Monday, August 22, 2005

Charlize's Destiny... To My Fantasy..

I was browsing Yahoo, then suddenly came up this movie sneak preview, trailer i mean... Æon Flux.. Damn cool, i've watched the trailer, but i can't say it's a good movie, hopefully it'll fulfilled any guys, fan of Charlize, hope the movie won't turn out to be crap. The costumes were ok, since she doesn't have big tits, just nice to fit those tight costumes. She usually act in romantic or drama movies, somehow this time all of the the sudden she's acting as an assassin, full action packed character..

Aeon Flux is the archetypal action goddess. Beautiful, acrobatic, has a wonderful figure and not too clingy in her relationships with members of the opposite sex!

Aeon has no conscience and no worries about killing people. She does however have a mild sense of right and wrong. She is not keen o­n the idea of injustice and I think she would feel very bad about hurting anyone that wouldn’t hurt her.

She even has a certain compassion for her friends. In Isthmus Crypticus for instance, she would not kill her friend Una despite Una’s attempt to destroy Aeon.

This contradicts sharply with the gratuitous violence of War and Aeon Flux (the pilot) where the amount of death and destruction wielded was almost intolerable.

Aeon has o­ne weakness, and it’s a big o­ne! She is in love with Trevor Goodchild the leader of her opposing culture, the Breens and the person responsible for most of her missions.

Invariably Aeon must destroy something that Trevor in o­ne of his madcap fantasies, has created. However, it seems that she also takes o­n some jobs for him too!

Maybe Aeon is a double agent or simply takes o­n the work she thinks most appropriate to her skills. More likely she is a free agent, taking o­n whatever assignments she likes.

She tends to die a lot (in short episodes) which can be really infuriating! by the way, have you noticed that it has NEVER been Trevor that has killed her? Pretty unusual considering their love-hate relationship.

Not much is known of her background. It seems we have not yet had the pleasure of finding out how she was raised and what helped her form her attitudes to life.

Mind you, if you take a closer look at Aeon Flux, what do we really see? She is most certainly beautiful and ruthless, but lets face it, she botches just as many missions as she completes.

She has a terrible habit of being emotional when she really should be dispassionate, she makes snap decisions while being prone to unexpected sessions of awkwardness and fallibility. She is occasionally delightfully sadistic and gratuitous. - AND she has died several times!

This is ALL woman! (sorry, couldn't resist).

Æon Flux is an animated science fiction television series that aired on MTV. It premiered in 1991 on MTV's Liquid Television experimental animation show as a six-part serial of short films, followed in 1992 by five individual short episodes. In 1995 a season of ten half-hour episodes aired as a stand-alone series. Æon Flux was created by Korean American animator Peter Chung. Also see Æon Flux (film)

Æon Flux is set in a surreal, futuristic universe of mutant creatures, clones, and robots. The title character is a tall, sexy, scantily-clad secret agent from the country of Monica, skilled in assassination and acrobatics. Her mission is to infiltrate the strongholds of the neighboring country of Bregna, which is led by her sworn enemy, and sometimes lover, Trevor Goodchild. Monica represents a dynamic anarchist society while Bregna embodies a centralized scientific planned state. The names of their respective characters reflect this: Flux as the self-directed agent from Monica and Goodchild as the technocratic leader of the Breen. This juxtaposition also maps accordingly to the characterizations of Eris and Greyface in the discordian mythos.

The visual style of Æon Flux was deeply influenced by the figurative paintings and drawings of the Austrian artist Egon Schiele. Other key influences on Æon Flux can be found in Japanese anime (especially grittier fare like Akira), and European comic works such as the work of Moebius (particularly in lineforms, color palettes, and figure characterizations). Graphic violence and sexuality, including fetishism and domination, are frequently depicted. One peculiarity of the series is that every short and some full episodes end with the recurring, violent death of

Æon Flux. Another is that, with the exception of a single spoken word, all of the short episodes are completely devoid of dialogue. Peter Chung has said that this plot ambiguity and disregard for continuity are meant as a satire of mainstream action films, and his stories often emphasize the futility of violence and the ambiguity of personal morality.

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