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Heavy Metal Year 1993 Magazine Back Issues

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HM Jan 1993
Heavy Metal January 1993 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Heavy Metal January 1993

Features
Druuna! Denis Sire! Prado!
The Illustrated Fantasy Magazine
Trio Grande in "Adios Palomita"
The Hermit and the Fool

 


HM Mar 1993
Heavy Metal March 1993 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Heavy Metal March 1993

Features
Ramparts Of Spray And Melting Pot
The Illustrated Fantasy Magazine

 


HM May 1993
Heavy Metal May 1993 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Heavy Metal May 1993

Features
Azpiri! Prado! Frezzato!
Little Ego: Flowers From Ulrico
Eva Medusa: You are the Poison
Time and Reflection

 


HM Jul 1993
Heavy Metal July 1993 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Heavy Metal July 1993

Features
Corben! Gimenez!
The Illustrated Fantasy Magazine

 


HM Sep 1993
Heavy Metal September 1993 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Heavy Metal September 1993

Features
Heavy Metal: The Illustrated Fantasy Magazine
Scott Hampton's "The Upturned Stone"

 


HM Nov 1993
Heavy Metal November 1993 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Heavy Metal November 1993

Features
Little Ego by Vittorio Giardino
Schultheiss! Vince's "Eden"!
A Pleasant Walk by Altuna
For Private Eyes by Font

 


HM Mar 1993
Heavy Metal Summer 1993, SoftWare magazine back issue cover image
Software

Buying Choices
Heavy Metal Summer 1993, SoftWare

Features
Covergirl Photographed by Oscar Chichoni
Amalio's Mother Christmas
Serguei's Confession
Carole Goes Shopping
The Continuing Adventures Of Druuna!

 

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Heavy Metal is an American science fiction and fantasy comics magazine, known
primarily for its blend of dark fantasy/science fiction and erotica. In the mid-1970s,
while publisher Leonard Mogel was in Paris to jump-start the French edition of
National Lampoon, he discovered the French science-fantasy magazine Métal
Hurlant which had debuted December 1974. The French title translates literally
as "Howling Metal."

When Mogel licensed the American version, he chose to rename it, and Heavy
Metal began in the U.S. with the April
1977 issue
as a glossy, full-color monthly. Initially, it displayed translations
of graphic stories originally published in Métal Hurlant, including work
by Enki Bilal, Jean Giraud (also known as Moebius), Philippe Druillet, Milo
Manara and Philippe Caza. The magazine later ran Stefano Tamburini and Tanino
Liberatore's ultra-violent RanXerox. Since the color pages had already been
shot in France, the budget to reproduce them in the U.S. version was greatly
reduced.



Films

In 1981, an animated feature film was adapted from several of the magazine's
serials. Made on a budget of USD$9,300,000, under production for three years,
Heavy Metal featured animated segments from several different animation houses
with each doing a single story segment. Another house animated the frame story
which tied all the disparate stories together. Like the magazine, the movie
featured a great deal of nudity and graphic violence, though not to the degree
seen in the magazine. For example, in its Den segment, it did not display the
blatant male genitalia of its print counterpart. The film featured such SCTV
talents as John Candy, Eugene Levy, Harold Ramis and Ivan Reitman. It did reasonably
well in its theatrical release and later gained something of a cult status,
partially because a problem with music rights resulted in a delay of many years
before the film became available on video.


Another animated feature film alternatively called Heavy Metal 2000 and Heavy
Metal: F.A.K.K.², with a budget of $15,000,000, was released in 2000. This
direct-to-video release was not based on stories from the magazine, but instead
was based on The Melting Pot, a graphic novel written by Kevin Eastman and drawn
by artist Simon Bisley, who based the appearance of the female protagonist after
nude model and B-movie actress Julie Strain, the wife of Kevin Eastman. Strain
later lent her vocal talents to the movie, portraying the character modelled
after her likeness. It spawned a video game in 2000, Heavy Metal: F.A.K.K.².
An independent video game was also spawned in 2001, Heavy Metal: Geomatrix.

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