When the picture isn’t going for gross, it almost has a “Scary Movie” approach, outright aping scenes from popular films and referring back to Troma’s own canon. Unfortunately, Return to Nuke ’Em High Volume 1 has more of the latter gags than the former. You have to hand it to Kaufman for staying so committed to sensational, offensive exploitation filmmaking, even if he does focus on himself far too much, and demonstrates a troubling obsession with bodily byproducts. Wish I saw this back in 2013 but was waiting for Vol. Oh, but first, Lauren gives birth in the girls’ locker room to a duck-human hybrid monster baby. Some of the funniest scenes in Troma history and quite large in scale. The members of the glee club have turned into Cretins, evil Chief Executive Herzkauf (Kaufman) has found a fountain of youth in the flatulence of teens who have been exposed to nuclear tacos, and the only ones who can save the high school - and the world - from the evil effects of Tromorganics are Lauren (Catherine Corcoran) and her blogger girlfriend Chrissy (Asta Paredes). The unnecessarily convoluted plot concerns the effects of tainted tacos at Tromaville High School, provided by the corrupt Tromorganic Foodstuffs conglomerate. 1,” the film forms a two-part reboot of 1986’s “Class of Nuke ’Em High.” Along with 2013’s “Return to Nuke ’Em High Vol.
2,” directed by exploitation impresario Lloyd Kaufman. Appear in a Troma Meltdown Scene for Return to Nuke ‘Em High: Volume 2: Troma fans of all shapes, sizes, and walks of life are invited to participate in a dramatic group meltdown scene to be used in the action-packed, socially poignant conclusion to the Troma Team event film, Return to Nuke ‘Em High: Volume Two, directed by Lloyd Kaufman. The fluorescent fluids fly fast and furiously in the Troma Entertainment production “Return to Return to Nuke ’Em High a.k.a.