Hell Comes to Frogtown

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Hell Comes to Frogtown
Directed by Donald G. Jackson
R.J. Kizer
Produced by Donald G. Jackson
Randall Frakes
Written by Donald G. Jackson and
Randall Frakes (story & screenplay)
Starring Roddy Piper
Sandahl Bergman
Cec Verrell
William Smith
Rory Calhoun
Music by David Shapiro
Cinematography Donald G. Jackson
Enrico Picard
Editing by R.J. Kizer
James Matheny
Distributed by New World Pictures
Release date(s) January 29, 1988 (USA)
Running time 88 min.
Country Flag of the United States United States
Language English
Budget Unknown
Gross revenue Unknown
Followed by Return to Frogtown
Allmovie profile
IMDb profile

Hell Comes to Frogtown is a 1987 cult film that was created by Donald G. Jackson. The screenplay for this film was written by Jackson and Randall Frakes. The film was directed by Jackson and R.J. Kizer, and stars the professional wrestler Roddy Piper.

[edit] Plot

This film is set in an post-apocalyptic wasteland of the future where amphibians rule the Earth. Following a nuclear war, few fertile men and women exist and, as a result, Sam Hell (Piper) is recruited by the government to reproduce and save the human race. He is recruited to infiltrate a city of frog-people and rescue a group of fertile women. Hell has to wear a protective codpiece that will explode if he tries to abort his mission.

Hell contains the hallmarks of an unintentionally funny B-movie (low budget, awful costumes, blatant plot holes, awkward dialogue, obvious bloopers, and an absurd plot), yet seems to be conscious of its hilarity.

The most notable scene in the movie is the notorious "Dance of the Three Snakes" sequence by Sandahl Bergman.

Hell has its own "induction" (featured listing) at the website WrestleCrap.com.

Despite its critically poor reception, Hell Comes To Frogtown was followed by three sequels: Return to Frogtown (1993), Toad Warrior (1996), and Max Hell Frog Warrior (2002).[1]

[edit] In popular culture

The title inspired the animated television series Family Guy episode title "Hell Comes to Quahog".[citation needed]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Patrick Naugle (24-08-2001). Interview With Donald G. Jackson, Director of Hell Comes To Frogtown. dvdverdict.com.


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