Steel Behemoths

The Steel Behemoths are supporting antagonists of the 2009 animated film 9. They are robotic drones designed by the Fabrication Machine to exterminate any lifeforms on Earth.

Appearance
Each Steel Behemoth is 30 feet tall, with a pair of thin and long legs made ​​of pure iron. Although thin, the Behemoth's legs are quite strong and able to move at considerable speed, even in small patterns. Each Steel Behemoth has a single, oval red eye, in the center of their head, which has large casings that loosely resemble WWII-era Nazi soldier helmets. They are also armed with a large-caliber revolving gun that shot in front of them as a huge minigun. They are also equipped with noxious gas canisters for killing off any lifeforms in the area.

History
The Steele Behemoths were commissioned by the Fabrication Machine on the orders of Chancellor Fredinand for the Nation to conquer the rest of the world. The Steel Behemoths apparently succeeded in slaughtering and obliterating practically all in their path on the battlefield during the war. However, the Fabrication Machine went insane and reprogrammed its machines to exterminate all life, so the Steel Behemoths turned on the Nation by massacring all military and civilians alike in sight, even releasing poisonous gas to kill off all other lifeforms.

After life on Earth had been cleansed, the Steel Behemoths disappeared from the sterile wastelands, leaving only the production lines of inactive Behemoths in the Fabrication Machine's factory. It is unknown what happened to the Steel Behemoths, but it can be presumed that over the years after the machines had destroyed most life, the Behemoths perished or deactivated without the Fabrication Machine or any further purpose.

After the Fabrication Machine was reactivated, it was seen to be experimenting on an inactive Steel Behemoth unit before its Seeker Drones alerted it to the stitchpunks' presence. However, the stitchpunks destroyed the factory, incinerating the Seeker Drones and the inert Steel Behemoths in the process.