* The music scenes. Not just because the songs are overflowing with '80s charm but because out of all the cast members faking playing their instruments, YK Kim himself manages to try very hard, yet at the same time look like he's not even bothering to try.
* The fight scene between the two band managers, where they don't land any hits, but they got their opposing goons so good otherwise before they swore each other off.
* Tom tries to pick up some women at the beach, only to end with him being shoved to the ground between two other women as they proceed to playfully slap him, along with him curling up and crawling away.
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NKnZB4K1u0s "I found my father. Oh my God!"]]
* The movie's message, as spelled out on its title card, is one of peace... a title card presented mere moments after a conclusion involving the heroes brutally exacting revenge on a ninja gang and the gang's BadBoss decapitating one of his own men. The MoodWhiplash is just amazing.
* Metatextually, when the film was rediscovered, Drafthouse Films called Y.K. Kim for permission to distribute it. He hung up on them, thinking it was a joke. ''Multiple times.''
* The standoff between Dragon Sound and Jeff's gang near the beginning of the film is ''awful'' in the best of ways. Since a lot of the dialogue is improvised, no one knows what to say so you have Y.K. Kim (Mark) and William Ergle (Jeff) struggling to have a believable conversation, stumbling over each other the whole time. Meanwhile all the other actors are awkwardly standing around waiting for the camera to stop rolling. Some are kinda just standing around, others are brandishing their weapons and Kathy Collier (Jane) in particular is just swaying back and forth with a bored expression since she has nothing to say or do. When the scene finally ends, an ADR of Mark comes up yelling out "You don't scare me at all! At all! Goodbye." Just try getting through that without cracking a smile.