Key the Metal Idol: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Corrupt Corporate Executive]]: Ajo.
* [[Corrupt Corporate Executive]]: Ajo.
* [[Crazy Prepared]]: Wakagi seems to be ready for just about anything that could possibly threaten Key. [[Properly Paranoid|As he should be.]]
* [[Crazy Prepared]]: Wakagi seems to be ready for just about anything that could possibly threaten Key. [[Properly Paranoid|As he should be.]]
* [[Deconstructor Fleet]]: Covers Pinocchio/ [[Become a Real Boy]], [[Mini Mecha]], Real Mecha, Super Mecha, [[Eccentric Mentor]], [[Idol Singer]], and [[Magical Girl]] to name a few. Additionally, it {{spoiler|subverts and deconstructs [[Emotionless Girl]] and [[Robot Girl]], as Key is revealed to be neither}}.
* [[Deconstructor Fleet]]: Covers Pinocchio/ [[Become a Real Boy]], [[Mini-Mecha]], Real Mecha, Super Mecha, [[Eccentric Mentor]], [[Idol Singer]], and [[Magical Girl]] to name a few. Additionally, it {{spoiler|subverts and deconstructs [[Emotionless Girl]] and [[Robot Girl]], as Key is revealed to be neither}}.
* [[The Dragon]]: Sergei/D.
* [[The Dragon]]: Sergei/D.
* [[Fan Service]]: Sakura and Key apparently need to shower often.
* [[Fan Service]]: Sakura and Key apparently need to shower often.
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* [[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.
* [[Human Resources]]
* [[Human Resources]]
* [[Idol Singer]]: Deconstructed
* [[Idol Singer]]: Deconstructed
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* [[Post Modernism]]: One manner to interpret this perspicacious exchange uttered by Wakagi and Shuichi in Episode 14 after Shuichi engages in disclosing what he has learned from his visit to Mamio Valley: {{spoiler|Wakagi: "There could be multiple universes, but Key should only have two futures... to regain her humanity, or fail. Any action should lead to one or the other. Her future should determine her present, and we should have been performing our given parts, but an element of uncertainty suddenly interrupted that determined plot. You! You still can't fit into your role. Do you realize how your good intentions have warped the future, thinking it was for Key's good?" Shuichi: "How could I change the result? Would Key transform into something inhuman?" Wakagi: "Exactly! Something inhuman, but we can't go back anymore, and I thought your role was the Greek Chorus."}}
* [[Post Modernism]]: One manner to interpret this perspicacious exchange uttered by Wakagi and Shuichi in Episode 14 after Shuichi engages in disclosing what he has learned from his visit to Mamio Valley: {{spoiler|Wakagi: "There could be multiple universes, but Key should only have two futures... to regain her humanity, or fail. Any action should lead to one or the other. Her future should determine her present, and we should have been performing our given parts, but an element of uncertainty suddenly interrupted that determined plot. You! You still can't fit into your role. Do you realize how your good intentions have warped the future, thinking it was for Key's good?" Shuichi: "How could I change the result? Would Key transform into something inhuman?" Wakagi: "Exactly! Something inhuman, but we can't go back anymore, and I thought your role was the Greek Chorus."}}
* [[Punch Clock Villain]]: Staff A, B and C. We never learn their names, {{spoiler|and they still end up dead in the end like [[Kill'Em All|almost everyone else]].}}
* [[Punch Clock Villain]]: Staff A, B and C. We never learn their names, {{spoiler|and they still end up dead in the end like [[Kill'Em All|almost everyone else]].}}
* [[Ridiculously Human Robots]]: Inverted. {{spoiler|Key's behavior is very robotic, but she's human.}}
* [[Ridiculously-Human Robots]]: Inverted. {{spoiler|Key's behavior is very robotic, but she's human.}}
* [[Robot Girl]]: Heavily subverted, since {{spoiler|Key only thinks she is a robot, due to a failed experiment by her grandfather that sapped Key of much of her emotions and memory}}.
* [[Robot Girl]]: Heavily subverted, since {{spoiler|Key only thinks she is a robot, due to a failed experiment by her grandfather that sapped Key of much of her emotions and memory}}.
* [[Shout Out]]: [[Eraserhead]] is one of the movies being taken out of the video store in episode 2.
* [[Shout-Out]]: [[Eraserhead]] is one of the movies being taken out of the video store in episode 2.
* [[Shower Scene]]: On a regular basis, as noted above.
* [[Shower Scene]]: On a regular basis, as noted above.
* [[Smug Snake]]: Tamari.
* [[Smug Snake]]: Tamari.

Revision as of 15:57, 25 January 2014

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: