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Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueMTV's classic, surreal, experimental, grotesque, macabre and darkly humorous animation anthology featuring both serialized and one-off segments. The show also features music videos and rare ... Tout lireMTV's classic, surreal, experimental, grotesque, macabre and darkly humorous animation anthology featuring both serialized and one-off segments. The show also features music videos and rare live action and puppet segments.MTV's classic, surreal, experimental, grotesque, macabre and darkly humorous animation anthology featuring both serialized and one-off segments. The show also features music videos and rare live action and puppet segments.
- Récompensé par 1 Primetime Emmy
- 1 victoire et 2 nominations au total
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Wow. Where to begin? Liquid televison was a major factor in my life. Well, entertainment wise at least. I was just barely old enough to start enjoying MTV when this baby aired. I can distinctly remember the varying styles of animation this series brought. From the sci fi realism of Aeon Flux (with her death in every episode), to the live action plastique look of dog boy, L. TV was a gallery of creativity. This show did indeed spawn some of MTV's most popular animation shows as well, like the aeon flux series (a less condensed version that folowed a story, unlike L.TV's one shots), and Beavis and butthead. Kudos has to go to MTV for even showing these twisted toons. It's a shame that L TV is no longer around. Even it's spinoffs (head, aeon flux, beavis and butthead) are no longer around. Still it's nice to see after all these years (8 to be exact) people still remember liquid tv. I highly recommend you try an catch an episode on one of MTV's animation festival weekends. There is a new incarnation of L TV, entitled Cartoon sushi, but to me it lacks what L TV had. It would difinatly suggest you pick up a L TV tape also, it's much more then worth it.
I was 20 when Liquid TV began to be aired in Spain (Tuesday nights 01:00 or 02:00 AM, prime time, eh?), and I remember only a few college freaks and me liked it, specially the variety of animations styles and contents. (I mean freaks because here this series was not broad-casted by MTV, but in TVE2 (like the BBC2), after a cultural program named Metropolis (that is still on air, by the way), so I doubt many Spaniards remember it).
I completely agree with Shawn Watson from Scotland: it was (still is) light years above the average animation series, so is a shame that now that we can buy almost every season of almost every famous TV series in shiny packages with full episodes and extras, this revolutionary show remains unavoidable.
At least most of you can buy the Wet Shorts DVD, unpublished in Spain.
I completely agree with Shawn Watson from Scotland: it was (still is) light years above the average animation series, so is a shame that now that we can buy almost every season of almost every famous TV series in shiny packages with full episodes and extras, this revolutionary show remains unavoidable.
At least most of you can buy the Wet Shorts DVD, unpublished in Spain.
There's no early Beavis and Butthead, no "The Maxx", no dogboy. It's missing some key elements! The stuff that got even bigger later. But even so, if you were a fan of the show, BUY IT! It's still got stuff I forgot about, Stick figure theatre and all. Worth the purchase on DVD for sure...
A brilliant and often demented collection of artists and the then experimental MTV gave us a new look at what animation could accomplish in the '90s. Combining animation, CGI, live-action and puppets, we got anything from 15-second bites to season-length serials exploring the adventures of such characters as bad-a** biker puppet "Winter Steele," pi**ed-off flower "Crazy Daisy Ed," the plastic-haired live action story of "Dog Boy," and those precocious youth "Bobby & Billy," and more than I can even remember. Don't forget this is the show that introduced us to "Aeon Flux," "The Head," and "Beavis and Butt-Head." This show changed my life. Well, sort of.
A regular show on MTv, when it was still on the cutting edge of creativity and non-conformism, Liquid Television featured a series of funny/disgusting/dumb/ingenious/disturbing shorts, mostly animated cartoons, but quite a bit of CGI, simple drawings, etc.
When I first went to college in 1994, this was on of the shows my friends and I would stay up to watch. It's bound to be remembered as an essential part of the Gen-X subculture (if you want to call it that).
Liquid Television is best known as where Mike Judge got his big break, with a demented little cartoon about two stupid losers named Beavis and Butthead, which everyone knows went on to have their own show (and equally important part of Gen-X) and eventually a feature length film. Judge, of course, went on to make "King of The Hill", one of the most popular shows on TV today.
During a time of great originality and artistic expression, Liquid Television was a testament to the fact that people can and do understand new ideas and appreciate them. Unfortunately, it is long gone and probably would not be appreciated in today's mass-produced, assembly line, politically correct media.
When I first went to college in 1994, this was on of the shows my friends and I would stay up to watch. It's bound to be remembered as an essential part of the Gen-X subculture (if you want to call it that).
Liquid Television is best known as where Mike Judge got his big break, with a demented little cartoon about two stupid losers named Beavis and Butthead, which everyone knows went on to have their own show (and equally important part of Gen-X) and eventually a feature length film. Judge, of course, went on to make "King of The Hill", one of the most popular shows on TV today.
During a time of great originality and artistic expression, Liquid Television was a testament to the fact that people can and do understand new ideas and appreciate them. Unfortunately, it is long gone and probably would not be appreciated in today's mass-produced, assembly line, politically correct media.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesSeveral segments on this series later became series of their own, including Beavis et Butt-Head (1993), Aeon Flux (1991), and Office Space (1992), which was later transformed into the movie 35 heures, c'est déjà trop (1999).
- Citations
Art School Girl of Doom: Oh, that is SO realistic!
- ConnexionsFeatured in E! Animation (1994)
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- How many seasons does Liquid Television have?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Durée30 minutes
- Couleur
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