Flux: Г†on
The original shorts were wordless. They relied on visual storytelling and surrealist logic. Even when the show moved to a half-hour format, it remained unapologetically intellectual.
Set in the year 7698, the story centers on the eternal struggle between two neighboring city-states: A chaotic, free-spirited borderland. Г†on Flux
Peter Chung’s masterpiece isn’t just a show; it’s a fever dream of transhumanism, fluid morality, and gravity-defying action. Here is a blog post exploring why this cult classic still haunts our screens. The original shorts were wordless
Characters constantly modified their bodies with bionics and genetic engineering. Set in the year 7698, the story centers
The first thing you notice is the art. Peter Chung’s character designs are elongated, sinewy, and impossibly flexible. Æon herself—a secret agent/assassin for the anarchist state of Monica—moves with a predatory grace. The visuals weren’t just "cool"; they were the narrative. The way characters moved and looked told you more about their psychology than a page of script ever could. 2. A Plot That Refused to Hold Your Hand
The surreal world of —originally a series of experimental animated shorts on MTV’s Liquid Television —remains one of the most provocative and visually arresting pieces of science fiction ever created.