Metal: A Headbangers Journey Review (dir. by Sam Dunn with Scot McFayden and Jessica Wise)


“Metal confronts what we’d rather ignore. It celebrates what we often deny. It indulges in what we fear most. And that’s why metal will always be a culture of outsiders.” — Sam Dunn

Metal: A Headbanger’s Journey is the kind of documentary that feels like it was made by someone who actually gets heavy metal instead of just staring at it from the outside and treating it like a weird cultural problem to be solved. Sam Dunn, with Scot McFadyen and Jessica Wise, builds the film around a simple but very effective idea: if metal has spent decades getting mocked, misunderstood, and moral-panic’d into the ground, why not let a real fan and anthropologist go out and explain what the scene is actually about? That perspective gives the movie a relaxed confidence right away. It never acts like it has to apologize for loving metal, and that attitude makes the whole thing way more engaging than a dry music-history lecture.

What makes the documentary work so well is the mix of fandom and curiosity. Dunn is not posing as some detached academic who wandered into the pit by accident. He is clearly a lifer, and that matters because his enthusiasm keeps the film from turning into a lecture about subgenres, stereotypes, and cultural backlash. At the same time, he is smart enough to ask real questions about why metal exists, why it inspires such loyalty, and why it keeps attracting outsiders who feel like they do not fit anywhere else. That balance gives the movie its shape. It is informative without becoming stiff, and it is affectionate without becoming blind praise.

The film does a stellar job of tracing the evolutionary trajectory of the genre. It starts with the bedrock, showing how the heavy, blues-influenced rock of the late sixties and early seventies paved the way for everything else. Dunn maps out the genealogy of metal with a sense of wonder, illustrating how a common foundation in the hard rock of acts like Led Zeppelin or the dark, doom-laden riffs of Black Sabbath splintered into a massive, tangled family tree. You get to see the distinct shifts in tone, speed, and imagery as the music moved from the raw power of pioneers like Iron Maiden and Motörhead into the more extreme, experimental territories of bands like Cannibal Corpse or the provocative, atmospheric reaches of Mayhem. This structural focus turns the film into a clear guide for how metal constantly reinvented itself while holding onto that core aggressive energy.

The interviews are a huge part of why the film stays alive. Dunn talks to an incredible array of musicians who cover a lot of ground, including legends like Alice Cooper, Bruce Dickinson, and Ronnie James Dio, and the movie benefits from the fact that these people are speaking as insiders rather than museum curators. Some bring humor, some bring historical context, and some bring genuine passion that reminds you why this music matters to its fans in the first place. What’s especially nice is that the movie does not treat everyone with the same reverence. It lets personalities come through, which gives the film a looser, more conversational energy. That makes it easier to sit through even when it moves into territory that could have felt overly academic in less capable hands.

One of the most memorable things about Metal: A Headbanger’s Journey is the way it handles the old stigma around heavy metal. The film doesn’t just repeat the familiar story that “metal got unfairly attacked”; it also shows why those attacks stuck in the public imagination for so long. That gives the documentary more bite. It is not only defending the genre, but also explaining the cultural fear that surrounded it, whether that meant the PMRC era or the broader idea that loud guitars and dark imagery automatically equal danger. Dunn and company make a strong case that metal is often a release valve rather than a threat. For a lot of listeners, it is a place to channel anger, alienation, and frustration instead of acting them out in destructive ways.

The film also does not shy away from the darker controversies that have haunted the genre’s reputation, specifically the actions linked to the Norwegian black metal scene. Dunn confronts the violence and extremism associated with these artists head-on, including a chilling interview with Gaahl, the infamous frontman of the Norwegian black metal band Gorgoroth. By highlighting the intense, radical nature of Gaahl’s worldview and the violent history of the subculture he represented, the film addresses the deep, dark mark these controversies placed on the Norwegian scene. Acknowledging how these headlines fueled mainstream hatred toward the music is essential to the film’s narrative. However, the documentary’s nuance really shines in its later home video releases, where Dunn adds vital context to ensure viewers understand that those dark moments were extreme outliers rather than the standard for the community at large. By clarifying that these actions did not represent the vast majority of metal fans or artists, the film successfully separates the music’s spirit from the criminal acts of a few.

There is also a fun educational streak running through the whole thing. The movie likes to trace lines between older rock traditions and the more extreme corners of metal, and that gives it some useful perspective. It reminds you that the genre did not appear out of nowhere and that its DNA is tangled up with blues, hard rock, theatricality, and rebellion. Even if you already know a fair amount about the subject, the film still has a way of making those connections feel vivid rather than obvious. It does a solid job of showing how metal evolved into something bigger and more fragmented than casual listeners usually assume.

If the movie has a weakness, it is that it can feel a little too short for everything it wants to cover. There is so much material here that some topics get only a snapshot when they could have used a deeper dive. That is especially true if you are the kind of viewer who wants more on the later developments and regional differences within the scene. Still, the brisk runtime also helps the film stay punchy and rewatchable. It does not overstay its welcome, and it keeps moving at a pace that suits the subject. In a weird way, the documentary’s eagerness to pack in so much is part of its appeal.

Visually and structurally, the movie keeps things straightforward, which works in its favor. It is not trying to be slick in a way that would distract from the subject. Instead, it uses interviews, performance footage, festival scenes, and Dunn’s own traveling framework to keep the momentum going. That direct approach fits the personality of the material. Metal is not a genre that usually benefits from fancy packaging. It needs energy, attitude, and clarity more than polish, and this documentary understands that.

The best compliment you can give Metal: A Headbanger’s Journey is that it feels like a conversation with someone who loves the music enough to explain it honestly. It celebrates the bombast, the mythology, the anger, and the community without pretending metal is above criticism or complexity. It is smart, funny in places, and genuinely useful as both a fan piece and an introduction for newcomers. Even years later, it still comes off as a passionate and accessible guide to a scene that is often easier to caricature than understand. For metal fans, it is an easy recommendation. For everyone else, it is one of those documentaries that might actually change how you hear the genre the next time a riff kicks in.

Supernatural: The Anime Series to be Released on DVD/Blu-Ray


Ever since it was announced in around Fall of 2010 that an anime series was going to be made based on the first two seasons of the popular CW drama series, Supernatural, I knew I had to get the DVD and/or Blu-Ray release of this series.

Like most Japanese anime series they rarely got shown in the US unless it was part of a video set. It’s rare to find newly shown episodes in Japan shown in the US at the same time. Lately, a new practice of streaming new episodes on-line through official anime streaming sites has given American anime fans the same access to new episodes as their Japanese counterparts. A fine example of this recent practice was the simultaneous airing of each new episode for the horror-ecchi series, Highschool of the Dead. Unfortunately, this wasn’t the case for the Supernatural anime series.

So, it was a relief to read the news release earlier this week about the anime series being released in the US through DVD and Blu-Ray sets of Supernatural the Animation season 1.

The DVD and Blu-Ray Season 1 sets will be released by Warner Home Video on July 26, 2011.

If there was ever a series that belongs to be redone in anime fashion it was, and is, Eric Kripke’s Supernatural. As I joked with people about this news once it was confirmed, the Supernatural slashfic community will now have to deal with an equally rabid yaoi community which has already sprouted since Supernatural the Animation premiered on Japanese TV earlier this year.

One thing that should please both subbed and dubbed warring camps is that the DVD and Blu-Ray release should have both original Japanese voice cast (which includes the very Japanese voice actors who dub the Dean and Sam Winchester characters in the live-action showing of the series in Japan) and the stars of the series itself, Jensen Ackles and Jared Padelecki dubbing the anime series in English (though it would seem Padelecki will be voicing all 22-episodes while Ackles only select episodes).

People I know who have seen the series while it aired in Japan have spoken nothing but positive things about the first season. So, far the announcement hasn’t been followed up with the items being put up for pre-orders on Amazon.com or any of the online video retailers. I’m sure that will change once more details about the DVD and Blu-Ray release come down in the coming weeks.

Source: Anime News Network

Supernatural the Animation – Preview Trailer


A couple weeks back I posted an article about Warner Home Video and Madhouse (anime studio) collaborating to adapt the very popular CW supernatural series Supernatural into anime. The series will comprise of 22-episodes and has a tentative release date in Japan around January 2011. More news has since come down the pipeline that the 22-episode season will see a DVD release with English-subtitles a couple months later.

From the preview trailer which has come out since it looks like the anime keeps the core theme of the show with the two Winchester Brothers fighting not just through demons, monsters-of-the-week and other supernatural problems, but also their own familial issues. The animation by Madhouse should appeal to non-anime fans since it skews more towards a realistic style instead of the hyper-kinetic wide-eyed animation style many non-fans think all anime looks like. I like to compare the animation to this series to a classic supernatural action anime which came out during the early 1990’s, Ninja Scroll.

The use of deep blacks to shade the character animations and give some definition to their faces gives the whole animation style quite the fleshy, rounded look instead of the angular, almost mechanical style of current anime. The incorporation of typical anime-style monsters was a nice touch. That was definitely tentacles coming out of that monster/demon. Though I must say that I’d be surprised if this series used said tentacles in other ways other than to be an instrument of destruction and bloodletting. I don’t think Supernatural the Animation will have much hentai qualities in it.

Anime horror usually don’t come out as often and when they do they’re usually of the hentai variety. If the folks at Madhouse even do half a good job in adapting the original tv series then this is one anime series I will have on my must-see list.

….And yes, that is a Japanese band cover of Kansas’ classic rock song, “Carry On Wayward Son, which has become the tv series’ unofficial theme song.

Supernatural the Animation


CW Network’s very popular tv series Supernatural looks to expand into a new media as Warner Home Video plans to release a 22-episode anime adaptation of the tv series. The series will come out in Japan this January of 2011 with acclaimed anime studio Madhouse doing the animation. The series’ first season will encompass the breadth of the original series’ first two season, but will have room for new content which explore and expand of the two Winchester Brothers’ early childhood as Hunters. Some secondary characters from the original show will also get a much more expanded role within the anime series.

I, for one, was quite excited when I first learned of this development. The original show has been a favorite of mine since it first debuted in the Fall of 2005. While for some the idea of an American TV series getting an anime adaptation might seem farfetched, but I think Supernatural‘s aesthetics lends itself well to the hyper-realistic conventions of anime. Madhouse has already shown it could do straight up horror with its very popular zombie anime series Gakuen Mokushiroku (Highschool of the Dead), so creating a series out of a show based on the supernatural and monsters and demons wouldn’t be too much of a stretch for the studio.

The Winchester Brothers in the anime will be voiced by the two same actors who dub the original series for airing in Japan: Yuya Uchida and Hiroki Touchi. There’s no word on whether the series will get an American dub version when the dvd/Blu-Ray comes out in the US so fans hoping to hear Jared Padelecki and Jensen Ackles voicing their anime counterparts may have to temper their hopes.

Time will tell if this anime adaptation will catch on in the US, but with Supernatural having such a huge and vocal fan-base there’s a chance it may just and allow a second season to be made.