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JUNK HEAD
1
Movie
Finished Airing
Jul 23, 2017
In the distant future, humanity is hurtling down a path of ruin. Global environmental destruction caused by chemical contamination, radioactive fallout, and UV rays coming through the patchy ozone layer has lead to deterioration of the human genome. (Source: Official Website)
8.0/10
Average Review Score
100%
Recommend It
2
Reviews Worldwide
Junk Head is an extraordinary achievement of stop-motion animation. Its influences range from art cinema to B-grade horror films and post-apocalyptic video games, but there's nothing quite like it out there. Created almost entirely by one man, Takahide Hori, Junk Head is a journey through a nightmarish underground landscape of ruins, caverns, and decaying industrial infrastructure inhabited by grotesque sentient humanoids and even more twisted and repulsive predators who lurk in the dark. The story is fairly simple, involving the extremely perilous adventures of a future "human" who volunteers for a dangerous mission into the unknown, His travels deep underneath the Earth's surface reveal aphantasmagoric, meticulously detailed underworld with its own social structure, belief system, and far more deadly threats than anyone could desire. Life is cheap in this underground labyrinth and the film doesn't shy away from the many interesting ways in which living creatures can meet their end. Adding to this sense of utter alienation from anything resembling our own reality, the characters all speak in various invented languages made of harsh, guttural sounds. You are relentlessly assaulted with the fact that this world, even though it's still called Earth, might as well be as alien as any planet from science fiction. Thankfully, Junk Head offers much more than a hellscape of misery and terror. Takahide Hori has a wonderfully playful sense of humor, sometimes dark, often quite silly, and frequently rather subtle. He also clearly cares about the many oddly shaped misfits who star in the film. They're all given personalities, motivations, and often some real dignity. They're just trying to do their best in an environment that's pretty much out to kill them at every turn. The film is never sentimental, but it invests the struggles and actions of the characters with genuine weight and significance. This movie is not just mere spectacle for its own sake. While Junk Heap is by no means the kind of film most people on this site would expect, I hope it gains a new audience of fans from the MAL community. The film is audacious in the scope of its execution and offers the kind of pleasures that popular entertainment rarely does. Hopefully Junk Heap will encourage some anime fans to delve into other forms of animation storytelling more deeply (I would especially recommend Jan Svankmajer). And if nothing else, maybe you'll have some intriguingly unique dreams in days to come.
Junk Head is an indie stop-motion animated film created by Yamiken studio, a team comprised of only the director Takahide Hori and animation director Atsuko Miyake. The film follows a rather simple story of a man who's consciousness is transferred into the body of a robot and is sent underground on a mission to locate a mutated creature from that was detected as an anomaly with a reproductive organ. The film is set in an intricately detailed subterranean industrial complex with an abundance of interesting sci-fi and horror imagery. The art design across the board is inventive and extremely memorable, fans of stuff like SilentHill will likely find stuff right up their alley with these creature designs. There are a number of sequences showcasing the animalistic environment with characters encountering all kinds of dangerous monsters, each with distinct behavior and abilities that were clearly given a great amount of thought. Everything in the world feels slightly grotesque, decrepit and alien, from the character designs to the original language that the characters speak in. Admittedly, this language can feel quite jarring, but I got used to it as the film went on. This odd language and much of what the film went for was greatly aided by its flexible tone. The film is often pretty tongue in cheek. Phil Teppet's 2021 film Mad God was similarly a stop motion film taking place in a gruesome apocalyptic setting, but felt a bit too relentlessly grotesque with no plot elements or characters I felt I could get invested in. This film, for me, has a much more appealing sense of personality. We have plenty of the eerie, atmospheric and spine chilling scenes, but the film also contains lots of high energy action sequences, fun characters, and actually had a really great sense of humor. Admittedly, the first half of the film feels much less gripping, plot wise, but it eventually picks up and gets to be very entertaining. This is definitely a film that will appeal first and foremost to those who are into its aesthetic. The story and characters, especially as it goes on, definitely add a lot to the experience, but the film's greatest strengths, for me, do still lie in the textured setting and memorable designs. I definitely recommend more people check this one out, I believe the duo is currently working on a sequel film as well, which I am excited to see. 7/10