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Right before the makers of Cabbage Patch Kids sued Topps for copyright infringement, filmmakers capitalized off of the fleeting success of the cards and spun out a movie that just trips over its feet again and again trying to find its footing. Kind of charming, in its own way, but also tedious, weird, and (to pull a phrase off of my report card) "does not live up to potential". There are many problems — the crappy GPK costumes that were just huge heads on midget actors that only allowed for two mouth positions being just one very noticeable failing — but the biggest of which is that the actual cards had no real backstory to them, no greater plot, just individual vignettes of cheery woe and vomit. They could’ve easily gone with the ultra-dark R-rating, flagging at least a couple dozen unsupervised children who slipped into the theater for permanent psychosis, or they could’ve really lovied these things up and gone the Care Bears route. Instead, there’s this weird middling process going on through the film; it’s capable of some surprisingly black comedy and adult themes, but mostly shoots for a kiddy attitude that follows a completely nonsensical plot. Maybe it’s smarter and more subversive than I realize, but I can’t help but think that any GPK fan would’ve been very let down to see their favorite cards be traded in for cheap slapstick gags and horrible voice dubbing. They even wussed out with the seven selected GPK, all of which are just sort of icky and none even suggestive of the infamous death-n-demise that ran rampant through the card series. We have Valorie Vomit (who only upchucks once, for shame), the eyeball-eating Ali Gator, 50’s thug Greaser Greg, always-peeing Nat Nerd, Windy Winston (who makes up for Valorie by farting nonstop), mucousy Messy Tessie, and the big baby Foul Phil. Wow. Inspiring. The basic — REALLY basic — story is that there’s a retired magician (Anthony Newley, the only competent actor in this disaster) who keeps an antique shop and is the guardian of a garbage pail full of obviously-not-inspired-by-Gremlins little freaks. Where they come from, no one knows, and the movie even waffles on that point: it suggests that the GPK are both from outer space and also some sort of ancient curse. Who knows? The magician’s shop assistant is a precocious wimp named Dodger (always good to name kids after baseball teams these days, I plan to name mine Cubs and Mariners) who’s being hounded by an adult gang for his lunch money (?), and who likes one of the gang girls in return (??). Dodger is also a neverending idiot for the sake of the story, so he knocks over the garbage pail, frees the Kids, and becomes their new dearest friend who doesn’t run away from them screaming and return with an arc welder. Since the girl Dodger likes — her name’s Tangerine, in case you wondered where all the good names have gone — is really into designing clothes, Dodger gets the Kids to whip up their own rad styles to impress the chick. Never mind he’s young enough to really be considered jailbait for her, or that the GPK target audience doesn’t give a fig about designing dresses, it’s the way it goes! There’s also another dumb and unresolved plot about how the GPK are trying to find all five million of their friends, presumably locked up in the State Home For The Ugly (urgh). Not to spoil anything for you, but the other kids (for sake of the costume budget) are never found, and the magician briefly alludes that they were all thrown into a garbage truck and crushed to death. Really. Really and truly. In between all of this weighty plot, the GPK pad it out by going out on town and doing "hijinks". They’re all very dumb hijinks, many involving doing whatever their primary gross function is, and you actually grow fond of the magician and his ability to make a scene partway bearable. It’s just one of the more bizarre entries from the 80’s that obviously bombed, but nostalgic pop culture and its sideshow freak status keep it kicking, in a "Can you BELIEVE they made that?" offhand conversational topic. While not a good movie in any respect, it’s probably excellent mocking fodder if you’re looking for something uniquely 80’s that reeks — in more ways than one.
Is It Worth Staying Through End Credits?
Intermission! [some sources: IMDb]
The first ever movie to be based on a trading card/sticker series. Another such film? Try Mars Attacks! Groovy Quotes
Ali Gator: Oh, yeah? Prove it. Valerie Vomit: I can't, you ate the evidence. Dodger: I’m too happy to die! Soundtrack Review
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