In 2013, “Virtually Heroes,” a crass, juvenile action comedy about a video game character (Robert Baker) who becomes bored of his heroic obligations, premiered at the Sundance Film Festival.
And then nothing happened for a decade. Its director, G.J. Echternkamp, has blamed the film’s disappearance on the mulish whims of the famously thrifty producer Roger Corman, who “was not happy with the money” offered by prospective distributors at the time and only recently relented, grudgingly, to allowing its release.
Maybe Corman was right to hesitate. “Virtually Heroes” is an unoriginal film. Almost all of its action footage has been repurposed, inexplicably, from old low-budget Filipino action movies from the 1980s and ’90s. (No effort has been made to convincingly match the old footage with the newer material, which I think is meant to be funny or charming. It’s neither.) But while the action is dated, the comedy is antique, ranging from inane nods to gaming culture like “n00b” and “teabagging” to multiple jokes about gay people and gags about orgies and porn magazines.
The film’s entire comic sensibility is epitomized by the closing credits, where an actress’s onscreen role is given as “Dead Broad” and almost a dozen others are credited as “Sexy Hippie.”
Between its old-hat story, flagrantly distasteful humor and lousy visual effects, “Virtually Heroes” feels as if it’s been sitting on a shelf for a lot longer than 10 years. It probably should have remained there.
Virtually Heroes
Not rated. Running time: 1 hour 22 minutes. Rent or buy on Google Play, Vudu and other streaming platforms and pay TV operators.