IMDb RATING
3.7/10
1.2K
YOUR RATING
The gingerdead man travels back in time to 1976 and carries out an epic disco killing spree.The gingerdead man travels back in time to 1976 and carries out an epic disco killing spree.The gingerdead man travels back in time to 1976 and carries out an epic disco killing spree.
Steve-Michael McLure
- Randy
- (as Steve-Michael McLure, Steven-Michael McLure)
Kimberly Dawn Guerrero
- Tammy
- (as Kimberly Pfeffer)
Zachary Haas
- Pickles
- (as Zachery Haas)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaMany of the extras during the roller disco scenes were fans who won the chance to appear onscreen through a contest run by the movie's production company Full Moon Features.
- Goofs(at around 18 mins) Tux is showing his girlfriend the "Tuxes' Magical Trail Mix." Immediately after, the scene cuts to a group of skaters dancing. When the camera pans up, you can catch a brief glimpse of "The Simpsons" arcade game, with Lisa Simpson's face appearing on the game screen. The movie is set in 1976, but The Simpsons (1991) arcade game didn't come out until 1991 and that the actual show The Simpsons (1989) didn't come to existence and popularized until 1989.
- ConnectionsEdited into The Twelve Slays of Christmas (2022)
- SoundtracksDisco You To Death
Music and Lyrics by Jackie Beat & Abby Travis
Featured review
The idea of rude humor and purposefully sexist comedy is fine--but you have to actually be funny. And you have to make something that holds together as a movie--I mean to sit through a feature length mess is not a good time.
The standards for this series as far as something that looks like a movie are low but this one is a new low. A Lousy sound job with obvious and much post production dubbing of voices is probably the shoddiest element. The sound dubbing is no bad it almost sounds like a commentary track playing over the actual film sound--and mostly sounds are just missing.
Director Butler doesn't show an understanding of how to shoot a movie it almost looks like it's shot and edited live--frequently the shots jump from one to another from a real location to poor sets.
The editing struggles to cut from one camera angle to another without it looking like each show was done at a different location. The original footage is badly shot so I'll give the editor a bit of a break--one of these "you can't make chicken soup from chicken sh**, still there is no pace to the movie.
The movie boast out of focus shots right in the first couple of minutes during a shoddy Silence of the Lambs parody--the kind of bad sketch comedy that would be editing out of any other movie.
There are also ,crappy Digital and practical effects and acting that is elementary school talent show rejection level. Most of this can be blamed on Butler and, I'm sure, a super short shooting schedule. Then again this was made in Los Angeles where there are more actors than anywhere else on the planet so why you'd pick these people? Even for no money there are so many to choose from.
Only possible note is that unlike the totally lazy films that Charlie Band directs himself, Butler actually has some ambition--to actually shoot in a real roller rink for a day or two and actually have some digital effects.
If you liked the previous films I guess you can add one star to my review but still not something worth your time.
Full Moon films seem stuck in many ways to what wasn't so great in the 1990's. Only back then they had, per film, budgets that now represent an entire years worth of movies. Sad.
The standards for this series as far as something that looks like a movie are low but this one is a new low. A Lousy sound job with obvious and much post production dubbing of voices is probably the shoddiest element. The sound dubbing is no bad it almost sounds like a commentary track playing over the actual film sound--and mostly sounds are just missing.
Director Butler doesn't show an understanding of how to shoot a movie it almost looks like it's shot and edited live--frequently the shots jump from one to another from a real location to poor sets.
The editing struggles to cut from one camera angle to another without it looking like each show was done at a different location. The original footage is badly shot so I'll give the editor a bit of a break--one of these "you can't make chicken soup from chicken sh**, still there is no pace to the movie.
The movie boast out of focus shots right in the first couple of minutes during a shoddy Silence of the Lambs parody--the kind of bad sketch comedy that would be editing out of any other movie.
There are also ,crappy Digital and practical effects and acting that is elementary school talent show rejection level. Most of this can be blamed on Butler and, I'm sure, a super short shooting schedule. Then again this was made in Los Angeles where there are more actors than anywhere else on the planet so why you'd pick these people? Even for no money there are so many to choose from.
Only possible note is that unlike the totally lazy films that Charlie Band directs himself, Butler actually has some ambition--to actually shoot in a real roller rink for a day or two and actually have some digital effects.
If you liked the previous films I guess you can add one star to my review but still not something worth your time.
Full Moon films seem stuck in many ways to what wasn't so great in the 1990's. Only back then they had, per film, budgets that now represent an entire years worth of movies. Sad.
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- Release date
- Country of origin
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- Also known as
- Gingerdead Man 3: Roller Boogie Man
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 18 minutes
- Color
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What is the French language plot outline for Gingerdead Man 3: Saturday Night Cleaver (2011)?
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