Heavy Metal 2000

This article is about the 2000 film. For the 1981 film, see Heavy Metal (film).
Heavy Metal 2000

DVD cover
Directed by Michael Coldewey
Michel Lemire
Produced by Jacques Pettigrew
Michel Lemire
Screenplay by Robert P. Cabeen
Carl Macek
Based on The Melting Pot
by Kevin Eastman
Simon Bisley and
Eric Talbot
Starring Michael Ironside
Julie Strain Eastman
Billy Idol
Music by Frederic Talgorn
Various Artists
Cinematography Bruno Philip
Edited by Brigitte Brault
Production
company
Distributed by Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Release dates
  • July 10, 2000 (2000-07-10)
Running time
88 minutes
Country Canada
Germany
Language English
Budget $15 million

Heavy Metal 2000 (also known as Heavy Metal: F.A.K.K.² outside North America) is a 2000 Canadian-German direct-to-video adult animated science fiction film produced by Jacques Pettigrew and Michel Lemire, and directed by Michael Coldewey and Lemire. Starring the voices of Michael Ironside, Julie Strain, and Billy Idol, the film is the follow-up to the 1981 animated cult film Heavy Metal, which is based on the fantasy magazine of the same name. The story is based on the graphic novel, The Melting Pot, written by Kevin Eastman, Simon Bisley and Eric Talbot. The film was made by CinéGroupe, a studio based in Montreal, Quebec.

Plot

In ages past, a malevolent race called the Arakacians discovered a place where space-time leaked a type of fluid. This fluid granted immortality to anyone who consumed it. The Arakacians built an empire and enslaved the known universe for centuries; they were unstoppable. The Arakacians were finally vanquished after the fountain chamber (where they gathered the water of life) was sealed by freedom fighters. The key to the chamber, a glowing crystal that will lead the bearer back to the fountain, but would drive anyone who possessed it insane, was cast into space and lost among the stars.

In a present-day asteroid excavation, space crewman Tyler and his colleague find the key by accident. Tyler touches the key and instantly goes insane. Tyler kills his mining partner, and takes over the ship, killing most of the resisting crew except for Dr. Schechter, and the pilots Lambert and Germain.[1] His search for the planet with the fountain leads to Eden,[2] a planet that is designated F.A.K.K.² (Federation-Assigned Ketogenic Killzone to the second level), but has inhabitants whose bodies carry the immortality fluid. Tyler invades Eden, and kills many of the Edenites, capturing some so he can extract the immortality fluids from their bodies. He also keeps the attractive Kerrie for his own sexual purposes. When Germain resists the idea, he is left on Eden.

Kerrie's beautiful sister Julie, who survived the attack, finds Germain, and they team up to follow Tyler. At a renegade space station, Julie finds Tyler at a restaurant and critically injures him. However, he ingests a vial with the immortality serum and heals instantly.[1] In the ensuing gunfight, Tyler blows up the club. Julie escapes the explosion; she and Germain board a shuttle-craft that latches onto Tyler's ship with a tractor beam before it jumps into hyperspace. Discovering them mid-travel, Tyler tries to shake them off, but the fight causes the hyperspace to collapse and the two ships to crash.

Julie wakes up on the desert planet called Oroboris, and meets a mysterious cloaked sage named Odin and his assistant, Zeek, a rock-like creature, both of whom are guardians of the ancient fountain. Elsewhere, Tyler's ship has been destroyed and most of his crew and abductees are dead. Tyler orders Dr. Schechter to extract Kerrie's fluids. He explores the planet and finds a race of reptilian beings, which he conquers by defeating their champion and then their leader in a death match. Julie enters the reptilian city in disguise as a woman that the reptiles found for Tyler. That night, she seduces Tyler, but when she tries to kill him, Zeek captures her and takes her back to Odin. Julie infiltrates Tyler's ship where she discovers Kerrie is still alive. She takes out Dr. Schechter, frees Kerrie, and escapes as the complex explodes. As a result, Tyler vows to make Julie immortal so he can "screw her and kill her every hour of every day for all eternity". With only three vials of serum, he orders his troops to storm the citadel where the immortality fountain is located.

At the citadel, Julie undergoes a ritual where she is outfitted in armor. She, Kerrie, and Germain help the fountain's guardians defend against Tyler's army. In the fighting, Lambert suffers a near-fatal injury and while reaching for Tyler's last vial of immortality serum, he knocks it loose from Tyler's belt and it breaks on the ground. Tyler, enraged, kills Lambert for the blunder. Tyler then walks to the pit of immortality and is about to put the crystal into the fountain's final lock but is stopped by Julie. She stabs Tyler in the left eye before he is able to place the crystal in the lock. A fight ensues, but Tyler appears to have the advantage, until Odin intervenes, which allows Julie to finally kill Tyler. Odin, throwing off his cloak, reveals himself to be the last of the Arakacians. He has been in hiding all these centuries, waiting for someone to find the chamber key and be drawn to the fountain. He intends to claim it as his own, and reestablish the Arakacian empire. However, Zeek pulls the crystal key from the pedestal, locking Odin inside the fountain chamber forever, and flies into outer space. As Germain and Kerrie help Julie to her feet, Zeek envelops the crystal into himself and becomes a new asteroid to hide the key for all time.[2]

Cast

Reception

Heavy Metal 2000 received negative reviews; based on 10 critics, the film currently holds a 10% rating on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes.[3]

Video game

The film had a video game about the events after Heavy Metal 2000, titled Heavy Metal: F.A.K.K.², in which the player assumes the role of Julie as she fights to save Eden from an evil entity called "GITH". The game is set some time after the film and features cameo appearances of several characters, for example, Julie's sister Kerrie, the pilot Germaine (now married to Kerrie), and a resurrected Tyler.

Sequel

After the release of 2000, a third film has been in various stages of development since. During 2008[4][5] and into 2009,[6] reports circulated that David Fincher and James Cameron would executive produce, and each direct one of the eight to nine segments for a new film based on Heavy Metal. Eastman would also direct a segment, as well as animator Tim Miller, with Zack Snyder, Gore Verbinski, and Guillermo del Toro attached to direct segments. However, Paramount Pictures decided to stop funding the film by August 2009[7] and no distributor or production company has shown interest in the second sequel since.[8]

In 2011, filmmaker Robert Rodriguez announced at Comic-Con that he had purchased the film rights to Heavy Metal and planned to develop a new animated film at the new Quick Draw Studios.[9]

Soundtrack

Heavy Metal 2000 OST
Soundtrack album by Various artists
Released April 18, 2000
Genre Heavy metal, alternative metal, industrial metal, hard rock
Length 73:47
Label Restless
Heavy Metal film soundtracks chronology
Heavy Metal OST
(1981)
Heavy Metal 2000 OST
(2000)
Heavy Metal 2000
Alternative cover used for the "clean" edition of the album.

The Heavy Metal 2000 Original Soundtrack is the 2000 soundtrack album to the film of the same name. The album features music by bands such as Pantera, Coal Chamber, Apartment 26, Billy Idol, Monster Magnet, System of a Down, Queens of the Stone Age, Puya, and other prominent alternative metal and hard rock bands. The album also features industrial-oriented selections, two tracks by alternative rock artists (Bauhaus and Queens of the Stone Age) and one hip hop track by Twiztid and Insane Clown Posse.

  1. "F.A.K.K. U" — 1:44
  2. "Silver Future" by Monster Magnet — 4:29
  3. "Missing Time" by MDFMK — 4:35
  4. "Immortally Insane" by Pantera — 5:11
  5. "Inside the Pervert Mound" by Zilch — 4:07
  6. "The Dirt Ball" by Insane Clown Posse and Twiztid — 5:33
  7. "Störagéd" by System of a Down — 1:17
  8. "Rough Day" by Days of the New — 3:18
  9. "Psychosexy" by Sinisstar — 4:02
  10. "Infinity" by Queens of the Stone Age — 4:40
  11. "Alcoholocaust" by Machine Head — 3:38
  12. "Green Iron Fist" by Full Devil Jacket — 3:51
  13. "Hit Back" by Hate Dept. — 3:52
  14. "Tirale" by Puya — 5:34
  15. "Dystopia" by Apartment 26 — 2:56
  16. "Buried Alive" by Billy Idol — 5:10
  17. "Wishes" by Coal Chamber — 3:06
  18. "The Dog's a Vapour" by Bauhaus — 6:44

References

  1. 1 2 Nesselson, Lisa (2000-05-31). "Heavy Metal 2000". Variety. Retrieved 2014-01-21.
  2. 1 2 Borntreger, Andrew (2006-05-09). "Heavy Metal 2000 B-Movie Review". Badmovies.org. Retrieved 2014-01-21.
  3. "Heavy Metal 2000". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved May 18, 2014.
  4. Michael Fleming (2008-03-13). "Par, Fincher put pedal to 'Metal' Eastman, Miller to direct animated segments". Variety. Retrieved 2008-09-21.
  5. Alex Billington (2008-09-04). "Zack Snyder, Gore Verbinski, Guillermo del Toro Directing Heavy Metal Segments?". firstshowing.net. Retrieved 2008-09-21.
  6. Fleming, Mike. "Fincher Brings Mettle To Passion Project". Deadline.
  7. "Heavy Metal comic to become a film" from ABC.net
  8. MTV News (2010-08-25). "David Fincher Can't Get Funding for "Heavy Metal"". worstpreviews.com. Retrieved 2011-05-07.
  9. Film School Rejects (2011-07-21). "SDCC: Robert Rodriguez Takes Heavy Metal". comingsoon.net. Retrieved 2011-11-26.

External links


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