The Battle of Love's Return explained

The Battle of Love's Return
Director:Lloyd Kaufman
Cinematography:Frank Vitale
Editing:Lloyd Kaufman
Distributor:Troma Entertainment
Runtime:82 minutes
Language:English
Budget:$8,000

The Battle of Love's Return is a 1971 American comedy film written, directed, produced, and starring Lloyd Kaufman, the co-founder of Troma Entertainment, his first major film after his student production The Girl Who Returned.

Plot

Abacrombie is a down-on-his-luck loser. After being fired from his job, he sets out on a quest to find himself, encountering a variety of oddball characters who only make it harder for him. Sooner or later, he stumbles upon the girl of his dreams, and he is determined to overcome his stupidity and win her heart.

Reception

The film was favorably reviewed by Howard Thompson of The New York Times[1] and Judith Crist of New York Magazine, who compared Kaufman to Woody Allen and Mel Brooks.

The worst review, however, came from Kaufman's father: when asked what his favorite part was, he responded "the part where Lloyd gets killed".

Home media

The film has never been released on DVD individually, but is included in its entirety (and as a deconstructed version) on Kaufman's instructional box set, Make Your Own Damn Movie!, and is included as an Easter Egg on The Sexy Box, a DVD boxset of Squeeze Play!, Waitress!, Stuck on You! and The First Turn-On!.[2]

Production notes

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Screen: 'Love's Return'. Thompson. Howard. The New York Times. 1971-12-01. 2020-12-21.
  2. Web site: DVD Talk Review . September 29, 2009 .