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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.1 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.
These stories are in order:
- Harry Canyon: In a dystopian future New York City, a cynical taxi driver (Harry Canyon) narrates his day in a film noir style, grumbling about his fares (and the occasional robbery attempt, which he thwarts with a disintegrator gun installed behind his seat). He stumbles into an incident where a fat gangster and his cyborged men murder an archeologist. Harry begrudgingly lets the murdered man's daughter into his cab, and she tells him about his discovery: the Loc-Nar, an artifactAn artifact (also artefact is any object or process resulting from human activity. The specific meanings of the word are several: an artifact in archaeology an artifact of observation an artifact of fantasy a compression artifact resulting from lossy data that people are killing each other over. Harry cannot afford to pay for a police investigation, so he takes the girl back to his apartment. That night, the girl strips, climbs into his bed, and they make love. Harry awakes alone the next morning, when the cops bust into the apartment, looking for the girl (whose existence he denies). One of his fares that day is the fat gangster, who threatens him to cooperate with him. The girl finds him later, and tells him she will sell the Loc-Nar and split it with Harry. He agrees to take her to the exchange. When the gangster gets the Loc-Nar, he takes it out of its isolation case, and it melts him away. Meanwhile, the girl pulls a gun on Harry, who uses his self-defense ray to evaporate her.
- Den: Based on the original story by Richard CorbenRichard Corben (born November 1, 1940) is an American comic book artist best known for his illustrated fantasy stories in Heavy Metal magazine. He was born on a farm in Anderson, Missouri. He studied at the Kansas City Art Institute, graduating in 1965.. Dan, a nerdA nerd is a very intelligent but lonely person who is fascinated by knowledge, especially science. A nerd who is versed in computer technology can also be a hacker. A nerd is not the same as geek who focuses only on technology and imagination. The term ney teenager (voiced by John CandyJohn Franklin Candy ( October 31, 1950 March 4, 1994) was a Canadian comedian and actor. Born in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, Candy was a member of Toronto's The Second City comedy troupe and gained widespread North American popularity when, in 1977, he beca), finds "a weird green meteorite" and puts in his rock collection at home. Weeks later, during a lightning experiment, the orb hurls the boy into the fantasy world of Neverwhere, where he changes into a naked bald muscleman named Den. Landing on a giant idol, he witnesses a strange ceremony to "Oolotec," and rescues a nubile young human sacrifice. Reaching safety, she tells him that she is from Earth, her name is Katherine Wells, and that she changed into an idealized body. Her reward to him with her sexual favours is interrupted by the minions of Ard, an immortal man who wants the Loc-Nar from the Queen (the woman who performed the ceremony) to rule the world. He puts Katherine in suspended animationSuspended animation is the technical term for the slowing without termination of life processes by external means. Outside science fiction, the technique is hypothetical. Breathing, heartbeat, and other involuntary functions may still occur, but they can and uses her to force Den get the Loc-Nar. Den agrees and infiltrates the Queen's palace with some of Ard's warriors. He is promptly caught by the Queen's guard, but she offers leniency if he has sex with her. He agrees and during their tryst, the raiding party steals the Loc-Nar. Den escapes and, with the Queen and her forces in pursuit, races back to the idol, where Ard is attempting to recreate the sacrifice himself. Den rescues Katherine and the Queen's arrival sparks a bloody battle between her, Ard, and their respective armies, which ends when Den recreates the same incident that drew him to Neverwhere, banishing Ard and the Queen. Refusing the opportunity to rule, Den and Katherine ride into the sunset, content to remain in Neverwhere as heroes with idealized bodies.
- Captain Sternn: On a space stationSpace stations A space station is a man-made structure that is designed for human beings to live on in outer space. A space station is distinguished from other manned spacecraft by its lack of major propulsion or landing facilities instead, other vehicles, a square jawed space captain is on trial for numerous serious charges. Pleading "not guilty" (against his rat-faced lawyer's advice), Sternn explains to his astonished lawyer that he intends to get acquitted on account that he bribed a witness, Hanover Fiste, to praise his character. Fiste takes the stand, but his perjury is subverted by the Loc-Nar in his possession (currently reduced to the size of a marble), forcing him to blurt out the truth about Sternn's evil and suggest gruesome execution methods. Fiste denounces Sternn with such fury that he changes into a muscled giant like the Incredible Hulk, and chases Sternn throughout the station, breaking through bulkheads after him. Eventually, Fiste corners Sternn, and promptly receives his promised payoff for his part in Sternn's plan to escape, shrinking him back to his gangly original form. Sternn then adds a bonus: he tosses Fiste out an airlock, and the Loc-Nar reenters an atmosphere (with Fiste's flaming hand still holding it).
- B-17: A World War IIWorld War II was the most extensive and costly armed conflict in the history of the world, involving the great majority of the world's nations, being fought simultaneously in several major theatres, and costing tens of millions of lives. The war was fough bomber makes a difficult bombing run with heavy damage and casulties. As the bomber limps home, the Loc-Nar rams itself into the plane, and raises the dead crewmembers as rampaging, flesh-hungry zombies. The pilot barely bails out in time, only to land on an island, surrounded by zombified airmen.
- So Beautiful, So Dangerous: A science consultant arrives at The Pentagon for a meeting about mysterious mutations that are plaguing the USA. At the meeting, the consultant tries to dismiss the occurrences, but he starts behaving erratically when he sees the green stone in the secretary's locket, until he goes beserk and sexually assaults her. In the sky above, a colossal ship with a smiley face design breaks through the roof with a transport tube and sucks up the berserk consultant and the secretary. The robot inside the ship is irritated at the consultant, who is actually a malfunctioning android, but his mood changes when the secretary arrives. With the cooperation of the ship's hippie crewmembers, he convinces the secretary to stay with them and they become lovers. Meanwhile, the pilots indulge in a massive amount of drugs and fly home completely stoned.
- Taarna: The Loc-Nar crashes onto a future Earth and changes a crowd of humans into mutated murderous barbarians who ravage a peaceful city. The elders desperately try to summon the last of a warrior race, the Tarakians. Taarna, a strong, silent (and sexy) warrior maiden, arrives too late to stop the massacre and resolves to avenge the city. Her search leads to the barbarians' stronghold, where she is captured, tortured and left for dead. With the help of her avian mount, she escapes and confronts the barbarian leader. Though wounded, she defeats him and in one last effort, flies into the Loc-Nar, destroying it. By connection, the Loc-Nar terrorizing the girl is similarly destroyed, blowing the mansion to pieces, and the girl is revealed to be the next Tarakian herself.
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