
There was a manga called Gunhed. There was a live-action movie called Gunhed. There was a game for the PC-Engine called Gunhed (aka: Blazing Lazers in the USA for TG16). There was also a Gunhed game for the ZX Spectrum in the UK All were somehow connected. This is about the movie.
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Truth be told I have no idea of the real intricacies between all three. According to Wikipedia – which is a bastion for misinformation and outright lies – first came the manga by Kia Asamiya, which resulted in creation of the film, upon which the game was then based. I don’t believe this though, since apart from an identical title the game is an overrated vertical shmup with seemingly no similarities. Also, the film credits list Hudson, implying that the film either came after or was made concurrently with the game. If the film was indeed made after or alongside the same game, then it’s another early adaptation, perhaps akin to Cyber Ninja?
The film itself, meanwhile, is simultaneously the worst and most awesome film I have ever seen. It is celluloid kusoge in its most concentrated form. A cinematic trainwreck so epic in its failings you can’t help but rubberneck through its 94 minutes, stunned at how it managed to be made. People accuse me of complaining too much about things, so it may seem strange that I paid for trash and claim to enjoy it. I discovered Gunhed by accident on eBay, recognised the name, and bought it for £5. The key point is I went in without expectations and, watching it with friends, it provided endless material for mockery and jokes. What connection has it got to Gunhed/Blazing Lazers on the PCE/TG16? Probably nothing at all!
Next it’s the future, 2030, and a new element called Texmexium (this should be your first clue as to the film’s quality) is discovered. Microchips are also really valuable. A bunch of thieves go to the island, 13 years after the war ended, to steal chips. All the thieves are killed off in the first 20 minutes, except the main guy and his woman, called Babe, and some geek with a bandana full of badges. Next they discover a woman from the Texas Airborn Rangers, she’s chasing a biodroid from a nuclear facility that killed people and stole some Texmexium. They team up with the Texas Ranger woman. Now it turns into Ridley Scott’s Alien meets Predator as the three run around what looks an underground carpark filled with scrap metal.
And now for our ending bonus:
The Credits, which I uploaded to Youtube. The main theme sounds like something from Panzer Dragoon, with drums and eerie percussion, and then it suddenly switches to a J-Pop song. Come on everyone, sing along even if you don’t know the lyrics.












