

A 2.2/10 rating has never been this compellingly unhinged.
A good heart and bad luck will get you nothing but trouble. That’s what Ryan discovers — the hard way — when he thought hitting the road would solve all of his problems, instead it was just the beginning. Ryan falls into one circumstantial trouble after another. From getting car-jacked at gun-point, being mistaken for a mobster’s son, to a run-in with cheerleaders intent on vigilante justice, Ryan barely escapes one mess before landing in the middle of another. Finally able to go home, Ryan heads back out on the highway. But has his luck really changed, or is there only more trouble in store for our charming hero?
Acting
Bill LeVasseur's deer-in-headlights energy carries every scene.
Direction
Ramayya's choices suggest he was directing three different films simultaneously.
Writing
Plot escalates from carjacking to cheerleader vigilantes without breathing.
Director
Ray Ramayya
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Ryan's Babe has become a minor cult legend in Canadian film circles, often screened ironically alongside similarly budget-challenged regional productions of the era.
Director Ray Ramayya reportedly financed much of the film personally after failing to secure traditional backing, explaining both its existence and its desperate energy.