Metalocalypse

Regular airtime: Sundays, 11:45 pm ET (Cartoon Network)

Cast: Tommy Blacha, Mark Hamill, Laraine Newman, Brendon Small

US release date: 6 August 2006

By Marisa LaScala

More metal

cover art

Many fans put up their devil horns and cigarette lighters on 6 August, with the debut of Metalocalpyse during Cartoon Network’s “Adult Swim.” Created by Tommy Blacha (who has written for Da Ali G Show and Conan O’Brien) and Brendon Small, the series centers on the heavy metal band Dethklok, specifically, its mission to make the world “more metal.”

Though its focus may be a heavy metal band with a low average IQ, let it be clear that this is not This is Spinal Tap. The movie earned its place in the comedy canon as a sharp satire rendered by a cast of extremely funny, fully realized characters. But, while Metalocalypse does an excellent job of lampooning the excesses of rock ‘n’ roll, the characters and situations remain thin. This even though they are intricately drawn, down to the thinning hair in drummer Pickles’ red dreadlocks. Smoothly animated, the shots include elaborately painted backgrounds that contribute to a metal-ish “tone,” a departure from the precious, warm nostalgia provided by Small’s previous animated show, Home Movies.

Metalocalpyse‘s premiere episode set up the Dethklok’s status as the “world’s most popular heavy metal band,” as they hyped one gig. Slated to be performed outside in the frigid Batsfjord, Norway, it featured a set list of only one song, their new Duncan Hills Coffee commercial jingle. Despite the adverse circumstances, the show sold to capacity (whether this is a dig at “selling out” remains unclear). At the concert, an overblown scene of carnage unfolded: the stage, air-dropped from the band’s private helicopter, missed its target and crushed waiting fans, hot coffee poured from the massive set sears the flesh of those below until only skeletons remained. Following the untimely demise of the Dethklok chef during the chaos, the band was on its own for dinner. The show then switched gears from sweeping exaggerations and broad jokes to finely tuned gags as the band members tried to navigate their way around the supermarket and failed. Whether this was due to their being spoiled, stupid, or high was also ambiguous.

The episode nailed its satire of metal mythology, rife with tales of heads bitten off bats, dismembered chickens, and lines of ants snorted. Dethklok had fans sign “Pain Waivers” (forbidding them to sue if they are “burned, lacerated, eaten alive, poisoned, de-boned, crushed, or hammer-smashed” while at concerts), even as stories of rock-related injuries at the show circulated. Said one enthusiastic fan at the Dethklok gig: “In London, some dude chopped off my fingers and threw them up on stage, and Murderface rolled them up and smoked them!”

The scenes in the supermarket were less focused on such cultural lore, more on the band members’ basic ineptitudes. One band member approached a store clerk with a cart full of nothing but booze. “Are these good for soup?” he asked. When the clerk started to protest, the band member interrupted, saying, “That’s a yes.” The gags here were faster and more consistent than during the rest of the episode, where laughs were intermittent. (Fans of the fast, deadpan improv in Home Movies will be disappointed.)

This one-dimensional humor causes other aspects of the show to miss their mark, and often give way to confusion. It’s hard to tell if the band is supposed to be loved or loathed by an intelligent audience, why fans so adore their music, or how band members have come to be so unthinkably ignorant. (Really, they never went shopping before they were famous?)

The addled atmosphere emerges from lack of crisp characterization. Dethklok is comprised of five musicians, yet in the first episode, only two personalities stood out, the “leader” Nathan Explosion (Small) and the “wacky” William Murderface. The others blend into each other: three have facial hair, three play some form of guitar, and two are from Scandinavian countries. The Norwegian and Swedish accents are difficult to parse, American William Murderface is given to chronic mumbling, and Nathan Explosion growls.

In fact, it’s hard to understand much of Metalocalypse‘s dialogue. And, even at a scant 15 minutes an episode, this can be wearing. As Spinal Tap’s David St. Hubbins says, “It’s such a fine line between the stupid and the clever.” Metalocalypse, unfortunately, waffles between the two.

— 16 August 2006
Metalocalypse—Title + Coffee Song and previews
 
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Comments

Quite frankly i’ve found that every review of this show seems to have been written by someone who doesn’t truly understand metal or it’s subgenres.

This type of humor is supposed to be for a very specific crowd. That crowd being metal fans but more importantly it’s for people who are or have been in metal bands. i’m in a band myself so i can find humor in ALOT of little things that no one notices because they do not have ANY kind of experience from being in a band.

The only way one will truly appreciate Metalocalypse is if they are totally in tap with the metal “culture”.

Comment by Alex from New Jersey — August 18, 2007 @ 7:27 pm

I’ve been in a ton of metal bands. This show is absolute shit. Any show that’s just a series of references to popular metal bands and stereotypes is a stupid show. Home movies was better, funnier, and the characters were actually likable. This show was a marketing ploy, if anything.

Comment by kb — July 23, 2009 @ 2:49 am

I completely agree with Alex’s comment, This is a pretty poor reveiw by someone who clearly does not get it. This is a show that is honed like a heat seeking nuclear rocket of comedy/metal/horror goodness. It is deffinetly for a target audience and that target is Metal heads. Now granted if you have a off beat and somewhat black sense of humor you will like the show but otherwise all you rap/pop/country listeners go watch king of the hill and leave Metalocalypse for the big boys and girls. And If you do listen to rock or metal and still dont like the show then what can I say other than go back to listening to creed and what ever christian metal bands you like.

And also by the way, the picture they used up at the top of this reveiw is not a real picture from the show.

Comment by AaronZZZ from Chicago — October 5, 2009 @ 3:40 pm

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