| important that she read as a complex and morally ambiguous character. Her sexuality, for instance, is just one element of that; very powerful and ultimately unapologetic.”
In her first action-heroine role, Theron called upon her unique skills as a ballet dancer to bring the character to life. “I was a ballerina for 12 years – it took me that long to figure out why I loved ballet so much. It wasn’t because I liked the technical aspect of it; I liked to get on stage and tell a story. For years, I did that, just using my body. For me, the physical aspect is as important as any line of dialogue.”
“No one else could have played the role,” says
Kusama. “We needed someone who had an incredible physical grace and strength, but not an over-muscular kind of strength. Charlize fit perfectly.”
“Charlize made the stunt work an integral part of the character,” says Hurd. “Her incredible physicality, due to her training as a dancer, let her create a performance from beginning to end, not only in the dramatic scenes, but in almost every moment of action that you see in the film.”
Steeped in the tradition of sci-fi action, “Aeon Flux” presents a future world where nothing is what it seems. Aeon’s assignment is to assassinate Trevor
Goodchild, the leader of Bregna, a seemingly utopian future society with no disease, no hunger, and no war. “When you think of sci-fi, you think of a grimy, dirty, overpopulated future – a world in decay. That’s not the case in ‘Aeon Flux’ – Bregna looks perfect,” adds Hurd. “We created imagery that was perfect to look at. Only later do we reveal that it contains the perfect lie.”
“Aeon Flux” began life as an animated series created by Peter Chung as part of MTV’s “Liquid Television.” In 1991, “Aeon Flux” debuted as a series of six two-to-three-minute short films, then reappeared in 1992 with five more three-to-five-minute shorts. In 1995, MTV aired ten 30-minute animated episodes.
“I’d always wanted to do animation for adults,” says Chung. “I’d seen a lot of animation from Japan and I’d seen a lot of graphic novels from Europe. They were sophisticated in their storytelling; they weren’t about good vs. evil, heroes vs. villains. Those were my main influences as I tried to create something people hadn’t seen before. Aeon isn’t a crime fighter; she isn’t a government agent. She’s not a hero in the classical sense. Instead, she’s a force for personal freedom.”
“I wanted to take the elements that Peter Chung created for Aeon and celebrate them as much as possible – physically, where we could, but also who she is,” says
Theron. “Aeon is a very strong woman, quite a free-thinker, who questions the things happening in the society she lives in. She thinks that this one mission will change her life, but as it turns out, she has to make some tough decisions.”
Chung is thrilled to see Theron bring his vision come to life. “It’s very exciting to see something I worked on such a long time ago to be given a new lease on life and introduced to a whole new audience,” he says.
Bringing this vision to the screen is director Karyn
Kusama, who previously directed “Girlfight,” the critical hit starring Michelle Rodriguez as a young Latina woman using her fists in a fight for personal dignity. “Girlfight” took the 2000 Sundance Film Festival by storm, sharing the Grand Jury Prize at the 2000 Sundance Film Festival and winning the Directing Award in Dramatic Competition. Kusama was also nominated for a 2000 Independent Spirit Award for Best First Feature. Though “Aeon Flux” marks Kusama’s first foray into science fiction, Hurd says that Kusama was just the person to bring this story to the screen. “It’s a perfect combination of material and director,” says Hurd. “In many ways, ‘Girlfight’ was the perfect calling card for this film, because, like Aeon Flux, the character that Michelle Rodriguez brought to life is tough, uncompromising, and larger than life.”
Picture credits: Jasin
Boland. Copyright © 2004 Paramount Pictures. All Rights Reserved. |