The Maxx - A fun retro 90s cartoon about a homeless schizo who thinks he's a superhero, featuring child abuse, r*pe, and Camille Paglia

https://youtube.com/watch?v=_EaQEn81AQQ

https://i.rdrama.net/images/1705675307361511.webp

Did anyone else ever watch this show? I originally saw random episodes, out of order, on late night MTV2 reruns when I was little and it lowkey traumatized me but I kept trying to find it again. It was way too adult a show for me to be watching. This was part of the "MTV Oddities" series and it only ran 13 short episodes and then disappeared almost entirely from the media universe. I've never met anyone else IRL who has seen it, and once or twice if I tried to explain it or describe it to somebody they'd react like it sounded fake. The whole series has this fever dream vibe about it, and if it weren't for the internet I might write it off as something I made up or misremembered.

I found this blog about it but it doesn't entirely do it justice:

Based on a comic, which I am definitely getting my hands on at the earliest opportunity, the cast of characters are all shapes and sizes and animated fluidly and in constantly changing styles. The show is totally surreal, half set in the shared subconscious of the main character Julie. Or maybe it's Maxx's subconscious? Or a collective subconscious? I think you get my point. The ‘real' world of the show is as grim as Mega-City One and haunted by Maxx's antagonist – a serial male feminist who seems to have a telepathic link to Julie's trauma fractured mind.

Throughout the show we explore how trauma in childhood and adulthood have caused Julie's psyche to fracture through the medium of ‘The Outback' an alternate reality that constitutes her subconscious and which seems to have trapped Maxx within itself illustrating their co-dependant relationship. It is a nuanced portrayal of how trauma can force us into self-destructive and risky behaviours and how ignoring and suppressing trauma can damage us unless we can find the strength to confront past events. Control is obviously important to her, both her own and others having control over their own lives as shown in her chosen profession and disdain for “professional victims” and this is a direct and realistic consequence of the lack of control she experienced through her “violation”.

The whole series is on the Internet Archive if you want to watch it. I haven't re-watched it to see how it stands up to my childhood nightmares, but I might do.

32
Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

I watched more of the head one (might just have been called The Head? Alien lives in a guy's massive head) and a little of Aeon Flux.

Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

I haven't seen either of those but I think they're from the same studio, or at least they were part of the same MTV animation block. Aeon Flux was probably the most famous, but I was never interested because it looked like western animation knockoff of anime + generic sexy-girlboss action hero, but maybe I judged it unfairly.

Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

I brought them up because they were all part of the same animation block on MTV, yes.

I never liked Aeon Flux as it was too ugly. Honestly, they all had somewhat offputting styles, but were weird enough to be interesting.

Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

I never thought I would see anyone post about The Maxx here.

Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

I'm full of surprises. :taywine2:

Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

I have all the issues of this comic in a closet somewhere

Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

I think I have this show on my NAS, the comic too but I haven't read it yet. It was weird and had some pretty dark undertones. I miss the kind of weird shit and experimentation we saw in those days across TV, music, etc. Everything feels so streamlined by "the algorithm" and utterly sanitized now. Idk, maybe I'm just going full boomer over here. :marseyboomergenocide:

Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

Things got golden again in the early to mid 10s as the traditional distribution methods were replaced, but they've all been recorporatised and the weirdness commodified again.

It comes in waves, but the corporations eventually adjust until artistic ingenuity finds a new avenue.

Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

I remember the max. Pretty cool. Also around the same time as Aeon Flux which was cool.

Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

Ah, the coomer era. Gone but not forgotten.

Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

Huh? Seems like it's a coomer golden age when it comes to cartoons

Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

What cartoons have you been watching? It's all foidbrained genderblob shit. Nothing for a weary straggot to rest his eyes on.

In my thinking the coomer era was 95-05, and it impacts cartoons, anime and video games. There was a lead-in from roughly '90 and a tail until maybe 2010. Creators were given some freedom, and home media was popping off. Many productions were a total sausage fest. 3D was primitive, and highly stylized.

Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

Oh I was thinking more of the shit perverts make on the internet, not like actually produced cartoons on tv lol

Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

Yeah, online coomershit has only been growing with time, while published coomershit has all but disappeared. I think there's an unexplored connection.

Sometimes it feels like even online coomershit is becoming more foid-centric, though. I wonder what the coomer landscape will look like in five years.

Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

:#marseytedsimp:

Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

Link copied to clipboard
Action successful!
Error, please refresh the page and try again.