Here’s yet another remarkable topic: previously untouched (Dana Carvey as Robin
Leach: “I don’t know WHYYY!”) and practically writing itself. I suppose the critical mass was seeing the
sequel and digesting its soundtrack album.
There are not one, but two films based on the sci-fi
cartoon magazine. That started in 1977
in the US and is still published today.
The main topic is science fiction, of course, but there’s a fair amount
of nudity and sex as well, which makes it a modest substitute for porn when you’re
too young to buy porn. (Not that I would know.)
It’s based on a French comics magazine, Metal Hurlant (Screaming Metal), which started in 1975. So let’s give the French credit for something
cooler than wine and 2CVs.
Heavy
Metal (1981 film). We
saw this in the movie theater in Paris in 1982.
I was 13 at the time, and Paris had two levels of rating: “Interdit au moins 18 ans” (forbidden to
those under 18 years old, essentially rated X or NC17, 90% applicable to porn
movies, 10% to ultraviolent films, and in all my time in Paris, even returning
after I turned 18, I never saw a single AUM18 film in the movie theater); and
“interdit au moins 14 ans” (forbidden to those under 14 years old, essentially
PG-13). The box office sold me a ticket
without a fuss, the usher let me in without a fuss. Also, no problem for my brother, who was 12
at the time. Paris!
Several unrelated segments.
1. Intro.
Corvette descends from space, driver is the scientist, who deposits the
Loc-Nar at home, only to be devoured by it.
The Loc-Nar then begins narrating its story to the scientist’s horrified
daughter.
2. Harry Canyon. A cab driver from NYC in 2031 (not Bruce
Willis) picks up an attractive woman escaping thugs with the Loc-Nar. She stays with him and rewards him with
cartoon sex. Eventually she makes a deal
to sell the Loc-Nar to some scumbags but screws up in trying to betray Harry. Bitch.
3. Den.
Nerdy teenager (brilliantly voiced by John Candy) is teleported to a
fantasy word where he becomes a bald Conan-type guy, Den. He befriends a hot chick – more cartoon
sex. They’re captured by a quasi gay guy
who wants Den to steal the Loc-Nar from a sexy but evil Queen. Den agrees, has more cartoon sex – this time
with the Queen – and the Loc-Nar is stolen again. Both QGG and EQ are defeated, and Den rides
away with the Hot Chick, refusing to take possession or control of the
Loc-Nar.
Ok, that’s it for the cartoon sex, for those looking for
that. But much more fun is still in
store…
4. Captain Stern. Stern (Eugene Levy) is on trial for various
misdeeds, ignoring his lawyer (Joe Flaherty) advising him to plead guilty. “I have
an angle”, Stern assures him. Indeed
he does: the prosecution’s star witness,
Hanover Fist, has agreed to change his testimony. But the Loc-Nar interferes, turning meek,
humble Fist into an angry beast testifying AGAINST Stern and then chasing him
throughout the space station to the tune of “Reach Out” (Cheap Trick). Finally Stern manages to resolve the
situation. [Or did he? Fist had already testified against him, and I seem to recall a court reporter at trial. Hmmm.....] Note: the prosecutor was
voiced by John Vernon, best known as Dean Wormer in “Animal House”.
5. B-17.
A WWII B-17 winds up taken over by zombies, thanks to – guess what – the
Loc-Nar. A short segment made memorable
by “Heavy Metal (Taking A Ride)” by Don Felder.
6. So Beautiful & So Dangerous. A hot secretary is rescued (?) from the
Pentagon by a huge, spherical, space ship piloted by two stoners (Harold Ramis’
classic line: "Look, man, if there's one thing I know, it's how to drive when I'm stoned"). She hooks up with a robot, voiced by...John
Candy. Not much on action, but the
soundtrack entries include “All Of You” (Don Felder) and “Heavy Metal” (Sammy
Hagar).
7. Taarna.
The covergirl, an Amazon warrior, avenges a city destroyed by a Mob
(“Rules”) warped and corrupted by the Loc-Nar.
Victory is gained, at a price.
One of the longest, and most serious pieces (no discernable humor) which
caps off the movie.
8. End.
The young girl at the beginning of the film gets a serious upgrade. And that’s it.
Soundtrack. It’s rare that a movie soundtrack is this
good – good enough to listen to independently of the film. It was our first introduction to Sammy Hagar,
Blue Oyster Cult, Cheap Trick, Don Felder (who I didn’t know had been in The
Eagles), and most of the others. Despite
the name, not all these songs are heavy, and very few truly qualify as “heavy
metal”.
Track Listing:
Heavy Metal (Hagar); Heartbeat (Riggs); Working In the Coal Mine (Devo);
Veteran of the Psychic Wars (Blue Oyster Cult); Reach Out (Cheap Trick); Heavy
Metal (Taking a Ride) (Don Felder); True Companion (Donald Fagen); Crazy (A
Suitable Case For Treatment)(Nazareth); Radar Rider (Riggs); Open Arms (Journey); Queen
Bee (Grand Funk Railroad); I Must Be Dreaming (Cheap Trick); The Mob Rules
(Alternate Version) (Black Sabbath); All of You (Don Felder); Prefabricated
(Trust); Blue Lamp (Stevie Nicks).
Comments. This led
us to get into Sammy Hagar, years before he joined Van Halen. I wasn’t impressed with the two Riggs songs,
or the two Cheap Trick songs, for that matter.
While we never got into Devo, their contribution, itself a cover, was
very amusing and entertaining (Lord, I am SO tired…). The BOC song led us into BOC. I tried in vain to find the Felder album
those two tracks came from, only to discover they were written expressly for
this soundtrack. Too bad, because
they’re MUCH better than his solo albums, or even his Eagles material. Thank God he plays “Heavy Metal (Taking A
Ride)” live these days. “Queen Bee” is
a lousy excuse for a GFR song and led me AWAY from that band until much
later. Their earlier material is much
better, and they have better songs than the annoyingly persistent “We’re An
American Band”. “Open Arms” is the
quintessential slow dance number for our school dances. Oh, while I prefer Ozzy to Dio, I don’t have
an issue with the albums they did with him, EXCEPT that I hate “The Mob
Rules”. “True Companion”, “Blue Lamp”,
“Prefabricated”, and “Crazy (A Suitable Case for Treatment)” were all fairly
mediocre and I only picked them up ages later.
None induced me to look into the respective bands responsible.
By the way: the original
plan was to have Blue Oyster Cult do the entire soundtrack. Along the way obviously that changed, but
consider their album Fire of Unknown Origin to be the template. “Heavy Metal: Black & Silver”, “Veteran
of the Psychic Wars”, and “Vengeance: The Pact” on that album are obvious
giveaways. If you’re moving on to BOC
from Heavy Metal, start with this album.
Heavy
Metal 2000. Instead of a
series of independent segments loosely tied together with the Loc-Nar as the
common thread, this is one continuous story.
What’s more remarkable is that
the main female character is not only voiced by Penthouse Amazon Julie Strain,
but they also use her actual likeness.
The bad guy is voiced by Michael Ironside, who takes a perverse delight
in playing nasty villains. Billy Idol
also plays a major role. The story
itself is not bad, with enough nudity to make it interesting. Overall a poor sequel but decent enough to
watch once.
HM2K Soundtrack. Unlike the original soundtrack, which was
all over the place and fairly eclectic, this one is firmly in the hardcore
heavy metal theme. However, I didn’t
find it all that great. The tracks by
Monster Magnet, KMFDM, Pantera, and Queens of the Stone Age were the best, and
Bauhaus’ contribution was surprising and good.
The rest was nu-metal nonsense, especially Insane Clown Posse (eye roll
x100).
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