A glowing green orb - which embodies ultimate evil - terrorizes a young girl with an anthology of bizarre and fantastic stories of dark fantasy, eroticism and horror.A glowing green orb - which embodies ultimate evil - terrorizes a young girl with an anthology of bizarre and fantastic stories of dark fantasy, eroticism and horror.A glowing green orb - which embodies ultimate evil - terrorizes a young girl with an anthology of bizarre and fantastic stories of dark fantasy, eroticism and horror.
- Directors
- Gerald Potterton
- John Bruno(segment Soft Landing)
- John Halas(segment So Beautiful and So Dangerous)
- Writers
- Daniel Goldberg(screenplay)
- Len Blum(screenplay)
- Dan O'Bannon(original story)
- Stars
- Richard Romanus(voice)
- John Candy(voice)
- Joe Flaherty(voice)
- Directors
- Gerald Potterton
- John Bruno(segment Soft Landing)
- John Halas(segment So Beautiful and So Dangerous)
- Writers
- Daniel Goldberg(screenplay)
- Len Blum(screenplay)
- Dan O'Bannon(original story)
- Stars
- Richard Romanus(voice)
- John Candy(voice)
- Joe Flaherty(voice)
Rodger Bumpass
- Hanover Fiste (segment "Captain Sternn")
- (voice)
- (as Roger Bumpass)
- …
- Directors
- Gerald Potterton
- John Bruno(segment Soft Landing)
- John Halas(segment So Beautiful and So Dangerous)
- Writers
- Daniel Goldberg(screenplay) (story) (story)
- Len Blum(screenplay) (story) (story)
- Dan O'Bannon(original story) (story) (segment Soft Landing)
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe home video was removed from circulation for several years because of problems with music licensing - with so many bands and artists on the soundtrack, securing rights to the music proved difficult.
- GoofsThe two final scenes of "So Beautiful & So Dangerous" are reversed. The robot and Gloria leave the spaceship onto the space station before the ship lands. If you look closely at the lower right corner of the screen as the ship grinds to a halt in the hangar bay, the escalator ramp used by the robot and the secretary only seconds before is deployed.
- Quotes
Prosecutor: Are you Captain Lincoln F. Sternn?
Stern: [haughtily] I am.
Prosecutor: Lincoln Sternn, you stand here accused of 12 counts of murder in the first degree, 14 counts of armed theft of Federation property, 22 counts of piracy in high space, 18 counts of fraud, 37 counts of rape...
[pauses to check the criminal record]
Prosecutor: ...and one moving violation. How do you plead?
Stern: [haughtily] Not guilty.
- Crazy creditsThe rolling text of the credits stutter upwards in rhythm with the machine sound that opens the song "Working in the Coal Mine" performed by Devo.
- Alternate versionsBecause of time constraints, a segment called "Neverwhere Land (1996)" was deleted; in this film, this would have connected "Captain Sternn" to "B-17". The story follows the influence of the Loc-Nar upon the evolution of a planet, from the Loc-Nar landing in a body of water, influencing the rise of the industrial age, and a world war. This original story was created by Corny Cole. The original rough animatics are set to a loop of the beginning of the song "Time" by Pink Floyd. The 1996 VHS release included this segment at the beginning of the tape. On the DVD release, this segment is included within the bonus features and is dedicated "In memory of Dawn M. Cole - 1931-1985". In both released versions, the sequence is set to the music of "Passacaglia" (from Magnificat), composed and conducted by Krzysztof Penderecki.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Imagining 'Heavy Metal' (1999)
Review
Featured review
Trippy little piece of art; waycool soundtrack to boot
HEAVY METAL (1981) **1/2 (Voices of : John Candy, Eugene Levy, Joe Flaherty, Harold Ramis, John Vernon) {Featuring songs by : Devo, Sammy Hagar, Blue Oyster Cult, Donald Fagan, Stevie Nicks, Nazareth, Grand Funk Railroad, Journey, Cheap Trick, Black Sabbath, Don Felder, Riggs, Trust} Landmark animated adaptation of the cult magazine "Heavy Metal" is a dizzying soup of noir, science fiction, fantasy and sex vignettes all strung together by the shared element of a glowing green meteorite of pure evil called Loc-Mar {which by the way has parallels to the glowing suitcase in "Pulp Fiction" and the eerie car trunk of "Repo Man"; just food for thought} that threatens a little girl as it recalls the stories for her. Somewhat dated by today's standards but nonetheless a trippy little piece of art. It's recent release on video (1996) was held up primarily by music rights for all the songs being used; includes THX sound and an excised segment "Neverwhere Land" that was cut due to running time. Executive produced by Ivan Reitman ("Ghostbusters"). Directed by Gerald Potterton.
helpful•148
- george.schmidt
- Apr 4, 2003
Details
Box office
- 1 hour 26 minutes
- (original ratio)
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