Drux Flux is a 2008 animated short by Theodore Ushev, inspired by Herbert Marcuse’s treatise One-Dimensional Man.
[1] A film without words, Drux Flux uses figurative and abstract imagery to portray people as crushed by industry and progress.
The NFB had asked him to create a 3-D version of Tower Bawher, but finding the work tedious, the filmmaker decided to begin work on Drux Flux instead.
The two films are similar in style, both utilizing Soviet constructivist imagery and Russian classical music score.
You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.This article related to a short animated film of the 2000s is a stub.