Street Trash wasn’t exactly the greatest cult movie to come out of the ‘80s, but the scenes of homeless people melting certainly made it one of the most memorable. Since it was always one of those “close but no cigar” kinds of flicks, the prospect of it being remade and/or sequelized doesn’t seem all that sacrilegious. The fact that the remake was written and directed by Ryan Kruger, the man behind the equally spotty, but highly entertaining Fried Barry, made it feel like a match made in Heaven.
Kruger transplants the action from Skid Row Los Angeles to South Africa in the not-too distant future. In an effort to clean up the city, the totalitarian government is cracking down on the ever-growing homeless population. They have turned the Tenafly Viper compound into aerosol form and plan to use drones to unleash it on the bums and melt them down into pools of multicolored goo. It’s then up to the homeless people to band together and rise up against their oppressors.
Even though the setting has been changed, and the themes have been updated for the modern era, this is more of a sequel than remake. Whatever you want to call it, it still delivers on what you want to see from a Street Trash movie, namely lots of scenes of homeless guys melting. I mean a guy melts into a puddle of purple goo before the opening titles (which proudly proclaims to be “A Ryan Krueger Thing”). Along the way, dicks are chopped off, ears fall off, faces melt off, and people explode. You know… good shit.
I will say that it sometimes feels like Kruger is trying a bit too hard. It’s also less successful in the third act once it becomes a quasi-action movie. The humor can be uneven too. While some of the comedy bits fall flat, when Kruger finds the sweet spot between extreme gore and surreal silliness, it works. Plus, it was also good seeing Fried Barry himself, Gary Green as a homeless man who has an imaginary friend that looks like a Smurf version of the guy from Everclear.