Heavy Metal (movie) Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
Heavy Metal is a Canadian animated film released in 1981 and directed by Ivan Reitman with the cooperation of various international animation studios. The film is an anthology of various adult oriented science fiction and fantasy stories adapted from Heavy Metal magazine and original stories in the same spirit. Like the magazine, the film has an unusual amount of bloody violence, nudity and sexuality for a North American animated film, especially in the time before the popularity of adult oriented Japanese anime.
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2 Critical Reaction 3 Popular Reaction 4 External links |
These stories are in order:
The critics were generally dismissive complaining that the film was wildly uneven and appealed only to adolescent tastes.
Plot Summary
The movie's framing story begins with an astronaut (possibly the "Grimaldi" mentioned in the credits) descending through Earth's atmosphere in a futuristic automobile. He arrives at a hilltop mansion, where a young girl greets him. He shows her something he brought back: a green sphere. Shortly after exposing it, the orb glows and painfully melts the astronaut. It introduces itself to the terrified girl as "the Loc-Nar, the sum of all evils." Before it kills her, it says, it will show her how it has influenced society through time and space.Critical Reaction
Popular Reaction
The film enjoyed only limited appeal in its initial run, but the film became a popular cult attraction for midnight theatrical showings much like Rocky Horror Picture Show. The film's mystique was heightened when legal problems with the film's music rights kept the film off the commercial home video market for 15 years which allowed the film to have a kind of rare appeal since viewers could see it only in theatres or in bootleg recordings. In 1996, the legal issues were resolved and the film is now in general availability.
