Métal Hurlant Chronicles

Métal Hurlant Chronicles

TV poster
Genre Science fiction, action, thriller, adventure, fantasy
Created by Jean-Pierre Dionnet (Métal Hurlant)
Developed by Guillaume Lubrano
Written by

Justine Veillot

Guillaume Lubrano
Directed by Guillaume Lubrano
Starring

Rutger Hauer

Narrated by Benoît Allemane (French)
Theme music composer Jesper Kyd
Country of origin France and Belgium
Original language(s) English, French
No. of seasons 2
No. of episodes 12
Production
Producer(s)

Justine Veillot

Guillaume Lubrano
Léon Pérahia
Sylvain Goldberg
Serge De Poucques
Editor(s)

Sébastien Bacchini

Anima Rolland
Location(s) Romania
Cinematography Matthieu Misiraca
Camera setup Single-camera
Running time 26 minutes
Production company(s)

WE Productions

Distributor Panini Group
Release
Original network France 4
Picture format HDTV
Audio format Surround
First shown in France
Original release 27 October 2012 (2012-10-27) – present
External links
Official Website (French)

Métal Hurlant Chronicles is an English-language Franco-Belgian television science fiction anthology series based on the popular comics anthology magazine Métal Hurlant, known in the United States as Heavy Metal and in Germany as Schwermetall. Each episode is a self-contained story taking place on a different planet with a different cast, and the episodes are linked together only by the idea that an asteroid, the "Métal Hurlant", passes the planet in question during the events of the story. The show's premise originated with Guillaume Lubrano, who put together a self-financed pilot to pitch the show, which was broadcast as the series' third episode. Lubrano and Justine Veillot produce the show through their company WE Productions. It was largely filmed in Bucarest, Romania.

The series premiered on French television on 27 October 2012 on France 4. Broadcast rights for various European countries such as Germany, Austria, Luxembourg were bought by Sony Pictures Television.[1]

Plot

As an anthology series, each episode is a self-contained science-fiction story taking place in a different world, with different characters played by a different cast and adapted from a story previously published in the Métal Hurlant magazine. However, the show also proposes that all the stories are linked together by an asteroid, called the "Métal Hurlant", which is passing close to the planet where the episode's story is taking place.

The opening credits, narrated in French by voice actor Benoît Allemane, inform that the "Métal Hurlant" (Screaming Metal) is the last fragment of what was once a living planet, led to destruction by the madness of its inhabitants and condemned to travel ceaselessly through space and time, screaming its sadness and despair.

Cast

A number of notable British, French, American and Dutch actors have performed in various episodes of the show, including Scott Adkins, Karl E. Landler, Michael Jai White, James Marsters, Michelle Ryan, David Belle, Dominique Pinon, Kelly Brook, Joe Flanigan, Frédérique Bel and Rutger Hauer among others.

Broadcast

After being initially expected for early 2012,[1] all six episodes of season one were broadcast on France 4 in a late night time slot over the course of two nights in either default dubbed French or optional subtitled original English audio tracks, between 27 October and 3 November of the same year.

Nolife was expected to rebroadcast the series in France sometime in 2013.

Sony Pictures Television has bought the broadcast rights for several European countries, where it was at least aired on Animax in Germany, Austria and Switzerland.[2]

Syfy Channel began airing the series in the U.S. on 14 April 2014 on Mondays at 8:00 and 8:30 p.m with various repeats during the week following.[3]

Reception

Broadcast on 27 October 2012 after 3 episodes of Doctor Who that gathered a 1.4% share on the night, Métal Hurlant succeeded in raising the global share for channel France 4, bringing it to a tie with W9 and beating out Gulli, NT1 & D8.

The premiere episode attracted 347,000 viewers, garnering a 2.2% share at 11 p.m, but lost about 100,000 viewers for the next two episodes broadcast on the same night. Overall the night held 2.4% of 15- to 34-year-olds and 3.5% of men aged 15 to 49.[4]

When it debuted on SyFy in 2014, its viewership was slightly below normal for a pilot in its time slot, and then steadily declined.[5] Its critical reception has been tepid, from the start. Generally, the series is described as having decent visual effects, but being poorly written and produced, with inconsistent acting.[6][7]

Future

A second season of six episodes has been completed, and is airing alongside season one during its run on Syfy.

Series overview

Season Episodes Originally aired
First aired Last aired
1 6 27 October 2012 3 November 2012
2 6 4 January 2014 12 May 2014

Episodes

All 12 episodes were directed by Guillaume Lubrano.

Season 1

Episode
#
Title Writers Air date Prod. code Viewers Share
1"King's Crown"
"La Couronne du Roi"
Guillaume Lubrano & Justine Veillot27 October 2012347,0002.2%
Starring: Scott Adkins, Michael Jai White, Darren Shahlavi & Matt Mullins
Based on: "King's Crown" by Jim Alexander & Richard Corben from Métal Hurlant №142, and (Vol.2) No. 10,[8] and (hardcover) No. 2
2"Shelter Me"
"Protège-Moi"
Guillaume Lubrano, Justine Veillot & Dan Wickline27 October 2012250,0001.9%
Starring: James Marsters & Michelle Ryan
Based on: "Shelter Me" by Dan Wickline & Mark Vigouroux from Métal Hurlant №142, and (Vol.2) No. 9,[9] and (hardcover) No. 1
3"Red Light / Cold Hard Facts"
"Lumière Rouge / Réalité Glaçante"
Guillaume Lubrano & Justine Veillot27 October 2012101250,0002.2%
Starring: Guy Amram, David Belle, Jean-Yves Berteloot, Cyrille Diabaté, Patrice Delmont & Jean-Michel Martial
Based on: "Red Light" by Geoff Johns & Christian Gossett and "Cold Hard Facts" by R.A. Jones & Matt Cossin from Métal Hurlant №141, and (Vol.2) No. 2 ("Red Light"),[10] and (Vol.2) No. 8 ("Cold Hard Facts"),[9] and (hardcover) No. 1 (both)
4"Three on a Match"
"Oxygène"
Guillaume Lubrano & Justine Veillot3 November 2012N/AN/A
Starring: Craig Fairbrass, Dominique Pinon, Eriq Ebouaney, Nathan Rippy & Andy Chase
Based on: "3 on a Match" by R.A. Jones & Ryan Sook from Métal Hurlant №139, and (hardcover) No. 1
5"Master of Destiny"
"Les Maîtres du Destin"
Guillaume Lubrano & Justine Veillot3 November 2012N/AN/A
Starring: Joe Flanigan, Kelly Brook & Charlie Dupont
Based on: "Les Maîtres du Destin" by Alejandro Jodorowsky & Adi Granov from Métal Hurlant №143, and (Vol.2) No. 10 (as "Masters of Destiny")[8]
6"Pledge of Anya"
"Le Serment d'Anya"
Guillaume Lubrano & Justine Veillot3 November 2012N/AN/A
Starring: Rutger Hauer, Grégory Basso, Puiu Mitea, Ion Bechet & Gabriel Velicu
Based on: "Le Serment d’Anya" by Julien Blondel & Jérôme Opena from Métal Hurlant №146.

Season 2

Episode
#
Title Writers Air date Prod. code Viewers Share
1"Whiskey in the Jar"
"Whisky"
Guillaume Lubrano & Justine Veillot21 April 2014N/AN/A
Starring: Michael Biehn, James Marsters, Dan Cade & Florin Stancu
Based on: "Whisky in the Jar" by Jim Alexander & Gérald Parel from Metal Hurlant (Vol.2) No. 14,[8] and (hardcover) No. 2
2"The Endomorphe"
"L'Endomorphe"
19 April 2014N/AN/A
Starring: Michelle Lee & Silvio Simac
Based on: "Endomorphe" by Stéphane Levallois from Metal Hurlant (Vol.2) No. 14,[8] and (hardcover) No. 1
3"Loyal Khondor"
"Le Dernier Khondor"
Guillaume Lubrano5 May 2014N/AN/A
Starring: Karl E. Landler, Marem Hassler, Scott Adkins, John Rhys-Davies, Marc Duret & Kamel Laadaili
Based on: "The Loyal Khondor" by Alejandro Jodorowsky, Pascal Alixe, and Dan Brown from Metal Hurlant (Vol.2) No. 4.[9]
4"Second Chance"
"Seconde chance"
Guillaume Lubrano28 April 2014N/AN/A
Starring: Scott Adkins & Karl E. Landler
Based on: "Second Chances" by James MacDonald, Jorge Pereira Lucas, and Dan Brown from Metal Hurlant (Vol.2) No. 5,[9] and (hardcover) No. 1
5"Second Son"
"Le Second fils"
5 May 2014N/AN/A
Starring: Karl E. Landler, Frédérique Bel & Dominique Pinon
Based on: "The Second Son" by Brian Robertson & Fred Beltran from Metal Hurlant (Vol.2) No. 13,[8] and (hardcover) No. 1
6"Back to Reality"
"Retour à la réalité"
Guillaume Lubrano12 May 2014N/AN/A
Starring: Jimmy Jean-Louis, Dominique Pinon, Lygie Duvivier, Guy Amram, Grégory Basso & Aurore Tomé
Based on: "Reality Check" by Jim MacDonald & Francis Tsai from Métal Hurlant (hardcover) No. 1

Home release

Scream Factory released on 14 April 2015 on Blu-ray and DVD.[11]

References

  1. 1 2 "Métal Hurlant Chronicles", Scott Adkins: Action Star, 3 October 2011. Retrieved on 3 October 2011.
  2. "Schwermetall".
  3. "Metal Hurlant". Schedule. Syfy. Retrieved 21 April 2014.
  4. Cotte, Tony. "Métal hurlant chronicles démarre devant 350000 téléspectateurs", Toute La Télé, 29 October 2012. Retrieved on 29 October 2012.
  5. Monday's Cable Ratings & Broadcast Finals: "The Voice" Tops Demos, "DWTS" Leads Viewers
    Metal Hurlant Chronicles (8:00)* – Syfy 0.747 million viewers, #34; 0.307 million adults 18–49 (0.24 rating), No. 35
  6. Strange Horizons
    Metal Hurlant Chronicles
    The problem is that with the great influence that the magazine has had on genre storytelling across all media in the last forty years, none of the show's episodes feel truly innovative. Of the six episodes, three are a total disaster in terms of writing and directing; the other three, while significantly better, still feel like something that would have been considered fresh had it aired two decades ago.
  7. The AV Club
    Metal Hurlant Chronicles is classic sci-fi (with the beauty and charm removed)
    Michael Jai White appears in both, and the clearest sign of progress on the filmmakers' part is that, by the time they made "The Endomorphe," whoever is responsible for the closing credits had learned how to spell White's name. (He's listed as "Michael Jay White" in "King's Crown.")...Both "stories" amount to a series of fights that gradually winnow the cast down until there's just enough people left onscreen to take in the twist ending. Of the two episodes screened for critics, the twist endings run the gamut from predictable to unintentionally hilarious.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 Cail, Dave (3 October 2011). "Métal Hurlant Comic Book List – 2004". Heavy Metal Magazine List.
  9. 1 2 3 4 Cail, Dave (3 October 2011). "Métal Hurlant Comic Book List – 2003". Heavy Metal Magazine List.
  10. Cail, Dave (3 October 2011). "Métal Hurlant Comic Book List – 2002". Heavy Metal Magazine List.
  11. "Shout! Factory Brings Home the Metal Hurlant Chronicles". Dread Central.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, April 17, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.