Surf Nazis Must Die

Surf Nazis Must Die

Poster for Surf Nazis Must Die
Directed by Peter George
Produced by Robert Tinnell
Written by Jon Ayre
Starring Gail Neely
Barry Brenner
Robert Harden
Tom Demenkoff
Music by Jon McCallum
Cinematography Rolf Kestermann
Editing by Craig A. Colton
Distributed by Troma Entertainment
Release date(s) 1987
Running time 83 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Surf Nazis Must Die is a 1987 American comedy film directed by Peter George and starring Gail Neely, Barry Brenner, and Robert Harden. It was produced by The Institute, a production company formed by Peter George, Craig A. Colton and Robert Tinnell, and distributed by Troma Entertainment, a company known for its low-budget exploitation films.

Contents

Plot

An earthquake leaves the California coastline in ruins and reduces the beaches to a state of chaos. A group of Neo-Nazis led by Adolf (Brenner), the self-proclaimed "Führer of the new beach," takes advantage of the resulting chaos by fighting off several rival surfer gangs to seize control of the beaches. Meanwhile, an African American oil well worker named Leroy (Harden) is killed by the Nazis while jogging on the beach. Leroy's mother "Mama" Washington (Neely), devastated by the loss of her son, vows revenge. After arming herself with a handgun and grenades, she breaks out of her retirement home and sets out to exact bloody vengeance on the Surf Nazis.

Cast

Reception

Surf Nazis Must Die was criticized by reviewers as boring and hard to follow, and its acting, dialogue, and camerawork were widely panned. Janet Maslin wrote "Not even the actors' relatives will find this interesting."[1] Roger Ebert stated that he walked out of the film after 30 minutes.[2]

Years later, there was a short lived hardcore punk band from Germany that had the same name as the film title and have used samples from the movie. [3]

Notes

  1. ^ Maslin, Janet (October 2, 1987). "Film: 'Surf Nazis Must Die.'" The New York Times.
  2. ^ Ebert, Roger (May 11, 1987). "'Surf Nazis' washes up at Cannes." Chicago Sun-Times.

External links