governance rights over which projects get featured on the platform. It’s a VIP pass to the hottest club filled with degens, and the bouncer is a smart contract. Currently in presale at $0.025865, the token has already raised over $16.7M from investors who clearly understand that infrastructure plays win in bull markets, including a $33K buy in just 10 hours ago. Early Best Wallet Token price predictions suggest significant upside as the platform scales and trading volume increases. When $XRP finally rips past $2.75 and sparks the altcoin feeding frenzy, you’ll want a wallet built for chaos. Best Wallet is that stack, multi-chain, fast, and battle-ready. Get in early, and you’re positioned if volumes explode at launch. Join Best Wallet token ($BEST) presale now. 2. Bitcoin Hyper ($HYPER) – The Layer 2 That Finally Makes Bitcoin Usable Bitcoin is painfully slow with just 3-7 transactions per second. We’ve all been there, waiting 30 minutes for a transaction to confirm while watching the crypto market move without you, like you’re stuck in traffic while everyone else is already at the party. Bitcoin Hyper ($HYPER) decided that wasn’t good enough and built a Layer 2 rollup for Bitcoin. Bitcoin Hyper fuses Solana’s SVM with Bitcoin’s battle-tested security. Think Bitcoin’s trust with Solana-level speed: near-instant finality, tiny fees, and the same hard security that made BTC the OG. The $HYPER token is currently in presale at $0.013185, and the project has already raised over $25.1M. Whale buys of $379.9K and $274K show that smart money is recognizing that Bitcoin needs scaling solutions and Bitcoin Hyper is actually delivering. Analysts are already eyeing Bitcoin Hyper price predictions that suggest significant upside post-launch. The tokenomics are refreshing, with 30% allocated to development, as it appears they genuinely want to build something. Novel concept in crypto, I know. The presale is structured in stages with price increases as it progresses, so early birds genuinely do get better entry points. Learn how to buy Bitcoin Hyper before the next price increase. Staking is available from day one, and with Bitcoin’s dominance likely to remain strong, regardless of what happens in the altcoin market, $HYPER offers a solid hedge that still provides sweet presale upside potential. Join Bitcoin Hyper ($HYPER) presale now. 3. DeepSnitch AI ($DSNT) – The Intelligence Edge That Separates Winners from Exit Liquidity Wouldn’t it be nice to know what the whales are doing before everyone else does? That’s exactly what DeepSnitch AI is building, and it’s about time someone did this properly. DeepSnitch combines artificial intelligence with blockchain surveillance tools to provide regular traders with the same insights that whales and institutions have been using for years. Five AI-powered tools analyze wallet movements, identify accumulation patterns, detect suspicious activity, and provide a heads-up when smart money is making moves. The DeepSnitch AI token ($DSNT) is currently in Stage 2 presale at just $0.02032, having raised over $476K. That’s dirt cheap for a project with actual utility that solves a real problem. When $XRP finally breaks through $2.75 and altcoin season goes nuclear, having DeepSnitch AI in your toolkit means you’ll see the next wave coming before most people realize there’s a wave at all. Read more about DeepSnitch AI ($DSNT). $XRP is testing support while whales stack sats and experts call for a potential run to $3. Whether you’re betting on $XRP to break through or hedging your bets with high-potential presales, position now or cry later. Best Wallet token gives you the infrastructure, Bitcoin Hyper gives you the Bitcoin upside with actual functionality, and DeepSnitch gives you the intelligence edge. If there was ever a time to position yourself for the next leg up, it’s probably now. Authored by Elena Bistreanu, NewsBTC — https://www.newsbtc.com/news/best-altcoins-buy-xrp-support-2-62
Share
NewsBTC2025/10/29 19:39
The Top Altcoins to Buy Now: Digitap, SUI, XRP

The Top Altcoins to Buy Now: Digitap, SUI, XRP

Traders in 2025 are prioritizing altcoins with clear utility, verifiable liquidity, and less noise. They reward live products with growing TVL and volumes, and real payment use cases. Looking at the landscape, Digitap, SUI, and XRP stand out. Within that shift, the Digitap crypto banking application is moving from concept to deployed products, unifying fiat and crypto rails in one platform. SUI supports the scalable-L1 narrative with expanding DeFi. XRP remains tied to cross-border liquidity and now operates in a more predictable legal environment after the SEC case wrapped up in August 2025. But, tactically, Digitap looks best placed to claim the top altcoins to buy crown because it brings the model together in a single, consumer-ready banking app. Digitap: $TAP Presale Unleashes the First Omnibank Digitap is an omnibank that brings deposits, withdrawals, payments, transfers, and FX in fiat and crypto into one experience, with a compliance layer and multi-rail settlement. The architecture shows how the platform stitches together banking rails and public networks to support personal and business accounts with wallets, on/off-ramp, and cards. It’s built for everyday use by people and businesses. $TAP is an ERC-20 with a fixed 2 billion supply, a deflationary design with burns tied to transactions, fees, and events, and real utility economics including staking, VIP tiers, discounts, and governance. Today’s user pain is juggling separate banks, apps, and wallets. Digitap reduces that friction with integrated rails and cards to spend crypto or fiat balances without gymnastics, which typically boosts retention and product stickiness. Core features Unified account (consumer or business) for payments, transfers, FX, and multi-asset wallets Multi-rail settlement that combines traditional banking infrastructure with public blockchains for transfers and swaps Security and compliance layers designed for cross-border operations Digitap’s app is built, live, and ready to scale, with desktop plus App Store and Google Play versions offering deposits and withdrawals, FX, transfers, receiving, and virtual/physical cards, along with offshore account opening in the same dashboard. The ecosystem pairs staking (up to 124% APR) with a deflationary mechanism, including buyback & burn of 50% of app fee profits and early-unstake burns (staking penalties), reducing effective supply over time. SUI: Performance-First L1 with Rising DeFi Liquidity Sui is an L1 focused on parallelized execution and a smooth UX that has supported its DeFi growth since 2024. TVL first topped $2.5 billion on May 21, 2025, and stayed above $2.0 billion into late Q2. It has since set a new high above $2.6 billion, driven by protocols such as Suilend, NAVI, and Momentum. Where it can gain share: ongoing UX and finality improvements, plus continued DeFi integrations, can support liquidity retention. Key risks: competition from other L1s/L2s and the challenge of sustaining liquidity across cycles. The Mysticeti consensus upgrade cut transaction latency for owned objects from roughly 2.2s to ~400 ms, boosting DEX and lending responsiveness and reducing slippage risk during periods of volatility. XRP: Cross-Border Payments After the SEC Chapter XRP remains associated with payments and cross-border liquidity for B2B and institutional rails. The environment became more predictable after appeals in SEC vs. Ripple concluded, keeping the District Court’s final judgment intact and preserving the 2023 view that retail exchange sales aren’t securities. With litigation concluded and parameters clearer, partnerships and payments integrations may face fewer US legal uncertainties, though rules still vary by jurisdiction. Risks include uneven global regulation and competition from stablecoins and other liquidity rails. XRP is currently trading near $2.41, with a market cap of around $144.4 billion and more than 59 billion coins in circulation out of a 100 billion max supply. These levels indicate ample liquidity for executing orders across major pairs. Final Thoughts on the Best Altcoins to Buy Now SUI delivers liquidity metrics that align with near-term DeFi interest. XRP operates under a clearer post-appeals legal backdrop, reducing friction for payments partners and integrations. Tactically, $TAP sits at the top of the best altcoins to buy now because it differentiates on utility, unifying fiat and crypto in a payments-and-account app. Project Links: Buy Presale Telegram The post The Top Altcoins to Buy Now: Digitap, SUI, XRP appeared first on 36Crypto.
Share
Coinstats2025/10/29 18:25