Metalocalypse Full Series [95% FREE]
Some Season 1 episodes are nearly unwatchable in their crudeness. The animation is cheap for the first two seasons. Army of the Doomstar feels rushed.
But for the converted, it is a singular work of art. It is a show that starts as a parody of metal fans and ends as a love letter to them. It understands that metal’s obsession with death, frost, and violence is often a mask for deep vulnerability.
The music is genuinely great. The character arcs are shockingly well-earned. And the final image of Nathan Explosion, standing in the ashes of everything, realizing that "the metal" was always about love... is one of the strangest, most triumphant endings in animation history. metalocalypse full series
On the surface, Metalocalypse (2006–2013) is a lowbrow cartoon about the world’s biggest death metal band, Dethklok: five idiot-savant musicians who are richer than God, dumber than rocks, and prone to accidentally causing mass casualties. But to dismiss it as just "the metal Aqua Teen Hunger Force " is to miss one of the most ambitious, bizarre, and surprisingly heartfelt animated sagas of the 21st century.
Dethklok—Nathan (vocals), Pickles (drums), Murderface (bass), Skwisgaar (guitar), and Toki (guitar)—are so famous that their concerts cause thousands of deaths. Their music literally influences the global economy. Their home is a murder-filled water fortress. Some Season 1 episodes are nearly unwatchable in
You want to laugh at idiots, then cry for them, then headbang until your neck breaks.
Metalocalypse is not for everyone. If you hate extreme metal, potty humor, or slow-burn plotting, you will bounce off it hard. But for the converted, it is a singular work of art
Beneath this absurdity lurks the series’ true plot: The Tribunal, a secret Illuminati-like organization, watches Dethklok with dread. Ancient prophecies (and a mysterious organization called the Falconback Project) suggest the band is either the key to saving the world or triggering a secret, apocalyptic event known as "The Metalocalypse."