

And the Hunger Force’s faltering attempts to stop it will lead them into the mystery surrounding their origins and their bizarre connection to a mad scientist known, naturally, as Dr. Monitoring the trio’s progress from outer space is a bizarre constellation of pseudo-adversaries with their own agendas: the Space Invader-esque aliens Ignignokt and Err two Christmas-treeish denizens of Pluto, Oglethorpe and Emory a crazy robot dubbed the Cybernetic Ghost of Christmas Past and a psychopathic watermelon slice named, appropriately, Walter Melon, along with his drumming sidekick, Rush’s Neil Peart.Ĭhaos predictably-and unpredictably-ensues as the Insanoflex comes to life with Carl strapped unceremoniously aboard.

What they don’t realize, however, is that the activated Insanoflex will morph into a civilization-destroying robot. Thus the Aqua Teen Hunger Force’s quest for the key to the Insanoflex commences. One problem: It’s missing a computer control panel. Master Shake, in particular, hopes the device will turn him into an irresistible sex machine (never mind that we never see any female shakes). The plot, such as it is, goes something like this: Frylock, Master Shake and Meatwad have purchased one Insanoflex universal weight-lifting machine from their irascible, slobbish (and human) neighbor, Carl. (And, in case you’re wondering, the characters are not teens, have nothing to do with water, nor are they hungry or forceful, really.) Now the creators of these fast-food antiheroes hope to parlay that underground popularity into a bigger audience via the big screen.
#BLINKING COLON FACER CREATOR SERIES#
But since debuting on cable TV in 2000, the anthropomorphic trio of Frylock, Master Shake and Meatwad have become unlikely cult favorites on the Cartoon Network’s Adult Swim series Aqua Teen Hunger Force. If you think a goateed box of French fries, a large shake and an amorphous mound of ground beef are unlikely candidates for animated stardom, well … I’d have to agree with you.
