IMDb RATING
6.4/10
1.4K
YOUR RATING
Can Dethklok choose between their egos and the greater good of the world to embark on a gauntlet of dangers that will try their very souls and finally write the song that will be their salva... Read allCan Dethklok choose between their egos and the greater good of the world to embark on a gauntlet of dangers that will try their very souls and finally write the song that will be their salvation?Can Dethklok choose between their egos and the greater good of the world to embark on a gauntlet of dangers that will try their very souls and finally write the song that will be their salvation?
Tommy Blacha
- William Murderface
- (voice)
- …
Victor Brandt
- General Crozier
- (voice)
Thundercat
- Fan
- (voice)
- (as Stephen "Thundercat" Bruner)
Kim B. Petersen
- Priest
- (voice)
- (as King Diamond)
Mark Hamill
- Salacia
- (voice)
- …
Kirk Hammett
- Fan
- (voice)
Jon Hamm
- Emcee, Klokateer
- (voice)
Scott Ian
- Elite Tribunal Soldier
- (voice)
- …
Malcolm McDowell
- Vader Orlag
- (voice)
Juliet Mills
- Whale
- (voice)
Laraine Newman
- Rose Explosion
- (voice)
- …
Brendon Small
- Edgar Jomfru
- (voice)
- …
Livia Zita
- Tribunal Member
- (voice)
Featured reviews
Metalocalypse was one of my favorite shows to watch in high school. Skwisgaar Skwigelf taught me how to sweep pick. To see it get a finale after all these years is wonderful. The plot of Doomstar was serious and less focused on the show's quirky humor, but it was still awesome. There were new songs, returning characters, beautifully animated sequences, and a cool acknowledgment to all the fans of the show. Although, I'm a tiny bit disappointed the Finnish Lake Troll and Mashed Potato Johnson didn't make a cameo. But whatever. Thank you Brendon Small and Tommy Blacha for creating this show and making all the fans happy.
Judging by the other reviews, it seems like fans really just wanted more Metalocalypse. That's great, but after binging the series, I really did want to know what it was all about. The production value here was miles above any in the series. At first ir seemed odd to have less metal in Metalocalypse, but the music was honestly amazing. It truly felt epic, which is how a finale should feel. And the art? Oh my God, the art. Those backgrounds were absolutely beautiful, and I'm a sucker for a beautiful, bloody apocalypse - reminds me of my dreams. People have noted the comedy was lackluster, which may be true, as I don't really remember much about the jokes, but the rest of it left a mark ans I found the whole thing a lot of fun.
I loved the tv series. Seasons 1 to 3 in particular I've probably seen at least 4 to 5 times each. However if you're here for a laugh you won't find it in this. It's just the "lore" of the doomstar and anything else which I feel was better when it was in the background. I'll admit this was WAY better than the "musical" ego trip they put together but this is still not very good. Maybe a die hard fan who has no sense of humor will love it. At least this was better than the Aqua Teen Hunger Force movie that came out recently.
I liked it better when the series was about out of touch rockstars. Getting plastic surgery, why it's dangerous to date fans or trying to get back to their roots are three that come to mind. The episodes were mostly short but because of that we craved more. Compare that to the 4th season of The Twilight Zone where the episodes doubled in length and some of them were extremely difficult to get through.
The art style was very hit or miss. The final battle was trash. This was a great idea on paper but perhaps it was the best they could do with their budget. I found myself constantly getting bored as the story struggled to keep me involved. I love how spiteful Nathan is to the fans telling them where to go in the beginning too. This is full of boring cliches and I didn't enjoy it at all to the point I wish this was never made.
Either way. If there is little to no humor and just the "lore" it honestly that's like if half the band didn't show up to play a concert. Yeahhh pickles and toki showed up!
I liked it better when the series was about out of touch rockstars. Getting plastic surgery, why it's dangerous to date fans or trying to get back to their roots are three that come to mind. The episodes were mostly short but because of that we craved more. Compare that to the 4th season of The Twilight Zone where the episodes doubled in length and some of them were extremely difficult to get through.
The art style was very hit or miss. The final battle was trash. This was a great idea on paper but perhaps it was the best they could do with their budget. I found myself constantly getting bored as the story struggled to keep me involved. I love how spiteful Nathan is to the fans telling them where to go in the beginning too. This is full of boring cliches and I didn't enjoy it at all to the point I wish this was never made.
Either way. If there is little to no humor and just the "lore" it honestly that's like if half the band didn't show up to play a concert. Yeahhh pickles and toki showed up!
Coming back after a decade hiatus, expectations of this movie were going to go against it to begin with, sure. I think most of us would have settled for any resolution, but it's moreso HOW they chose to tell it and what they focused on that made this movie feel off, especially compared to the spectacular Doomstar Requiem.
Metalocalypse's original draw was its humor, with plenty of music and metal subculture/in-jokes to be extra endearing to those who took notice. The world plot is really not that important. Ironically, the whole "the band is central to the fate of the world" plot originated as a joke because of the funny dissonance that came with 5 low-IQ hedonistic narcissists being so central to world affairs. Sure you had a few hardcore, dramatic moments like Offdensen's arc or Nathan's eulogy that added some relishable gravity to the series, but for each of these moments there were a dozen or so jokes to keep the show from insisting it was some relationship drama anime that it never built the foundation to stand on.
The movie opens and the humor already misses the mark. Traumatized by the rescue of Toki, the bandmates repeat the F word over and over in an interview in some bit that wouldn't even have been that funny in a 2000s flash cartoon. (This is also where Jon Hamm has his cameo. Despite his top billing, his character is mostly irrelevant and has under 10 lines). From here on, there are very few attempts at jokes, and most didn't land for me.
If you've ever had the misfortune of reading Youtube comments or loading a Tumblr page, you'll come across this weird fan meta narrative that the band is a family. Cutesy artworks and narratives about Nathan being "band dad," Pickles the band mom, Toki the baby, and so on. The movie actually tries to incorporate this... REALLY awkwardly and uncomfortably. In more than a few scenes, especially the opening, they very inorganically have Pickles acting motherly and like a spouse to Nathan, going so far to have Toki cry like an infant in a public place. No idea if the writers thought these fanfic people comprised the general fanbase or something.
After bucking that, the movie goes onto almost exclusively focus on Nathan. This is not about the band like the last movie or couple seasons were; it's about Nathan's personal growth, development, and interaction with loved ones and music... you know, the guy who for years was just a comedic dumb ape whose entire life philosophy was just adhering to cartoonish "brutality..." they felt prudent to make sure he learns his moral lessons and to love again. It came across very forced and inappropriately saccharine in many spots. I'd say the only character who gets a somewhat reasonable and in-character ending is Murderface, who did get a pretty solid payoff for the cliff-hanger at the end of Requiem. Yeah, the final conclusion they arrive on with him was a bit cheesy and too dissonant a mix of "it has to have heart, but it also has to be funny," but at least it's something. The other three bandmembers get basically no arc beyond what they can provide Nathan.
The pacing of the whole thing is very weird. There is a lot of "oh yeah, we did that previously, now forget about it" in Act I, meandering in Act II, and great haste to wrap everything up in Act III. This story felt like the movie needed to be double the length, or spread out over a final season. To its credit, most major characters get a resolution, but some, including the main antagonist, are swept off the screen just as quickly as they arrive. I will say Knubbler's role was a great exception, a fine mix of silly and serious that gave his character a fitting resolution.
Other than those overarching criticisms, I can't say it was offensive to watch. I'm continuing to listen to Dethalbum 4, which I don't like as much as 2 or 3 but it's growing on me. I don't think the score was as grand or memorable for this as Requiem, especially considering the "Song of Salvation" was supposed to be worthy of saving the world. The animation in this is probably its strongest asset. They really broke out the big guns not just for the movement but the art direction as well. The scene of Murderface's climax looked almost out of old-school Disney.
Overall, I don't think making this movie for those invested in the originally-satirical plot or the Tumblr people was the best move. It was meant to be a finale for the SERIES and the core fans, not just a checklist for the plot points. It needed to be longer and mapped out better, with stronger flow and more self-awareness of just how goofy the core premise is. I don't know if the writers thought that the plot of Metalocalypse was what had the most fans invested, or if they just lost taste for what the show used to be over 17 years and wanted to make something more serious, shoehorning that tone into their old material.
The Doomstar Requiem was a much better approach: putting the music and main characters centerstage, not caring so much about why they're there or if the "lore" is satisfied, plenty of gags, and a couple heartfelt moments just as icing instead of the cake. It serves as a more true series finale to me than Army, which I'd just give a tepid recommendation if you REALLY need to know what happens to the world and all the characters.
Metalocalypse's original draw was its humor, with plenty of music and metal subculture/in-jokes to be extra endearing to those who took notice. The world plot is really not that important. Ironically, the whole "the band is central to the fate of the world" plot originated as a joke because of the funny dissonance that came with 5 low-IQ hedonistic narcissists being so central to world affairs. Sure you had a few hardcore, dramatic moments like Offdensen's arc or Nathan's eulogy that added some relishable gravity to the series, but for each of these moments there were a dozen or so jokes to keep the show from insisting it was some relationship drama anime that it never built the foundation to stand on.
The movie opens and the humor already misses the mark. Traumatized by the rescue of Toki, the bandmates repeat the F word over and over in an interview in some bit that wouldn't even have been that funny in a 2000s flash cartoon. (This is also where Jon Hamm has his cameo. Despite his top billing, his character is mostly irrelevant and has under 10 lines). From here on, there are very few attempts at jokes, and most didn't land for me.
If you've ever had the misfortune of reading Youtube comments or loading a Tumblr page, you'll come across this weird fan meta narrative that the band is a family. Cutesy artworks and narratives about Nathan being "band dad," Pickles the band mom, Toki the baby, and so on. The movie actually tries to incorporate this... REALLY awkwardly and uncomfortably. In more than a few scenes, especially the opening, they very inorganically have Pickles acting motherly and like a spouse to Nathan, going so far to have Toki cry like an infant in a public place. No idea if the writers thought these fanfic people comprised the general fanbase or something.
After bucking that, the movie goes onto almost exclusively focus on Nathan. This is not about the band like the last movie or couple seasons were; it's about Nathan's personal growth, development, and interaction with loved ones and music... you know, the guy who for years was just a comedic dumb ape whose entire life philosophy was just adhering to cartoonish "brutality..." they felt prudent to make sure he learns his moral lessons and to love again. It came across very forced and inappropriately saccharine in many spots. I'd say the only character who gets a somewhat reasonable and in-character ending is Murderface, who did get a pretty solid payoff for the cliff-hanger at the end of Requiem. Yeah, the final conclusion they arrive on with him was a bit cheesy and too dissonant a mix of "it has to have heart, but it also has to be funny," but at least it's something. The other three bandmembers get basically no arc beyond what they can provide Nathan.
The pacing of the whole thing is very weird. There is a lot of "oh yeah, we did that previously, now forget about it" in Act I, meandering in Act II, and great haste to wrap everything up in Act III. This story felt like the movie needed to be double the length, or spread out over a final season. To its credit, most major characters get a resolution, but some, including the main antagonist, are swept off the screen just as quickly as they arrive. I will say Knubbler's role was a great exception, a fine mix of silly and serious that gave his character a fitting resolution.
Other than those overarching criticisms, I can't say it was offensive to watch. I'm continuing to listen to Dethalbum 4, which I don't like as much as 2 or 3 but it's growing on me. I don't think the score was as grand or memorable for this as Requiem, especially considering the "Song of Salvation" was supposed to be worthy of saving the world. The animation in this is probably its strongest asset. They really broke out the big guns not just for the movement but the art direction as well. The scene of Murderface's climax looked almost out of old-school Disney.
Overall, I don't think making this movie for those invested in the originally-satirical plot or the Tumblr people was the best move. It was meant to be a finale for the SERIES and the core fans, not just a checklist for the plot points. It needed to be longer and mapped out better, with stronger flow and more self-awareness of just how goofy the core premise is. I don't know if the writers thought that the plot of Metalocalypse was what had the most fans invested, or if they just lost taste for what the show used to be over 17 years and wanted to make something more serious, shoehorning that tone into their old material.
The Doomstar Requiem was a much better approach: putting the music and main characters centerstage, not caring so much about why they're there or if the "lore" is satisfied, plenty of gags, and a couple heartfelt moments just as icing instead of the cake. It serves as a more true series finale to me than Army, which I'd just give a tepid recommendation if you REALLY need to know what happens to the world and all the characters.
10KDean509
Thank you Brendon Small and Tommy Blacha.
From watching when the first season aired, I can confidently say that Doomstar was worth the wait. Finally, Dethklok fans were able to close a chapter that we all hold near and dear to our hearts.
The only thing that would make it better would be news of another run at the series or another movie... but I'm happy and content with what we have. There's nothing like seeing your favorite band release new material for the first time, now we'll be able to cherish it for forever.
Death Album IV, that goes with the film is absolutely amazing. I'm going back, yet again, to watch from Season one, all the way up to Doomstar.
From watching when the first season aired, I can confidently say that Doomstar was worth the wait. Finally, Dethklok fans were able to close a chapter that we all hold near and dear to our hearts.
The only thing that would make it better would be news of another run at the series or another movie... but I'm happy and content with what we have. There's nothing like seeing your favorite band release new material for the first time, now we'll be able to cherish it for forever.
Death Album IV, that goes with the film is absolutely amazing. I'm going back, yet again, to watch from Season one, all the way up to Doomstar.
Did you know
- TriviaSequel to 2013's The Doomstar Requiem and the series finale of Metalocalypse.
- Quotes
Nathan Explosion: [to Salacia] GO INTO THE WATER!
- ConnectionsFeatured in AniMat's Crazy Cartoon Cast: Golden Global Destruction (2021)
- How long is Metalocalypse: Army of the Doomstar?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Metalocalipsis: El ejército de la estrella del Apocalipsis
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 23 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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