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7.0/10
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Jim and Roy, a friendly violet demonic-looking alien that inhabits Jim's giant head, must stop an alien invasion. Misguided FBI agents and a manipulated mad doctor stand in their way, but Ji... Read allJim and Roy, a friendly violet demonic-looking alien that inhabits Jim's giant head, must stop an alien invasion. Misguided FBI agents and a manipulated mad doctor stand in their way, but Jim finds allies.Jim and Roy, a friendly violet demonic-looking alien that inhabits Jim's giant head, must stop an alien invasion. Misguided FBI agents and a manipulated mad doctor stand in their way, but Jim finds allies.
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John Worth Lynn Jr.
• 1994–1996
Melanie Holtzman
• 1994–1995
Gordon Barnett
• 1994–1996
John Andrews
• 1995–1996
Rex Ronson
• 1996
Tad Hills
• 1994–1995
Chris Johnston
• 1994–1995
Featured reviews
To say that "the Head" was my favorite show during its actual television run would be an overstatement. I watched it as frequently as I could, but missing it wouldn't mean heartbreak.
The series is about a man named Jim trying to find love and friendship in New York City. The only thing is, an alien encounter left him with a massive head playing home to an alien named Roy. Season one (Which, unfortunately, is the entire show) follows Roy and Jim as they work together to stop an alien invasion from a parasitic species bent on the domination of Earth.
The artistic style seems simplistic and gritty, but definitely has a certain compelling quality to it. The characters move awkwardly and unrealistically, but it's forgivable when you consider it's a show about freaks that was first aired as a segment on a show called "Oddities." Eric Fogel and Ray Kosarin do some downright incredible things with perspective to give every scene a very fresh and interesting feel. And the characters themselves are all well-designed and fascinating to look at.
The story is a little weak and predictable. The usual alien invasion bit with meddling federal agents and a mad scientist. But it has its own quirks to liven it up. And the characters were all fascinating. Unfortunately, since it was such an action-oriented plot, most of Jim's friends seemed underdeveloped and two-dimensional, and Jim himself seemed like a generic Everyman sort, but his alien, Roy, had a distinct and enjoyable personality. And Dr. Elliot is one of the few mad scientists to have a clear background that shows why he is who he is. He's honestly among the most enjoyable villains I've ever seen.
Ultimately it's the jokes that make the show. There are some decent puns, but it's mostly the dead-pan sort of stuff that seems incredibly popular in this, the Family Guy era.
"The Head" was a great show if you were into it, but it definitely wasn't for everybody.
The series is about a man named Jim trying to find love and friendship in New York City. The only thing is, an alien encounter left him with a massive head playing home to an alien named Roy. Season one (Which, unfortunately, is the entire show) follows Roy and Jim as they work together to stop an alien invasion from a parasitic species bent on the domination of Earth.
The artistic style seems simplistic and gritty, but definitely has a certain compelling quality to it. The characters move awkwardly and unrealistically, but it's forgivable when you consider it's a show about freaks that was first aired as a segment on a show called "Oddities." Eric Fogel and Ray Kosarin do some downright incredible things with perspective to give every scene a very fresh and interesting feel. And the characters themselves are all well-designed and fascinating to look at.
The story is a little weak and predictable. The usual alien invasion bit with meddling federal agents and a mad scientist. But it has its own quirks to liven it up. And the characters were all fascinating. Unfortunately, since it was such an action-oriented plot, most of Jim's friends seemed underdeveloped and two-dimensional, and Jim himself seemed like a generic Everyman sort, but his alien, Roy, had a distinct and enjoyable personality. And Dr. Elliot is one of the few mad scientists to have a clear background that shows why he is who he is. He's honestly among the most enjoyable villains I've ever seen.
Ultimately it's the jokes that make the show. There are some decent puns, but it's mostly the dead-pan sort of stuff that seems incredibly popular in this, the Family Guy era.
"The Head" was a great show if you were into it, but it definitely wasn't for everybody.
I actually liked this show when it was on MTV (it atctually made MTV watchable again) because it is weird yet funny and cool. Only the first season though (the first 13 episodes that were later made into a video) is watchable. In which a regular guy named Jim starts to get very odd- his head is very very large and is holding an alien named Roy (which is short for some jubberish) who has come to Earth to stop another alien named Gork from destroying the world. Very odd, but usually funny in a crude way, especially when looking at the other freaks on the show (a guy with 5 ft. arms, one with a mouth in his stomach, another with a blade stuck in his head, another that looks like a rat, one woman with a dark secret with a tale and a guy who has a fishbowl in his mouth). A+
This was a really interesting show, probably one of the best MTV ever had. Too bad they canceled it, because it's a hell of a lot better than watching Real World 24 hours a day. I don't remember a whole lot about the show but I remember it had a cool story with great animation.
It's amazing that this decade I found out about all these MTV animations other than "Daria" (which I love), "Eon Flux" (great animation, but I don't care for that cartoon), and "Beavis and Butthead" (too uncanny for me *shivers*). First this decade, when it came to other MTV cartoons I had never heard of, it was "Downtown" an animation that was way too short-lived. A couple of years ago, I watched it once a week during the summer! A great experience. I am still pissed off that it was short-lived. Then I got to spend time with "Liquid Television". (Maybe if I were high like those people in the 90s were, I would appreciate it more?!) I kind of liked "Liquid Television," but at the same time, I couldn't stand it. "Cartoon Sushi" was way worse. I hated it. I had to DNF it.
Not that many animated projects came out of MTV's Oddities, which sucks because I was hoping to come across a lot more projects! Now onto the show! So I thought the show was going to be something that I'd see on "Liquid Television," nonsensical, questionable, random, sophomoric, yet entertaining just with a horror touch. But "The Head" wasn't really like that. I thought this was going to be a horror cartoon about an ACTUAL Ave Satani demon living inside Jim's head. But it's a just a cute good alien who uses Jim as a host so they can save the planet together. Yes, this cartoon was bizarre. But it's not completely bizarre. This cartoon grows on you really quickly ~at least it did for me~. Yes, it's gross, but that's when Roy only comes out of Jim's head. There is brain tissue or gunk that spreads out onto the floor and makes a noise whenever Roy pops out. This cartoon wasn't vulgar. And it wasn't doing things for shock value.
Jim's crush, Mona, introduces him to a human anomalies counseling group. The people in the group are important because we see them throughout seasons one and two which I wasn't expecting. This is what adds to the wholesome part of the show. The togetherness and humanity. We get to know more about these characters, and we see episodes from their point of view, and we see Jim, Roy and Mona helping them out. I wasn't expecting this show to touch my heart. Making me feel things. I have a great admiration for cartoons or live action productions that are bizarre but heartfelt. Mister Rogers would've loved this cartoon if he could look past the big heads and brain muck. I loved the voice acting! And I love Mona's monotone voice. It was a little off-putting at first, but I grew to love it, and I love her. She was a great female character.
I was heartbroken when I finished with the last episode. I thought this cartoon had three seasons. It's a pity it was short-lived. I even got to watch a behind-the-scenes episode of how the animation was made! The final stage was made in Korea. Interesting that Koreans were working with Americans in animation in the 90s. I thought it was in the 2000s they started collaborating with the American animations in general.
I do not know what MTV is like nowadays; the last time I paid attention to that channel was in 2017 when they were showing "Floribama Shore", "Jersey Shore" reunions/reboots, "Siesta Key" & "Ridiculousness" garbage. It's amazing how animation is not associated with MTV anymore. They were ahead of their time with "Liquid Television". I hope that someday they go back to their animated roots.
~So if you're someone who loves to watch brain rot or edgelord crap then this cartoon isn't for you.~
Not that many animated projects came out of MTV's Oddities, which sucks because I was hoping to come across a lot more projects! Now onto the show! So I thought the show was going to be something that I'd see on "Liquid Television," nonsensical, questionable, random, sophomoric, yet entertaining just with a horror touch. But "The Head" wasn't really like that. I thought this was going to be a horror cartoon about an ACTUAL Ave Satani demon living inside Jim's head. But it's a just a cute good alien who uses Jim as a host so they can save the planet together. Yes, this cartoon was bizarre. But it's not completely bizarre. This cartoon grows on you really quickly ~at least it did for me~. Yes, it's gross, but that's when Roy only comes out of Jim's head. There is brain tissue or gunk that spreads out onto the floor and makes a noise whenever Roy pops out. This cartoon wasn't vulgar. And it wasn't doing things for shock value.
Jim's crush, Mona, introduces him to a human anomalies counseling group. The people in the group are important because we see them throughout seasons one and two which I wasn't expecting. This is what adds to the wholesome part of the show. The togetherness and humanity. We get to know more about these characters, and we see episodes from their point of view, and we see Jim, Roy and Mona helping them out. I wasn't expecting this show to touch my heart. Making me feel things. I have a great admiration for cartoons or live action productions that are bizarre but heartfelt. Mister Rogers would've loved this cartoon if he could look past the big heads and brain muck. I loved the voice acting! And I love Mona's monotone voice. It was a little off-putting at first, but I grew to love it, and I love her. She was a great female character.
I was heartbroken when I finished with the last episode. I thought this cartoon had three seasons. It's a pity it was short-lived. I even got to watch a behind-the-scenes episode of how the animation was made! The final stage was made in Korea. Interesting that Koreans were working with Americans in animation in the 90s. I thought it was in the 2000s they started collaborating with the American animations in general.
I do not know what MTV is like nowadays; the last time I paid attention to that channel was in 2017 when they were showing "Floribama Shore", "Jersey Shore" reunions/reboots, "Siesta Key" & "Ridiculousness" garbage. It's amazing how animation is not associated with MTV anymore. They were ahead of their time with "Liquid Television". I hope that someday they go back to their animated roots.
~So if you're someone who loves to watch brain rot or edgelord crap then this cartoon isn't for you.~
This show was really cool. I watched it every Saturday morning. The plot was so cool, it sucked you every time. I did start to get dull after the first season. It may have had something to do with the fact that season 1 was a mini-series and season 2 they made it into a normal series. I wish at least the first season would be released on DVD or something.
Did you know
- TriviaThe show marked the voice acting debut of John DiMaggio (who's best known as Bender from Futurama).
- Alternate versionsThe video version, "The Head Saves the Earth," runs 110 minutes. When the show aired on MTV, the same 13 episodes (minus commercials and credits) had a running time of around 130 minutes. Chops were made to keep the video's running time under 2 hours.
- ConnectionsFeatured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Darkest Animated Shows (2018)
- How many seasons does The Head have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- The Head Saves the Earth
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime22 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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