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Freaked
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Directed by Alex Winter, Tom Stern
The manic writing-directing comedy team of Tom Stern and Alex Winter (the latter of Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure and Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey) followed up their deranged short-film collaborations and the short-lived MTV series The Idiot Box with this comic fantasy, which amounts to a virtual car crash of anarchic, mind-blowing weirdness. The brain-damaged plot follows self-centered sitcom actor Ricky Coogin (Winter), official spokesman for the E.E.S. (Everything Except Shoes) corporation, into the jungle-bound South American nation of Santa Flan. Coogin has been sent as an emissary on behalf of E.E.S. to placate the media uproar over a substance called Zygrot-27, a chief ingredient in many E.E.S. products which has been decried as a fatal environmental toxin. Accompanied by his friend Ernie (Michael Stoyanov) and environmental activist Julie (Megan Ward), Ricky takes a detour into the jungle to a bizarre amusement park overseen by bombastic barker/inventor Elijah C. Skuggs (Randy Quaid), who specializes in the display of "Hideous Mutant Freekz" (the film's original title). The trio soon discover that Skuggs manufactures his oddities himself, and they find themselves at the mercy of his hideous freakmaking factory -- which coincidentally uses Zygrot-27 as a catalyst. Once he has the hapless heroes strapped down, Skuggs reveals his intention to transform Coogin into an evil mega-freak who will destroy all the others in a slam-bang, standing-room-only closing event. Miffed at the notion of sustaining an acting career as a spine-covered, pus-gushing monster, Coogin joins a rebellion within Skuggs' captive stable of other man-made freaks -- whose ranks include such monstrosities as effete human worm; a bearded lady (Mr. T in a frilly dress); a man with a sock-puppet for a head (voiced by Bob Goldthwait); and Ortiz the Dog-Boy (an uncredited Keanu Reeves). Their plans to turn Ricky into a zygrot-powered superhero go astray, however, leading to a hilariously apocalyptic finale. Doomed to home-video status by lethargic distribution from Twentieth-Century Fox, this unappreciated gem deserves a second look; packed with hilarious visual gags, ultra-gross setpieces and body-function jokes, Freaked is a hallucinogenic funhouse of a movie. ~ Cavett Binion, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
A colorful, kinetic, and crazed concoction of surreal imagery and absurdist humor, Alex Winter and Tom Stern's demented masterpiece gleefully resigns itself to chaos from the opening credits, never looking back to take pause and lunging forward into oblivion with reckless abandon. Originally intended as a motion picture vehicle for equally absurd rockers the Butthole Surfers (singer Gibby Haynes can be spotted during the tent riot), and later attempted to be neutered by the studios (action figures were actually produced and sold), Freaked somehow managed to survive studio mangling to become one of the most outrageous - though least known - comedies of the 1990s. Unfortunately for Stern and Winter, confused distributors simply had no idea how to market the film and simply released it on a city to city basis for the moviegoing public to ignore. Thankfully the film found new life on video and cable, eventually gaining a loyal following thanks to devoted fans who just couldn't get enough of Stern and Winter's chaotic brand of humor as displayed in their short-lived MTV series, The Idiot Box. Randy Quaid is at his campy best as sleazy freak-maker Eliza C. Skuggs, Mr. T is unforgettable as the bearded lady, and Winter himself is in top form as the cocky, smarmily snide former child star turned biohazardous product-endorsing Ricky Coogan. With the jokes coming as fast as they do, some expectedly fall flat, while others, more often than not, score a direct hit. A loud and noise-infested soundtrack (courtesy of the Buttholes and Henry Rollins among others) is the perfect compliment to this laugh-laden nightmare of a comedy, constantly bursting with energy at all the right turns. Although it's a shame that the film was largely ignored during initial release, it's nice to see it finding a second life on the small screen. Keep a sharp eye out for a heavily made-up cameo by Winter's Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure cohort Keanu Reeves as Ortiz, the Dog Boy. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
 

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