Aon Flux

Aon Flux





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400 years in the future, set in the year 2415, Aeon Flux is a mysterious assassin. Four centuries after a virus nearly annihilated the human race, leaving only five million survivors in a utopian city called Bregna. Aeon is struggling to destroy the Goodchild regime led by its namesake, Trevor Goodchild, the ruler of Bregna and a descendant of the man who found a cure for the deadly virus. As instructed by the Handler, Aeon is assigned to assassinate Goodchild, but there are deeper secrets to be discovered, and conspiracies to be foiled. — Anthony Pereyra {hypersonic91@yahoo.com}
Rated PG-13 for sequences of violence and sexual content
According to director Karyn Kusama , after finishing the movie, the studio fired her, re-cut the movie to a 71 minute long version that tested poorly and then asked her to edit the film again, but not back to her original vision. Huge parts of the plot were left out and even one character's sexuality of being gay was cut out by the studio. It's possible that this 71 minute version of the film was an R rated version which some producers wanted. Despite Kusama's objections, alternate scenes were filmed which for example showed more bloodier fights and bullet hits, and more nudity from Charlize Theron in several of her scenes. In the end, they decided to go with PG-13 rating so violence and nude scenes were cut, including entire sex scene, although you can still see several quick shots of Theron's breasts in post-sex scene. Kusama's original cut was about 30 minutes longer and it also had different score, composed by Johnny Klimek and Reinhold Heil, which was rejected by the producers and replaced with Graeme Revell's score while they were re-editing different versions of the film for test screenings. Trailers for the film show some of alternate scenes which could be from Kusama's director's cut, like Aeon in different clothes after she wakes up.
There are several shots where post-production forgot to replace Sithandra's feet with hands.
Like Fifth Element, without the humour
When I originally heard of Aeon Flux, it sounded absolutely terrible. The posters looked even worse. However, after seeing a trailer somewhere, I loved the look and bright colours (being easily pleased) and decided to give the movie a chance. Aeon Flux is the story of a female, barely clothed rebel sent in to assassinate the ruler of a dystopian isolated city, which contains the entire remainder of mankind. Let's just say the plot is entirely unoriginal, a derivative of many other Sci-Fi movies and stories. Charlieze Theron gets to prance around with an insect-like walk (her first appearance strongly reminded me of a praying mantis), salamander-like crawls, and other, animal-inspired, ballet-like movements. The world of Aeon Flux is drawn in bright, almost psychedelic colours, and it feels as if we glimpse only the tiniest part of this strange place. A lake of tears acts as CCTV for the entire city, pills exchanged in French kisses are used for telepathy, little pellets of liquid metal have a will of their own... A good chunk of the film is dazzling to watch, without any explanation behind it. Strictly speaking, Aeon Flux is about 80% futuristic fantasy, with very little science fiction in it. In fact, it sometimes feels as if the strangely organic gadgets of the rebels do not fit in this world - as the authorities seem to have more conventional technology and weapons. What Aeon Flux succeeds at the most is dazzling the audience. Visually, stylistically, and with its energy and futuristic fantasy (and constantly underdressed heroine). In that, it reminds me strongly of Fifth Element - another film where we feel as if we only get a glimpse of a futuristic, colourful world full of strangely dressed people, without the need to explain or expose every aspect of it. However, Aeon Flux is less satisfying than Luc Besson's classic - because it lacks a sense of humour and takes itself too seriously (which, given the plot, is a bad move). All in all, I would recommend the film to people who enjoy Fifth Element, bright colours, a sense of visual alienation, and unoriginal science fiction dressed up in a bright, original and almost unique coating.
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Aeon Flux is a mysterious assassin working for the Monicans, a group of rebels trying to overthrow the government. When she is sent on a mission to kill the Chairman, a whole new mystery is ... Read all Aeon Flux is a mysterious assassin working for the Monicans, a group of rebels trying to overthrow the government. When she is sent on a mission to kill the Chairman, a whole new mystery is found. Aeon Flux is a mysterious assassin working for the Monicans, a group of rebels trying to overthrow the government. When she is sent on a mission to kill the Chairman, a whole new mystery is found.
Æon Flux : [Sithandra'so feet was turned into a second set of hands] How are the modifications?
Sithandra : [scoops up firearm with one of her extra hands, holsters dagger with the other] Useful. You should have it done.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Denise Poirier as Æon Flux
John Rafter Lee as Trevor Goodchild
Julia Fletcher as Benzenhurst
Steffan Chirazi as Bambara
Alex Fernandez as Aemon
Paul Raci as Onan
Susan Turner-Cray as Hostess Judy
Japhet Asher as Clavius
Andrea Carvajal as Una
Morgan Creaves as Rordy
Shawn Cuddy as Celia
Joseph Drelich as Clavius
Taichi Erskine as Boy
Kelly Gabriel as Lindze
Christianne Hauber as Principal Lorna
Mark Mars as Sinnah
Matt K. Miller as Ilbren
C. W. Morgan as Bargeld
Adam Paul as Nadir Zenith
Elizabeth Sampson as Hedrick
Patrick Stretch as Gildemere
Grace Whitefeather as Sybil
Phil Brotherton as Additional Voices
Jack Fletcher as Additional Voices
Frank Ottiwell as Additional Voices
Andrew Philpot as Additional Voices
Max Redmond as Additional Voices
R. Carl Voight as Additional Voices

^ First broadcast as a series of six 2-minute parts, which were combined into a pilot episode of 12 minutes for the VHS and DVD releases of the series.

^ Perlmutter, David (2018). The Encyclopedia of American Animated Television Shows . Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 17–18. ISBN 978-1538103739 .

^ Erickson, Hal (2005). Television Cartoon Shows: An Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1949 Through 2003 (2nd ed.). McFarland & Co. pp. 71–72. ISBN 978-1476665993 .

^ Kronke, David (August 8, 1995). "Inventive but convoluted 'Aeon Flux' on MTV" . Los Angeles Times . Retrieved 2010-11-12 .

^ "They're Changing Aeon's Toon" . New York Daily News . Retrieved 2010-11-12 . [ dead link ]

^ Aeon Flux: All You've Ever Needed From Sci-Fi , by Alison Veneto, SMRT TV, April 24, 2006, "...Æon Flux has a serious Gnostic bent. The ancient mystery religion is where they got the concepts of aeons and the demiurge, amongst other things."

^ Jump up to: a b Nina Munteanu (6 Dec 2012). "Aeon Flux: motion picture and animation review" . Europa SF . Retrieved 2013-07-28 .

^ Jump up to: a b Ed Stastny (November 1992). "Interview with Peter Chung" . Sound magazine . Archived from the original on March 3, 2016 . Retrieved June 25, 2016 .

^ Animated Series Soundtrack at droomusic.com

^ Æon Flux Motion Picture Soundtrack Archived 2012-03-01 at the Wayback Machine

^ 1997 Aeon Flux DVD at TVShowsOnDVD.com Archived 2015-07-13 at the Wayback Machine

^ Denise Poirier (Actor), John Rafter Lee (Actor), Howard E. Baker (Director) (November 22, 2005). Æon Flux: The Complete Animated Collection (DVD). Paramount/MTV.

^ Todd Gilchrist (November 23, 2005). "Aeon Flux: The Complete Animated Collection" . IGN . Retrieved 2013-07-28 .

^ SFAM (March 25, 2006). "CyberpunkReview = Aeon Flux" . CyberpunkReview.com. Archived from the original on 2013-08-08 . Retrieved 2013-07-28 .

^ Voorhees, Patty (January 4, 2006). "The Peter Chung Interview!!!!" . Monican Spies . LiveJournal. Archived from the original on November 4, 2010.

^ Mars, Mark; Singer, Eric (December 1, 1995). Æon Flux: The Herodotus File . MTV Publishing. ISBN 978-0-671-54524-6 .

^ Mars, Mark; Singer, Eric (November 29, 2005). Æon Flux: The Herodotus File . Pocket Books . ISBN 978-1-4165-1697-2 .

^ Kennedy, Mike; Green II, Timothy (May 3, 2006). Æon Flux . Dark Horse Comics . ISBN 978-1-59307-528-6 .

^ "Something Wrong?" at YouTube

^ "Video Game Graveyard" . GameSpot.com . Archived from the original on February 8, 2009 . Retrieved December 6, 2008 .



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Æon Flux / ˌ iː ɒ n ˈ f l ʌ k s / is an American avant-garde science fiction animated television series that aired on MTV from November 30, 1991, until October 10, 1995, with film , comic book, and video game adaptations following thereafter. [2] It premiered on MTV's Liquid Television experimental animation show, as a six-part serial of short films , followed in 1992 by five individual short episodes. [3] In 1995, a season of ten half-hour episodes aired as a stand-alone series. [4] Æon Flux was created by American animator Peter Chung . [5] Each Episode plots have elements of social science fiction , biopunk , allegory , dystopian fiction , spy fiction , psychological drama , postmodern visual, psychedelic imagery and Gnostic symbolism.

The live-action movie Æon Flux , loosely based upon the series and starring Charlize Theron , was released in theaters on December 2, 2005, preceded in November of that year by a tie-in video game of the same name based mostly on the movie but containing some elements of the original TV series.

Æon Flux is set in a surreal German Expressionist style futuristic universe in the year 7698 AD. The setting comprises a bizarre post-apocalyptic dystopian world surrounded by endless barren wasteland, mutant creatures, clones, and robots within the last two separated border wall cities of Monica and Bregna similar to the Berlin Wall , located somewhere in former Eastern Europe after an environmental catastrophe that wiped out 99 percent of the global population. The title character is a tall, sexy, dominatrix scantily-clad secret agent from the city of Monica, skilled in espionage , assassination and acrobatics . Her mission is to infiltrate and destroy the strongholds of the city of Bregna, which is led by her sworn enemy, and sometimes lover, Trevor Goodchild , the technocratic dictator of Bregna. The two cities engage in a futile never ending war for ideological supremacy; while Monica represents a dynamic nihilistic anarchist society where rules don't exist , Bregna embodies a centralized scientific planned Orwellian police state . The names of their respective characters reflect this: Flux as the self-directed agent from Monica and Goodchild as the self-appointed leader of Bregna.

The term Æon comes from the Gnostic notion of Æons as emanations of the God , who come in male/female pairs (here Flux and Goodchild). This juxtaposition also maps accordingly to the characterizations of Eris and Greyface in the Discordian mythos. Further mythic parallels can be drawn in likening Goodchild to Apollo and Flux to Artemis .

Some authors consider the title a reference to the Gnostic notion of an Æon , seeing the influence in the use of a demiurge in one episode, [6] and that the relationship between the main characters parallels the Valentinian notion of a syzygy . [7] Peter Chung, the creator, says the main character's name "started out just being the name of the cartoon and then eventually it stuck, so that's her name." The character Æon Flux was not meant to be part of the series, but MTV pushed to keep her in it, despite Æon dying at the end of the first batch of shorts. Chung intended the cartoon to be a reaction to heroic Hollywood action films, not as a spoof, but rather as a way to make the audience wonder about the wider context of these action heroes and evoke thought. [8] Æon Flux is therefore notable as one of the very few American adult animated series to be a drama rather than a comedy, as well as one of the only such series to air for more than one season.

One peculiarity of the early shorts is the violent death of Æon Flux, which occurs in each installment. According to the commentary by Peter Chung in the 2005 DVD release, she dies in every short episode after the initial six-part pilot because he never intended to make more episodes and felt the best solution was to have her keep dying; by contrast, she only "dies" once in the half-hour series. Often her death is caused by fate, while other times she dies due to her own incompetence. One of the half-hour episodes, "A Last Time for Everything", ends with the original Æon being killed and replaced by an identical clone . (In the episode "Chronophasia", Æon is apparently killed repeatedly by a monstrous baby, but the reality of these events is ambiguous. In "Ether Drift Theory", Æon is suspended indefinitely in an inanimate state, but remains technically alive.)

Chung describes the style of the show as "academic": "I was interested in experimenting with visual narrative, telling a story without dialogue and also trying to create a style of telling a story with animation that wasn't influenced by the usual kinds of things that you see." [8] Æon Flux depicts graphic violence and sexuality , including fetishism and domination . The featurette Investigation: The History of Æon Flux (included on the 2005 DVD release) notes that Peter Chung had worked on Rugrats prior to Æon Flux , and had become extremely frustrated by the limitations of the characters before creating Æon Flux . Chung says the visual style was also influenced by Hergé , Ligne Claire , Egon Schiele and Moebius .

With the exceptions of the exclamation "No!" in the pilot and the single word "plop" in the episode "Leisure", all of the short episodes are completely devoid of intelligible speech . Instead, the sound track employs a variety of sound effects, including sounds such as laughter, grunts, and sighs. It would not be until the beginning of Season 3 that dialogue would be used much more extensively.

The music and sound design for the original television series was created by Drew Neumann , who also created music for Aaahh!!! Real Monsters and The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy . Peter Stone (of Xorcist ) served as assistant sound editor for the original MTV series. The music was later compiled on the album Eye Spy, Ears Only Confidential . The initials "AF" were used on song titles and in the credits to replace the words "Æon Flux" due to the lack of licensing permissions from MTV. The album includes two discs worth of material from the series and also from the defunct original (1995) PC and PlayStation video-game project. A CD, Æon Flux: Music from the Animated Series , was included as a bonus with certain editions of the 2005 series compilation DVD that included 11 songs from the show with dialogue snippets featuring Æon and Trevor in-between the songs as standalone tracks. The extended fully remastered soundtrack Eye Spy: Declassified, Freedom of Information Act was re-released in 2010 as high-quality MP3s with new artwork by Peter Chung and a previously unreleased third volume of music. [9]

A soundtrack is also available for the 2005 live-action film, composed by Graeme Revell . [10]

MTV was the exclusive broadcaster of the series in the United States. In Canada, the shorts aired on MuchMusic and the third season aired a year or so later on the youth-oriented network YTV , in a late-night timeslot, during a period when the network was trying to appeal to an older audience. In Australia and New Zealand, during the early to mid-1990s, the Liquid Television shorts and the first series were shown on the program Eat Carpet on SBS television. In Southeast Asia the third season was broadcast in 1996 via the MTV Southeast Asia channel, which at the time was free to anyone with a satellite dish. In the UK, MTV first showed the shorts and the 30-minute episodes from 1992. In the mid-1990s, the BBC showed the Liquid Television shorts, which included all of the Æon Flux shorts. Locomotion played the third season repeatedly, between 1998–1999 and 2002–2003, in Spanish and Portuguese for Latin America . The series was also aired on Norwegian channel NRK2 , a sister channel to state channel NRK , alongside The Maxx , Phantom 2040 , and The Head in the late 1990s. Teletoon Detour also aired it with The Maxx .

In the lead-up to the 2006 international release of Æon Flux on DVD and the live-action movie, MTV UK replayed the third season of Æon Flux from October to November in 2005. The episodes were played at 2 a.m. on weeknights. MTV Australia followed with replays of the third season beginning in December 2005, scheduled at 1 a.m. on weeknights. The episodes were titled Æon Flux Animation, and they were not played in the original order from 1995.

As of 2009, MTV2 shows Æon Flux shorts as a part of the block MTV2 Legit. During January and February 2011, Æon Flux was aired once again in El Salvador on VH1 , in English language with Spanish subtitles.

The entire series was issued as three VHS tapes between 1996 and 1998, entitled Æon Flux , Mission Infinite , and Operative Terminus . These were later collected in a box set . A few of the shorts also appeared on a Best of Liquid Television compilation around the same time. The first VHS volume (which contained four of the half hour shows, and all of the shorts, sans "Night") was later released in 1997 on a now-out-of-print DVD that was distinct as it did not utilize any menus. [11]

With the 2005 release of the live-action movie, the complete series including the shorts and the episodic series was collected in a DVD box set, which was released on November 22, 2005. [12] The set features director's cut versions of several episodes, with added special effects, and in a few cases, new scenes written by Peter Chung and recorded by the original voice actors in order to improve charac
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