Troma Entertainment: Eating Miss Campbell (2022) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Troma Entertainment

The face and patina of Lloyd Kaufman’s fifty-year-old independent film production company Troma Entertainment has changed considerably since it first originated in 1974.  Often making B-exploitation pictures on the cheap and quick, usually channeling the energies of 1950s horror movies while amping up the gore levels and politically incorrect transgressions, Troma based on the Greek word tromos meaning ‘horror’ and its frontman Lloyd Kaufman have seen fit to offer a unique frequently hilarious, grungy and gritty antidote to popular mainstream horror fare typically with its tongue firmly planted in cheek.   Much like Roger Corman and his production company New World Pictures, Troma was a haven for character actors and/or directors that have since tapped into the mainstream to initially find their footing and decades later as Troma has moved away from Super 8mm film to crisp 4K digital camerawork that impetus has more or less remained the same.

 
Their latest pickup and release comes in the form of British based writer-director Liam Regan who started out as a Troma fan before working up to actually working on Troma movie sets including both of the Return to Nuke ‘Em High sequels.  Eventually Regan formed his own production company called Refuse Films and found himself in and out of collaborations with Lloyd Kaufman including but not limited to Shakespeare’s Shitstorm and soon the unlikely twosome would circle back together on an unlikely pairing of Troma Entertainment and Refuse Films for Liam Regan’s 2022 cannibalistic coming-of-age horror comedy Eating Miss Campbell.  With a title riffing on Kevin Williamson’s Teaching Mrs. Tingle and a rebellious snarky teen goth lead that will remind viewers of The Craft and more recently Happy Death Day, Eating Miss Campbell like most Troma fare aims to completely offend and to a degree upset with its transgressive comedy but gradually plays out as a mostly watchable high-school Mean Girls satire with odes to Ruggero Deodato peppered in.

 
Beth Conner (Lyndsey Craine) is an angsty depressed 18-year-old goth vegan living with her nymphomaniac parents who has tried to take her own life several times only to inexplicably reawaken inside a low budget horror movie and like most teenagers just wants an ordinary life with love and happiness in it.  However, things are complicated at her local school Henenlotter High (little homage there) with the arrival of English teacher Miss Campbell (Lala Barlow) whom Beth develops a crush on.  Soon, upon a chance meeting with Miss Campbell, Beth discovers her latent inner cannibal when she gets a taste for human flesh and blood and realizes she really likes it.  From there, as jock bros try to make unwanted advances on her and schoolmasters try and throw their weight around when they aren’t being ousted for illicit relations between staff and students, the chaos and pandemonium ensues including but not limited to school shootings, cannibal cults and more than a few off-color jokes that would make Uwe Boll wince.

 
Vulgar, stupid, crass, infuriating and strangely kind of wise at the end of it all, Eating Miss Campbell is a unique new look for the face of Troma Entertainment.  While the microbudget impetus is still there, Liam Regan and Lloyd Kaufman manage to work in a number of original punk rock bands including Unquiet Dead and Hands off Gretel as well as cameos from The Human Centipede 2 actor Laurence R. Harvey and later Dani Thompson and even Lloyd Kaufman himself.  Slickly filmed digitally by Hamish Saks with a serviceable original score by Joe Renzetti, the Troma/Refuse collaboration while unlikely is one of the most polished and refined looking Troma efforts to date.  Acting wise, yeah most of the cast is hamming it up deliberately but Lyndsey Craine makes our surrogate Lydia Deetz into a resourceful heroine who frequently breaks the fourth wall to speak directly to the audience.

 
Released in 2022 followed by a new Troma Team Video disc release on blu-ray with plentiful extras, Eating Miss Campbell isn’t quite in league with their previous Super 8mm fare and feels perhaps too clean for what we expect from the Troma moniker.  Still, despite the offenses and crassness, Eating Miss Campbell for all of its digital slickness and 5.1 surround audio nevertheless comes together as a mostly solid Troma movie with a largely British cast.  No this isn’t The Toxic Avenger or Cannibal Holocaust or Bones and All or even Trouble Every Day for that matter.  And yet it winds up being a mostly fun-gross romp whose sensibilities perfectly reflect the attitude of the fifty-year-old independent filmmaking giant.  Troma fans will find much to enjoy here even if the filth and grittiness of their earlier efforts isn’t quite there.

--Andrew Kotwicki