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Nerding Day: Insektors šŸŒ­

In the early ā€™90s, computer animation was still in its infancy. Shows like Transformers: Beast Wars and ReBoot by Mainframe Entertainment and the decidedly more Christ-like Veggietales from this period have managed to stick in the public consciousness, but one CGI TV series from the era seems to have slipped out of history: Insektors. Produced by French studio Fantome in 1993, Insektors features all of the classic themes of early ā€™90s childrenā€™s entertainment: bugs, environmentalism, and the forcible conversion of your ideological enemies to your ā€” the only correct ā€” world view.

Starring a walking stick insect named Fulgor (David Gasman, who also voiced Goku in a bunch of Dragon Ball Z movies and has somehow appeared in every game by Quantic Dream), Insektors is the tale of the sunny, color-loving Joyces and their struggle against the villainous Yuks. It was a pretty standard set-up. The Yuks are industrialist bugs who have mined all of the coal out of their side of the planet and are now turning their sights on the abundant flower stalks in Joyce territory. It was very evil, and the exact same business model as most of the showā€™s sponsors.

What do they need all of these resources for? Building giant war machines to collect more resources, for one, but more importantly to throw into a giant furnace to keep their Queen warm. Is Insektors thus a metaphor for the real-world colonialist adventures that have fed the insatiable desires of the metropole through history? Iā€™m going to say that yes, yes it is. Americans want low gas prices and the big insect Queen wants to stay warm. Same thing. Anyone telling you differently is about to throw you into an oven to keep their Queen warm. The oven knows itā€™s the bad guy by the way:

One might ask why the Queen doesnā€™t simply move someplace warmer than the Yukā€™s frigid swamp. First off, maybe she likes it in the swamp. Maybe the swamp has good schools or itā€™s really walkable or something. Second, itā€™s implied that the Queen is in fact so cold because of how evil she is. This suggests that, were the Queen to cease in her quest for domination and destruction, she would be relieved of the very conditions which make it necessary in the first place. Oh, the irony! The cruel, probably not intended, Shakespearean irony!

Meanwhile, the Joyces are sustained by The Great Prism, a magical entity that can spontaneously grow plants. As it turns out, itā€™s rather easy to be pacifistic naturalists when all of your needs are supplied by an omnipotent crystal god. 

The Joyces spend their days embodying Marxā€™s adage of the man in communist society who spends the morning gardening, the afternoon making music, and the evening gathering pollen for the semi-sentient terraforming prism at the center of their culture. And we should follow their example. Letā€™s all work together and worship the prism.

It may seem like the Joyces are carefree layabouts who look like characters from a local exterminator commercial, but they arenā€™t idiots or cowards. When the Yuks start encroaching on their land and cutting down their flower forests to fuel their furnaces, they square up against the invaders with a ferocity that belies their beneficent image, like a drunk guy at Santacon.

Given how Insektors was aimed at young audiences and that it was developed well after the heyday of violent ā€™80s cartoons, Fantome seems to have been interested in portraying conflict in a way that didnā€™t rely on fisticuffs or laser battles. Thus, the Joyces resist the Yuks through technology like Fulgorā€™s Kolor Guitar. Behold:

When strummed, this instrument produces blasts of colorful energy which are harmless to Joyces, yet send Yuks into laughing fits. Rather than kill or maim, these weapons seem to literally convert their targets into peace-loving Joyces. An ethnic bioweapon, yes, but one where you can sincerely add the words, ā€œwait let me explain.ā€

We should really stop to think about this for a minute. Mind controlling weapons were pretty common in ā€™90s cartoons, but they were typically wielded by villains. For one thing, itā€™s dramatic when a hero is turned against their allies. For another, bending the very will and identity of a living being is usually understood as pretty fucking evil. While plenty of kidsā€™ stories end with the villains seeing the errors of their ways and recanting, few of these come to Jesus moments happen because the characters in question got hit by a personality-warping rainbow money shot. I hope. I actually donā€™t remember how Care Bear tummies worked.

The Yuks, those miserable bastards, donā€™t take this subversion of their free will sitting down. They have their own weapons called Koal Juice Guns, which cause depression in any Joyces they hit. Additionally, theyā€™ve got a machine called the Dark Box they toss their incapacitated goons into to turn them back into sad industrialists. Presumably, they could also use it on Joyces to make them into Yuks. Again, the show was just acting out the best-case scenario for its advertisers.

So we have two civilizations ā€” one industrialized and militaristic, the other nature-loving and peaceful. And both of them are armed with weapons that donā€™t outright annihilate their foes, but rather strip them of their very being and make them more like their wielders. Imagine living in this world, where in every conflict with your enemy you risk not just injury or death but the complete reversal of your personality. In their effort to make Insektors less violent, Fantome inadvertently created a vision of a hellish existence where the self is as fragile as the petals of a flower. It seems like something Philip K. Dick would come up with, not Saturday morning cartoon fodder.

Insektors isnā€™t all psychological horror, though ā€” itā€™s also got some interesting worldbuilding. In the episode ā€œPlanet Karbon,ā€ for instance, Prince Acylius of the Yuks has run away to live with the Joyces, preferring their music and color to his peopleā€™sā€¦ toil and misery, I guess. And yes, okay, thatā€™s the exact same thing the show always does, but when heā€™s shown the Great Prism, Prince Acylius touches it and triggers a giant sky beam and booming voice that tells the story of the planet. 

Once upon a time, it seems, the only living things in the world were the Yuks. Then the Great Prism fell from space and introduced color and plants. While most were disturbed by this new presence, a few overcame their fears and were rewarded with the ā€œawakening of their souls.ā€ Which looked like the loading screen for a 1995 CD-ROM encyclopedia.

They developed a new way of life and became the Joyces. This is a fun kind of inversion of the typical ā€œadvancedā€ industrialist society versus the ā€œprimitiveā€ hunter-gatherers. It suggests that the Yuks are the backwards ones, sticking as they do to their timeless plan of burning stuff for fuel until there isnā€™t any left.

That said, what exactly is the message here? That you should embrace novelty? That mysterious and incomprehensible sky shapes are to be trusted without question? Or is the Great Prism meant to stand in for clean nuclear power, perhaps? Was Insektors propaganda meant to get children onboard with fission reactors? Admittedly, probably not. But like all good art, it makes you wonder, right?

Lacking the brand recognition of Beast Wars and the on-trend computer theming of ReBoot, Insektors isnā€™t as well-remembered as its contemporaries. Maybe thatā€™s because of how little of it there was ā€” Fantome only produced 26 episodes, each of which is 12 minutes long. Maybe itā€™s because the characters look like first drafts of the cast of A Bugā€™s Life. Or maybe itā€™s because ā€œInsektorsā€ sounds like the name of a toy line of insect-themed superheroes sold exclusively at K-Mart for a few months in 1990 that six undiagnosed bug fetishists on the Internet are absolutely obsessed with to this day.

Insektors was released outside of its native France in both the UK and North America, and received two different English dubs. I grew up with the North American version, but watching it on YouTube it does seem that the UK version is the superior one even though itā€™s a little less faithful to the original. The voice acting is generally higher quality, and there are a lot of fun little bits that didnā€™t make it to the North American dub. 

For instance, in the NA dub a character complains that heā€™s allergic to flowers when caught in some rapidly-growing plants. In the UK, the line is ā€œIā€™m in the Day of the wretched Triffids!ā€ Itā€™s truly a sad indictment of the state of American education that children of the ā€™90s wouldnā€™t get a John Wyndham joke.

And it isnā€™t just the voices or tenor of the humor that changed across the two versions ā€” each region got different names for all of the showā€™s characters and locations, making the Wikipedia page for the series a real mess. Most of the differences arenā€™t especially notable ā€” the Yuks become Kruds in the UK dub, and Fulgor is named Flynn ā€” but thereā€™s one crucial difference. 

In the UK, the evil Queen Bakrakra was named after a certain medical device. She isnā€™t Queen Krutch, or Queen Kannula, or Queen Kautery. Her name is Queen Katheter. In their effort to make Insektors more amusing to an audience of wry and sardonic children, the UK was, quite literally, taking the piss.

ā€¦

This article was brought to you by our fine sponsor and Hot Dog Supreme: Yossarian, who brainwashes squares with a guitar the old fashioned way: By fuckinā€™ shreddinā€™ it.

7 replies on ā€œNerding Day: Insektors šŸŒ­ā€

Loving these, Merritt.

Like most people, I do not remember most of these things you speak of! Although I did own a copy of TMNT Meet the Conservation Corps.

The only other examples of mind-control wielding protagonists I could come up with were: a) eighties hair metal bands in their music videos turning women in non-stripper professions like office-worker or teacher into burlesque performers and b) beer ad dipshits who magically transform the women in their lives from impediments to their self-destructive debauchery into vehicles for it.

ā€œThis is a fun kind of inversion of the typical ā€œadvancedā€ industrialist society versus the ā€œprimitiveā€ hunter-gatherers. It suggests that the Yuks are the backwards ones, sticking as they do to their timeless plan of burning stuff for fuel until there isnā€™t any left.ā€

Honestly, this is a pretty rad idea and Iā€™d love to see it explored more often without falling into the trap of idealizing an Arcadia-like society.

btw, it baffles me how so many shows, movies, books, etc., have environmental messages and not even one of those sponsors has the ā€œare we the baddies?ā€ epiphany. I wonder how rich people experience media, tbh. What do rich kids and their parents think when they watch a movie or a show that critiques class inequality or generational wealth. The 1% and the rest of us, weā€™re almost like two different species at this point.

ā€œOr maybe itā€™s because ā€œInsektorsā€ sounds like the name of a toy line of insect-themed superheroes sold exclusively at K-Mart for a few months in 1990.ā€
It was Sectaurs and it was 1985. They smelled awful.
https://www.sectaurs.com/the-toys

Grew up with the UK dub, the stag beetle over here was called General Wasabiā€¦ And he uh spoke the way a 90s British man thought the Japanese speak.

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