![]() ![]() Name and Name: An homage to the parent company, Troma, with the phrase Tromeo replacing Romeo in the film title.I Want My Beloved to Be Happy: Ness sheds tears on seeing Tromeo and Juliet having sex but is supportive of them.Half-Human Hybrids: Juliet's potion doesn't make her look dead, instead turns her into a cow monster.Gorn: The fingers scene early in the film alone would qualify for this.Gag Penis: The first appearance of a certain popular Troma prop. ![]() There's plenty of cow references, when."And then you put a little incest into the mix." from Martini towards Georgie at the start of the film.The Cinema Snob: Looks like this was done when the writer learned foreshadowing, but not subtlety. Shakespeare would no doubt approve of this joke. Here, Tromeo has the exact same lines in the same situation, but Juliet is touching her butt instead of her face, so he's talking about a different sort of cheek. Cargo Envy: A famous example from the source material is parodied: In the original play, Romeo sees Juliet in the window with her hands on her cheek and wishes he could be her glove.Cameo: Screenwriter James Gunn appears as the father of the family whose car crashes, and director Lloyd Kaufman is credited as "Shocked Onlooker".Brother–Sister Incest: Tromeo and Juliet as siblings at the end.B-Movie: A near necessity related to any Troma movie.Rather than committing suicide together because of a misunderstanding like in the play, Tromeo and Juliet suddenly find out they're actually siblings and drive off into the sunset to raise their mutant children. Adaptational Alternate Ending: Played for Laughs at the end. #Tromeo and juliet penis licenseAnd, you know, with a little artistic license taken (it's a Troma movie, after all). ![]()
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