Key the Metal Idol: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Fan Service]]: Sakura and Key apparently need to shower often.
* [[Fan Service]]: Sakura and Key apparently need to shower often.
* [[Fetish]]: Ajo has a truly disgusting obsession with robots.
* [[Fetish]]: Ajo has a truly disgusting obsession with robots.
* [[Freeze Frame Bonus]]: The series constantly pelts the viewer with massive spoilers, but they're almost impossible to notice.
* [[Freeze-Frame Bonus]]: The series constantly pelts the viewer with massive spoilers, but they're almost impossible to notice.
* [[Gainax Ending]]
* [[Gainax Ending]]
* [[Hey, It's That Voice!]]: Jinsaku Ajo's voice in the ([[Superlative Dubbing|largely well-done]]) English dub is also the actor who played the Wishmaster in that franchise's later films.
* [[Hey, It's That Voice!]]: Jinsaku Ajo's voice in the ([[Superlative Dubbing|largely well-done]]) English dub is also the actor who played the Wishmaster in that franchise's later films.
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* [[Inelegant Blubbering]]: {{spoiler|Key's first response to becoming human and the emotions that come with it.}}
* [[Inelegant Blubbering]]: {{spoiler|Key's first response to becoming human and the emotions that come with it.}}
* [[Kick the Dog]]: Ajo does this at least once per episode.
* [[Kick the Dog]]: Ajo does this at least once per episode.
* [[Mecha Mooks]]: The PPOR combat robots.
* [[Mecha-Mooks]]: The PPOR combat robots.
* [[Mega Corp]]: Production Minos.
* [[Mega Corp]]: Production Minos.
* [[Mind Screw]]
* [[Mind Screw]]
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* [[Smug Snake]]: Tamari.
* [[Smug Snake]]: Tamari.
* [[Third Person Person]]: Key combines this with [[Spock Speak]] and [[Creepy Monotone]]. {{spoiler|She still speaks in the third person after "becoming human", making the transition all the more disheartening.}}
* [[Third Person Person]]: Key combines this with [[Spock Speak]] and [[Creepy Monotone]]. {{spoiler|She still speaks in the third person after "becoming human", making the transition all the more disheartening.}}
* [[Twelve-Episode Anime|Thirteen Episode Anime]]: Kinda. It came out with fifteen episodes: thirteen regular ones, including two "movies."
* [[Tsundere]]: Sakura, particularly when talking to Key.
* [[Tsundere]]: Sakura, particularly when talking to Key.
* [[Unlucky Childhood Friend]]: Sakura.
* [[Unlucky Childhood Friend]]: Sakura.
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[[Category:Anime of the 1990s]]
[[Category:Anime of the 1990s]]
[[Category:Anime]]
[[Category:Anime]]
[[Category:Key The Metal Idol]]
[[Category:Science Fiction Anime and Manga]]
[[Category:Studio Pierrot]]
[[Category:Mecha Anime]]
[[Category:Key the Metal Idol]]
[[Category:Studio Cockpit]]
[[Category:Thirteen-Episode Anime]]

Latest revision as of 04:25, 20 September 2019

Tokiko Mima, nicknamed "Key," is a robot who has been raised as a human girl by her inventor/grandfather , or is it the other way around?. As her grandfather is dying, he tells her that she can become a human, provided she can make 30,000 friends before her battery runs out. With this, Key moves away from her idyllic village and heads for Tokyo.

Here she finds her best friend from Middle School, Sakura, working three different jobs to keep afloat. With her help as well as the help of Sakura's friend Tataki (neither of which are convinced by Key's story), they plan to make Key into a Idol singer - someone they reason could easily gain the friendship of 30,000 people.

However, in times of extreme stress or danger, a second personality emerges from Key's emotionless form, revealing a girl that is not only more like a human, but one who appears to do supernatural feats.

Key the Metal Idol was released as a 15-episode OVA over a few years. The final episodes are nearly 90 minutes in length.

And if you think from the description that this is a cutesy kid's tale about making friends and becoming a real girl... you're going to be in for a rough ride.

Tropes used in Key the Metal Idol include: