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1[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Q_The_Winged_Serpent_9725.jpg]]
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3->''"Its name is Quetzalcoatl... just call it Q... that's all you'll have time to say before it tears you apart!"''
4-->-- '''{{Tagline}}''' for the movie
5
6A 1982 fantasy/horror movie written and directed by Creator/LarryCohen, starring Creator/DavidCarradine, Creator/MichaelMoriarty, Candy Clark, and Creator/RichardRoundtree.
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8Shepard (Carradine) is a UsefulNotes/{{New York City Cop|s}} investigating a series of ritual homicides. Bodies turn up [[FlayingAlive skinned alive]], with the heart cut out, decapitated, and otherwise mutilated in disturbing ways.
9
10Meanwhile, Jimmy Quinn (Moriarty) is a piano player and petty criminal who gets caught up in a jewelry-store heist caper. When things go badly, he takes the stolen jewels and flees, abandoning his fellow crooks, and loses the jewels after being hit by a taxi. He flees to a disused attic space at the top of the Chrysler building, where he finds a humongous nest near a hole in the roof.
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12The two plot lines come together when Shepard figures out that an Aztec Cultist priest, Kahea, has been convincing victims to be somewhat willing human sacrifices as he prays the ancient Aztec god Quetzalcoatl back into existence. Quetzalcoatl appears in the form of an [[GiantFlyer enormous]] [[OurDragonsAreDifferent dragon-like creature]], and nests in the top of the Chrysler building, flying out to snatch victims off of skyscrapers under construction, rooftop swimming pools, and snacking on the occasional skyscraper window-washer.
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14Jimmy disposes of his fellow crooks by leading them to the nest and cheering as the bird eats them, then informs Shepard where to find the nest in exchange for a promise of immunity and one million dollars, tax free. A team of NYPD cops waits at the top of the Chrysler building, and when the bird-snake-god thing returns from a hunting flight, they shoot the thing to death in a [[https://youtu.be/okBKiKtkh3A surprisingly cool action sequence]]. Afterwards, Kahea ambushes Jimmy in his apartment in revenge for killing the monster and prepares to make him a sacrifice to Quetzalcoatl, but Shepard luckily intervenes and kills Kahea. Jimmy gets his one million dollars, tax free.
15
16----
17!!"Q is all you'll have time to say before its tropes tear you apart":
18
19* AccompliceByInaction: when Quinn is demanding concessions from the police for his aid, it's pointed out to him a few times that by not telling the police where the egg is he's responsible for whomever Q kills. He's not having it, though.
20* AgentMulder: Shepard. Upon discovering the first skinned corpse, he immediately starts researching ancient Aztec sacrificial rites and starts believing that modern day fanatics are trying to resurrect Quetzalcoatl. He ends up being right, but it was still a big leap.
21* ArbitrarySkepticism: The police commissioner scoffs at the idea of modern day Aztec cultists being responsible for Quetzalcoatl resurrection and rampage... despite not denying the existence of Q itself. Shepard outright calls him on this.
22* AttackOfThe50FootWhatever: A giant snake-bird thing terrorizes UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity.
23* BatDeduction: Shepard assumes that the presence of skinned corpses means fanatical Aztec neopagans are trying to resurrect Quetzalcoatl. This is actually true, but it's still a pretty big logical leap.
24* BlackDudeDiesFirst: [[spoiler:Richard Roundtree's Sergeant Powell is the only one of the two protagonist detectives to not survive the film.]]
25* CharacterDevelopment: Jimmy Quinn eventually realizes (with help) just how pathetic he's been, and after realizing that nothing was going to be as scary as encountering Q, decides to get a real job and reconcile with his girlfriend.
26* DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu: At the end of the movie the NYPD manage to kill Q, an Aztec God. Somewhat justified in that modern weapons such as sub machine guns didn't exist in the Aztec's time.
27* DirtyCoward: Jimmy. His first move with everything he encounters is to try to run away.
28* DoesNotLikeGuns: Jimmy Quinn, who loudly protests when offered a gun and has to have one forced on him by his criminal accomplices. When he tries to use said gun to threaten said accomplices later, they laugh and accurately point out that he's too chicken to actually shoot it.
29* FanserviceExtra: The rooftop sunbathers qualify, particularly the one who takes off her bikini top and lotions herself right before being snatched away by the monster. A second scene has two women doing fitness in bikinis (although the one who gets eaten is the bored trainer with them), with one doing push-ups and looking pretty healthy muscle-wise.
30* GiantFlyer: Quetzalcoatl's physical form.
31* GenreBusting: A gritty police procedural crossed with a monster movie.
32* GodsNeedPrayerBadly: Until people start praying to him and offering him sacrifices again, Quetzalcoatl can't fly around biting people's heads off.
33* HadToComeToPrisonToBeACrook: Jimmy claims to have become a crook as a result of having drugs planted on him, insisting he only wants the money so he can go straight.
34* HalfTheManHeUsedToBe: Q tears Doyle in half.
35* HateSink: Jimmy, who's a money-grubbing, obnoxious coward who doesn't care that innocent people are dying [[spoiler:and actually [[KarmaHoudini made it out of the movie alive although he at least didn't get the money that he held up the city for]]]].
36* HiddenDepths: Michael Moriarty's petty criminal is also a talented jazz pianist, and plays an original song composed by the actor for the film, called "Evil Dream".
37* HumanSacrifice: Q is prayed back into existence with ritualistic human sacrifices.
38* IgnoreTheFanservice: One of the monster's victims is a guy who decides to go swimming in a rooftop pool rather than watch some bikini-clad babes do push-ups. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BrRr-TFpmfQ It ends badly for him]].
39* LandmarkingTheHiddenBase: The monster nests in the top of the Chrysler Building.
40* LargeHam: Jimmy's "Eat them! Eat them!" line as Quetzalcoatl's progeny eats the gangsters.
41* MaybeMagicMaybeMundane:
42** There ''is'' a flying monster terrorizing New York and there ''is'' a crazy cult running around killing people because it believes it's Quetzalcoatl, but whether or not it ''is'' Quetzalcoatl and thus the killings are directly responsible for its appearance is not really answered.
43** Simultaneously, the high priest [[spoiler:survived a bullet through his forehead, and it takes several more to put him down after. His victims also seem impervious to pain, simply lying content while flayed alive]].
44* MeaningfulBackgroundEvent: During the helicopter shot of the police driving to intercept the final ritual killing, [[spoiler: Q's shadow falls over the bridge]].
45* MixAndMatchCritters: Quetzalcoatl manifests as a dragon-like monster with four legs, a bird-like beak, and bat-like wings.
46* MonsterIsAMommy: Q has an egg in a nest in the Chrysler Building. [[spoiler:And another in an abandoned building nearby.]]
47* MonumentalBattle: The final shootout at the top of the Chrysler Building.
48* MultipleGunshotDeath:
49** Unusual for a monster film that has an alleged god as the central threat, Quetzalcoatl and its progeny are not destroyed by some special spell or enchanted item or "chosen one", but rather [[MugglesDoItBetter by having a dozen NYPD SWAT troopers]] (and Shepard) unload sub-machineguns onto them (in Quetzalcoatl's case, non-stop for a few minutes as it flies around trying to kill them in the climax).
50** The cultist sub-plot gets neatly wrapped up when the cult leader, Kahea, goes after Jimmy (understandably blaming him for Quetzalcoatl's death) and Shepard puts five bullets in him (one gets him in the head and he looks dead for a moment, Shepard empties the rest of the gun when Kahea pulls off one final NotQuiteDead scare).
51* NotDistractedByTheSexy: One of the victims is a personal trainer that is bored and annoyed instead of turned on by the bikini-clad women he's spotting.
52* OffWithHisHead: If Q doesn't completely carry its victims away, it rips their heads off. This is how it kills the window washer at the beginning. When the police find the nest, we also learn that this is how Webb (one of the gangsters) died, as his headless corpse drops onto Shepard.
53* OneLetterTitle: On some releases. Turned into an example of RoleCalled when the subtitle is added.
54* OurDragonsAreDifferent: As opposed to the usual Feathered Serpent, Q in the movie appears as a draconic, four-legged creature with a bare, dinosaurian body, four clawed legs, large batlike wings, and a beaked, condor-esque head.
55* OurGodsAreDifferent: There's some debate on whether Quetzalcoatl is actually a god or simply a prehistoric bird creature that isn't divine at all and somehow found its way to New York City. Shepard seems to lean towards the former, while the police comissioner believes the latter. Regardless, Kahea performs sacrifices to it, though whether those sacrifices brought Quetzalcoatl into existence or not is never fully revealed.
56* PeekABooCorpse: Twice. First when Jimmy goes into the Chrysler Building and the sunbathing woman's bloodied skeleton falls on him, and later on when the police go up there and Webb's headless corpse drops down and startles Shepard.
57* PoliticallyIncorrectVillain: When Jimmy tells Shepard where he learnt jazz piano (an African-American in a jazz bar taught him), he dumps two racist words in quick succession.
58* RainOfBlood: When Q grabs the sunbather, various pedestrians and drivers in the streets below get spattered with blood falling out of a clear blue sky.
59* RasputinianDeath:
60** Kahea gets shot by Shepard, and it doesn't seem to really faze him at all. It takes five bullets before he finally goes down.
61---> '''Shepard:''' "This man does not die easily."
62** Q takes about three minutes of sustained submachine gun fire to the head, neck, and chest from at least a dozen cops before it finally dies.
63* SadlyMythtaken:
64** In Myth/AztecMythology, Quetzalcoatl was one of the only gods that ''did not'' receive human sacrifices. In fact, he harshly condemned the practice. Of course, the movie also implies that Q might not actually be Quetzalcoatl, merely a giant flying reptile its cult mistook for him.
65** Also, he wasn't a dragon, but a feathered serpent with wings.
66** Also, the mythical Quetzalcoatl was male. In this movie, Q was made female.
67* SequelHook: The final scene is a slow camera {{pan}} through an abandoned building, ending with a zoom in on a second nest, complete with gigantic egg that hatches as the screen fades to black. No sequel was ever made, sadly. Also an example of TheEndOrIsIt.
68** To a lesser extent, the very existence of fertilized eggs implies at least one more Q, unless [[TrulySingleParent it can reproduce aesexually]].
69* ShadowDiscretionShot: Used in Webb's death. We see the shadow of Q's claw reaching for him.
70* SmallNameBigEgo: Quinn starts the movie acting like he has enough clout to get jewelry thieves to do what he wants on a heist, but they dismiss this at every turn. When he finds out how valuable the location of Q's lair is, he starts making demands of the police, claiming he's the most important man in the city.
71* SummonBiggerFish: Jimmy gets rid of the mafia men trying to kill him because he took their diamonds by leading them to Quetzalcoatl's nest on the top of the Chrysler Building and letting it eat them.
72* UnusuallyUninterestingSight: Doyle and Webb (the crooks Jimmy leads to the top of the Chrysler Building) sure don't seem too concerned about the bloody skeleton on the floor.
73* VertebrateWithExtraLimbs: Q has four legs and two wings.

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