A curious group of friends sneak into an abandoned spinach canning factory to investigate the legend of the "Sailor Man," who is said to haunt the factory and local docks.A curious group of friends sneak into an abandoned spinach canning factory to investigate the legend of the "Sailor Man," who is said to haunt the factory and local docks.A curious group of friends sneak into an abandoned spinach canning factory to investigate the legend of the "Sailor Man," who is said to haunt the factory and local docks.
Christian Elán Ortiz
- Vincent
- (as Christian Elan Ortiz)
Featured reviews
Look, it is what it is, but somehow this Popeye was harder to understand than anything Robin Williams ever said.
It hurts.
I appreciate the lack of CGI but Popeye looks like the last version of Joan Rivers.
It feels part Troma but mostly Friday the 13th.
The experience could have used a few more quips from the big guy, but then again, the Elephant Man was easier to understand.
After 80 years, this viewer hoped to get a bit more then what the film offered.
This thing is at least watchable when compared to "Popeye's Revenge."
4 out of 10 spinach cans.
PS Put something in your pipe and smoke it all before you watch either of these movies.
It hurts.
I appreciate the lack of CGI but Popeye looks like the last version of Joan Rivers.
It feels part Troma but mostly Friday the 13th.
The experience could have used a few more quips from the big guy, but then again, the Elephant Man was easier to understand.
After 80 years, this viewer hoped to get a bit more then what the film offered.
This thing is at least watchable when compared to "Popeye's Revenge."
4 out of 10 spinach cans.
PS Put something in your pipe and smoke it all before you watch either of these movies.
B movies can be great fun! This is not that type of B movie. A few giggles that were certainly not intended aside (as it was because it was so stupid in parts), the script is bland. Acting is, again, what you expect from nobody in particular casting. Writing/Direction is nothing to write home about either. Not fun, bland, and derivative. I wanted so much to have fun with this, but I simply couldn't. No replay value. It is just a bad move. Glad to see practical effects, and they are fine. Nothing special about them, and the camera work helps hide the effects flaws for the most part. Static mask, but you don't see "Popeye" all that much (and it is always dark anyway).
A group of youngsters break in to a spinach factory, desperate to figure out whether the fabled old Sailor exists.
It's definitely better than Popeye's Revenge, a bit more cohesive, and I'd argue that the acting, though far from perfect, isn't actually that bad.
Is it good, absolutely not, but if does fall into that category of so bad it's watchable, one of those movies that going could put on after a night out, have a pizza and a giggle over.
Popeye, all I keep thinking of is The Goonies, imagine if Sloth has been on the roids, had some cosmetic surgery, some Botox and developed a love of spinach instead of chocolate.
The death scenes are really poor, and at times you can see bits and bobs I'm sure you're not meant to.
Every cliché under the sun, the film starts exactly the same way as Pooh and Mickey, a woman running for her life in some sort of warehouse, if you're wanting originality, think again.
I eagerly await the new Snow White from these guys, but until then, Slayer Man provides some unexpected entertainment.
5/10.
It's definitely better than Popeye's Revenge, a bit more cohesive, and I'd argue that the acting, though far from perfect, isn't actually that bad.
Is it good, absolutely not, but if does fall into that category of so bad it's watchable, one of those movies that going could put on after a night out, have a pizza and a giggle over.
Popeye, all I keep thinking of is The Goonies, imagine if Sloth has been on the roids, had some cosmetic surgery, some Botox and developed a love of spinach instead of chocolate.
The death scenes are really poor, and at times you can see bits and bobs I'm sure you're not meant to.
Every cliché under the sun, the film starts exactly the same way as Pooh and Mickey, a woman running for her life in some sort of warehouse, if you're wanting originality, think again.
I eagerly await the new Snow White from these guys, but until then, Slayer Man provides some unexpected entertainment.
5/10.
So I went into this movie knowing it was obviously going to be bad. But how bad you ask? Well, pretty darned bad. The first thirty to forty five minutes are somewhat laughable and slightly on a so bad it's good scale, but then it just drags on. The cast is awful, the acting is horrendous. I will say that I thought that the Popeye mask and get up was somewhat interesting to look at as they keep him in the light most of the film. Lots of close ups, which I'm not sure how I feel about. It's interesting, but bad. The charm was lost halfway through and like so many "so bad it's good" movies it doesn't live up to the standards. The plot was interesting also, I'll give it that. But it truly goes nowhere. This film was made for what reason exactly? Who are the people this is made for? I'm left really pondering these questions. Can't recommed.
I don't understand all the negative reviews. When watching this movie, I was reminded of many 80's horror B-movies, many of which would never win any awards but had a charm all their own-"Superstition" (1985), "The Slayer" (1982), "Slaughter High" (1986), etc. What do all these movies have in common? Low budget (check), Elaborate death scenes (check), Young people making all the wrong choices (check), A rather elementary plot (check). It is a common formula, but the sum of which serves as the hallmark of many B-movies in the Horror genre since Hollywood's inception. Moreover, the writer and director paid homage to the original cartoon through many creative tropes. What more could you ask for? My advice: enjoy the movie for what it is-a modern day "Dr. Giggles" (1992) and don't expect a classic like "A Nightmare on Elm Street" (1984). If you do that, you won't be disappointed.
Did you know
- TriviaProducer Jeff Miller said they went old-school and focused on using real practical effects instead of relying on CG for the gore.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Cinema Snob: Popeye the Slayer Man (2025)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- Popeye: The Slayer Man
- Filming locations
- Oneonta, New York, USA(location)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $7,134
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $7,018
- Mar 23, 2025
- Gross worldwide
- $48,280
- Runtime1 hour 28 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39:1
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