List of Æon Flux episodes
This is a list of all episodes in the animated TV series Æon Flux.[1] The first two seasons are devoid of speech and purposely lack continuity, as Æon dies in every episode.[2]
Series overview
Season | Episodes | Season premiere | Season finale | DVD Release | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Season 1/Pilot | 6 (condensed into one episode on DVD) | September 1991 | 13 February 2005[3] | ||
Season 2 | 5 | September 22, 1992 | November 24, 1992 | 13 February 2005 | |
Season 3 | 10 | August 8, 1995 | October 10, 1995 | 13 February 2005 | |
Season 1/Pilot (1991)
Each of the six episodes in the first season was originally broadcast as a 2-minute segment of Liquid Television. On home media releases they are compiled into a single "pilot" episode.
No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1–6 | "N/A" | Peter Chung | Peter Chung | September 1991 | |
The episode starts with Æon catching a fly with her eyelashes. We then cut to an apparent battle between Monican agents and Breen forces, with Æon liberally mowing down dozens of soldiers on her quest to apparently assassinate a Breen Official, though most of them are already sick and dying from a strange disease carried by an azure beetle. As hundreds of soldiers die in the sewers, Trevor Goodchild finds and takes in one of the beetles, hiding it in his finger and carrying it with his lover to the top of the building where Æon's target is sleeping. While going there, Æon sees Trevor and the woman fondling each other, and shows signs of longing for such treatment. As Æon travels on her own path, Trevor uses the infectious toxin in the beetle to formulate an antidote, which he first uses on himself and his lover. Æon has travelled up onto the roof, unwittingly picking up a tack from a loose cable fastening on the sole of her boot. As she prepares to kill her victim, she steps on the tack, stabs her foot and falls from the building to her death. The Monican authorities destroy her body and burn her apartment, while Trevor is hailed as a hero for developing a cure for the virus. In the final part of the episode, a young boy is seen buying a magazine with Æon exhibiting a foot fetish, while Æon goes into a strange heaven where a spirit does to her what she exhibited in the magazine.[4] |
Season 2 (1992)
Each episode of the second season was broadcast as a 5-minute segment of Liquid Television.
No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Gravity" | Peter Chung | Peter Chung | September 22, 1992 | |
As the episode opens, Æon and Trevor are kissing through the windows of their transports, with the former being in a plane and the latter being in a train. As they do, Trevor uses his tongue to open up Æon's fake tooth and place a rolled up picture inside. After the two of them part, Æon spies an industrial vehicle driving past. Æon then retrieves the picture from her tooth to find it is a photo of a fellow passenger, and a suitcase. She climbs out and moves along the side of the plane to spy on the man, who is reading documents from the same suitcase. Æon must jump mid-air to the back of the plane to get inside, but she misses and falls. Realizing her fate, Æon prepares to shoot herself, but is distracted by the industrial vehicle from earlier stopping at the edge of a cliff. The workers pull at ropes to bring something to the surface while an intrigued Æon struggles against wind resistance to keep her binoculars at her eyes. She notices a bridge near the point where she will land, and shoots her grapple at it. At the same time Trevor's train is passing over the bridge and inside he is kissing his Breen lover. While she swings from the rope Æon is again distracted by the men salvaging the object which is obscured from view by the cliff, but is glowing brightly. Æon's distraction leads the rope to loop around her neck. A moment before she can clearly see what the object is, her neck is snapped.[5] | |||||
2 | "Mirror" | Peter Chung | Peter Chung | November 3, 1992 | |
In this episode, Æon is on an assassination mission. She infiltrates her target's home via a maintenance ladder. On her entry she falls from the ladder, and notices she is spied on by a security camera. While walking down a hallway she notices a room where the security camera recorder is being kept, and enters. She goes to destroy the tape but at the last minute decides to review the footage. The picture is faulty because of a loose video jack shorting against an air vent. Æon goes to fix the connection but spills coffee on her gloved arm. Unnoticed by the departing Æon, footage of another intruder previously entering the building plays on the monitor. While washing her arm, Æon accidentally sprays water on herself in the bathroom's shower and spoils her signature hairstyle. Æon then hears gunshots, and evacuates the area to find her target killed. She rushes out of the bedroom, but is then also shot by the assassin. While Æon lies on the floor dying, she looks at the exiting figure in the security monitor, but the image is still distorted. Æon shoots a nearby temperature control knob, disabling the air conditioner. With the air conditioning off, the loose video cable stops shaking, and the security camera picture clears up. Just before she dies, Æon sees the face of her killer on the monitor – Trevor Goodchild.[6] | |||||
3 | "Leisure" | Peter Chung | Peter Chung | November 10, 1992 | |
Æon enters her living quarters to find a container of eggs she was keeping in her refrigerator. But she finds that Trevor, who is in a cupboard, has had them all. Angry, Æon leaves her apartment, but before venturing outside the Monican base, she witnesses another agent fail to successfully complete jumping through a complex climbing frame. Æon steps up to practice jumping through, just as the other female agent walks away, and flawlessly executes the complex routine. Later, she enters a strange base and collects some of the same eggs seen earlier in her apartment. Resisting the urge to leave, Æon breaks one of the eggs and analyses the broken contents under a portable microscope and finds an aggressive infant form of a strange "alien" lifeform. The infant dies as a result of her probing. On her way out Æon is confronted by an adult alien, but she holds up one of the eggs and threatens to break it if the alien attacks her. She runs away, and the alien triggers a grid barrier similar to the one at the Monican training base. Æon begins surmounting it with ease, but the Alien, with its four legs, is far faster and swiftly catches up to Æon, killing her.[7] | |||||
4 | "Tide" | Peter Chung | Peter Chung | November 17, 1992 | |
In the episode, Æon and her red-clad companion are descending from the high floor of a sea base, carrying a key. As the two enter a lift, they are attacked by Trevor, who is easily knocked out by Æon, but not before he pushes all the lift's buttons at once, sending the lift down through all the levels. She handcuffs him, but drops the floor number attached to the key, leaving her no choice but to go down from level to level. On each floor, Æon shoots up the stairwell to keep a pursuing Breen soldier at bay, tests the key on that floor's locker and shoots a distant sky hook that is attempting to latch on to the railing of a small, distant, water level platform. Each time she exits the lift, Trevor and the red-clothed agent make love, with the agent springing back to either guard Trevor or try to retrieve the number. Æon begins to suspect and sets a trap, exposing the agent's weakness. The agent attacks and apparently kills Æon as she advances, then comes out on the correct floor for the key and finds an odd plug-shaped object in the locker; not knowing what it is for, she discards it. Without Æon to keep him at bay, the Breen guard runs down to the small platform, killing Trevor on the way, and helps the sky-hook get a grip on the platform's railing. Just before the red-clad agent reaches them, the sky-hook lifts up the entire platform, revealing an identical plug attached below it. The base sinks and the agent is left stranded.[8] | |||||
5 | "War" | J. Garett Sheldrew and Peter Chung | Peter Chung | November 24, 1992 | |
This episode focuses on a massive battle between the leather-clad, dark-haired Monicans and the soldiers of Bregna, with Æon Flux in the thick of battle. During the course of the battle, Æon cuts down dozens of guards before she is knocked down by a Breen guard who had been playing dead. Æon sees another Monican agent creeping up on the guard and keeps him distracted with alluring tongue movements. But the Breen sees the agent and kills him and Æon. The Breen makes his way into the battle, slaughtering dozens more attackers, and encounters a long-haired, super-fit Monican agent (called Romeo Svengali in the DVD commentary) with a sword. The Breen tries to shoot the agent down, but the bullet is deflected and the Monican kills the Breen. We then follow the Monican as he opens a way into a heavy-duty prison and heads up into a Breen airship, killing more soldiers before being shot in the chest by a redhead female Breen agent. The track switches to this agent as she infiltrates the base and frees someone who seems to be her lover from his cell. They run, pursued by guards, but are heading towards a pool of grease started when the Monican opened the gate...[9] |
Season 3 (1995)
In its third and final season, Æon Flux became a standalone program with each episode given a half-hour time slot with commercials.
No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Utopia or Deuteranopia?" | Peter Chung | Japhet Asher, Peter Gaffney, Mark Mars and Shari Goodhartz Story by: Peter Chung | August 8, 1995 | |
In the episode, Æon has infiltrated Bregna at a time when Trevor Goodchild has accepted power 'temporarily' from the kidnapped chairman Clavius. Soon, Trevor enacts a policy of 'complete openness', installing cameras all across Bregna and giving him ultimate control over the people. But Gildemere, a Breen soldier loyal to Clavius, is plotting against the new Chairman, guessing rightly that Trevor was the mastermind behind the kidnapping. Trevor's reasons for the coup are two-fold; he gains ultimate power in Bregna, and uses Clavius' body to create an isolated place, locked with a strange ornate key, where he can keep Æon for good, keeping her to himself in perfect privacy. Æon, for her own reasons, allies with Gildemere and finds her way 'into' Clavius, confronting Trevor and leading Gildemere to his leader, allowing him to free Clavius from Trevor's captivity: however Clavius is revealed to be completely insane and Gildemere is forced to kill him. He and Æon then fight and she easily overpowers him. Trevor finds them both near the walled frontier and Gildemere condemns Trevor as a traitor. But Æon uses the key to Clavius to unlock her own underwear and provoke the other soldiers into showing duplicate keys, apparently discrediting Gildemere's claims and opening the way for Trevor to cement his power. But Trevor's wish to keep Æon to himself is not granted, since Æon prepared her escape route beforehand and, though she returns the key to Trevor, flees across the frontier to Monica.[10] | |||||
2 | "Isthmus Crypticus" | Howard E. Baker | Todd French and Japhet Asher Story by: Peter Chung and Todd French | August 15, 1995 | |
Trevor has two humanoid birds held captive, named Seraph-Trevs, the Female of which he is trying to seduce. Meanwhile, another scientist named Ilbren is planning to have his way with the Female, even going as far as trying to employ Æon to capture it and offering the Male in return. Their meeting is interrupted by a mechanical tentacle, which Ilbren fends off with a swarm of robot wasps. The Male Seraph-Trev is securely held in a separate cell, reduced to a state of abject misery by separation from his mate. Æon plans to free them from Ilbren and Trevor's designs, and to do so employs an old friend of hers, named Una, to translate directions to the Birds' chambers. Una is a social misfit like Æon and has apparently fallen in love with the Male Bird, of whom she is sent a picture (it is revealed that the Male seemingly sent out the bird with the picture, perhaps as a call for help). Though distraction to the picture prevents Una from translating the directions in the time she is given beforehand, Æon and Una infiltrate the base anyway. Una guides Æon through the network of tunnels, but then sets out on her own to find the Male when she realises where Æon wishes to go. Ilbren finds and ambushes Trevor, tying him up and making his way to the Female. Trevor breaks free and finds Ilbren with the Female, while Una and Æon are arguing over the Male. Æon blows a hole in the wall dividing the two Birds and the Female rushes to embrace her mate, but one of Ilbren's robot wasp escapes and stings the Female, killing her. The Male, though saddened, takes Una and the two fly off in an ecstatic embrace. Trevor kills Ilbren and, mourning the death of the Female, tells Æon to go to Hell. Æon replies "Will you fly me there?". The episode ends with Una and the Male flying through the clouds, though a small mite from the Male jumps onto Una and bites her, hinting that she will meet the same fate as the Female.[11] | |||||
3 | "Thanatophobia" | Peter Chung | Mark Mars Story by: Peter Chung | August 22, 1995 | |
The episode starts with a pair of boys play-fighting, while another claps to mimic the sound of heavy punches. That boy later flicks a pebble into the path of one of the border turrets, activating it and watching the resulting spectacle. Trevor Goodchild is being pressured by the government into making the border more intimidating, despite his want to make people stay in Bregna through the 'power of ideas'. To this end, he secretly allows Æon to come in and bomb the factory where the parts for the wall are being made. In a parallel and intertwined storyline, two Breen lovers, Onan and Sybil, seek to escape from Bregna into Monica through a gap in the frontier. The escape is almost a success, but one of the turrets shoots Sybil in the back, destroying one of her vertebrae. Now she can only stand up straight when a special ampoule is inserted, though when she takes it out she has otherwise impossible flexibility, making crossing successfully a stronger possibility. When she is forced to work in the factory being bombed by Æon to pay off her medical bill, Trevor takes an interest in Sybil and visits her in the guise of a doctor, manipulating her nerves through the gap in her spine to stimulate orgasm. Jealous, Æon indulges Onan in his sexual fetishes while he visits her to find another way of getting his lover across. Eventually, Sybil finds out and angrily refuses Æon's offer of help, telling Goodchild about Æon's secret way into Bregna, and finding out about his resistance to the new border defenses. Trapping a returned Onan in her apartment, Sybil attempts the border crossing again. This time, she avoids the turrets, but before she can pass through the small entrance into Monica, wires trap her legs and robots built with the parts she has been helping to manufacture anesthetize and amputate them, leaving her trapped in Bregna forever. The episode ends with the boys from the beginning fighting each other for real, with the clapping boy sitting nearby, though now his arms are missing, showing that he had tried his stone trick again and been caught by the robots.[12] | |||||
4 | "A Last Time for Everything" | Peter Chung | Japhet Asher, Peter Gaffney, Mark Mars and Peter Chung Story by: Peter Chung | August 29, 1995 | |
By the time the episode starts, Goodchild has perfected a method of copying humans. Determined to put an end to the operation, Æon and a fellow agent Scaphandra, who is a double-agent for Bregna and lost parts of her feet on a crossing and had a hand-transplant to replace what had been lost, cross the border into Bregna. As Æon rushes towards Trevor's base of operations, Scaphandra is captured and taken to Goodchild, who takes a sample of her for copying. Æon comes in, frees Scaphandra and tackles Trevor about the ethics and inner purposes of his operation. Deliberately presenting an opportunity for Trevor, Æon allows him to take a sample of her, though Æon smashes Scaphandra's sample. After Æon leaves, Trevor copies Æon for himself. It is revealed to be a complex plot by Æon to inflict maximum pain on Goodchild by exchanging places with her Copy, toying with Trevor's feelings, then allowing her Copy to kill her. But as she performs her half of the mission, the real Æon begins to lose herself, developing feelings for Trevor and vice versa. But, while she is still herself, she orders her Copy to kill Scaphandra. The Copy carries out her twin's request, pretending to cross the border with Scaphandra and hanging back, allowing the turrets to cut down her treacherous partner. It is then that the real Æon, who now looks and dresses very differently from her old self, comes and confronts the Copy. The two Æons, reluctantly, go to perform the border run and Trevor, not wanting the Æon he has come to love to die, orders the turrets to be deactivated. The two Æons do part of the run, then, as Trevor watches in horror, the real Æon stops and allows the turrets to shoot her, just before they are shut down. The episode ends with Trevor cradling Æon's body, shedding tears, while the Copy escapes back into Monica.[13] | |||||
5 | "The Demiurge" | Howard E. Baker | Steve DeJarnatt, Peter Chung, Michael Ferris & John Brancato Story by: Peter Chung | September 5, 1995 | |
The story starts with a battle between Monican agents and Breen forces. Æon and the Monicans had captured an astral being called the Demiurge, which is threatening to dangerously warp people's view of the world, and are preparing to launch it into space. Trevor is determined to stop them, believing that the Demiurge will ensure a lasting peace for humanity. The rocket is successfully launched after a long and costly battle, but not before the Demiurge instils parts of itself in earthly Avatars: a cat, a bird and a resurrected Monican agent named Nader. Over the course of the episode, the three Avatars meet different fates: the bird is captured by Æon in a Monican morgue and apparently vanishes, the cat is nearly killed by Nader's lover Celia, who was obeying her lover's last request to her, but prevents its death only to fade when alone, and Nader is taken to a Breen base for experimentation, where he begins to show signs of pregnancy. Æon has gone to her apartment, an unstable structure supported by a single cable, and seen Nader's condition. Celia, apparently wanting to steal the Bird Avatar, infiltrates the home and is killed by Æon, without the assassin even seeing whom she has killed. Æon goes to kill Nader's 'baby', but is too late to stop Trevor extracting it; it is a new humanoid form of the Demiurge. As the Demiurge's power manifests itself in people nearby as extreme positive and negative emotions, Æon and Trevor fight over it as it rapidly grows to maturity, taking on a physical form similar to its host. Celia is resurrected by the Demiurge and carried to safety - taking refuge in Æon's home - when suddenly the supporting cable snaps and the building collapses. The Demiurge is apparently buried in the rubble, but Trevor is sure it is still alive. Æon, despite his protests, assures him that it knows they have its best interests at heart. Eventually Æon saves herself and Trevor by hanging onto a piece of rubble from the structure. The episode ends with Trevor carrying Æon to safety, and Nader, restored to a normal living state by the Demiurge's power, reuniting with Celia.[14] | |||||
6 | "Reraizure" | Howard E. Baker | Japhet Asher Story by: Peter Chung | September 12, 1995 | |
At the start of the episode Æon is preparing to penetrate a Breen prison disguised as a guard, where Trevor is keeping compromising photographs of him and Æon having sex, with the price of their return being a Narghile. Narghiles are a mysterious controlled species, apparently immortal, that produce a memory-wiping drug called 'Bliss'. During her escape, Æon runs into a female prisoner called Muriel, killing her in self defense after being mistaken for a guard. After her escape with the photos, Æon encounters and leaves with a Monican called Rordy. As they drive away from the prison, Rordy reveals himself to have been Muriel's partner, and Æon is afraid to tell him what actually happened, though she does tell him of Muriel's death. Rordy tells Æon that, years before, he and Muriel had taken 'Bliss', and lost their memories. Not remembering who they were or what lives they had had, Rordy and Muriel set out to capture every Narghile alive and launch them all into the sun on a special platform. Through her consolatory actions, Æon and Rordy begin to develop affection for each other. Æon takes the 'final' Narghile up to the platform, only to find that all the others are missing. It transpires that Muriel betrayed Rordy and sided with Trevor, handing the Narghiles over to him and giving him exclusive control over 'Bliss'. Trevor, who was on the platform waiting for Muriel, and Æon fight, which ends with Trevor stealing the Narghile. Æon tells Rordy (who has discovered the compromising photos) about Muriel, and the two have harsh words. Rordy eventually goes up the cable and finds out the truth of Æon's words, then tries to launch the platform, which is still anchored to the ground by a cable: eventually, the platform crashes. Meanwhile Æon infiltrates the prison a second time to find proof for Rordy, but Trevor meets her as she escapes and the two battle a second time, with Æon only just managing to escape along the anchoring cable of the crashed platform. Once at Rordy's home, she gives him the Narghile she stole, but Rordy no longer cares about it all. Annoyed at his attitude, she leaves, then remembers her mission and returns, destroying the photos. But when she looks for Rordy, she finds that he took the Narghile's pill of 'Bliss' as mental suicide. She leaves in a state of misery.[15] | |||||
7 | "Chronophasia" | Howard E. Baker | Peter Gaffney Story by: J. Garett Sheldrew and Peter Gaffney | September 19, 1995 | |
The episode begins with Æon lying on a stone slab, waking from a dream where she was screaming. We then flash back to earlier, where Æon and Trevor are making their individual ways to a Breen research base researching an ancient virus that apparently causes insanity and formed a basic part of early humanity, until they developed an immunity. Æon is cornered by the Breen soldiers near the base, but is sucked down and finds that, although the base has been there for under a month, it looks like it has been derelict for centuries. There, Æon finds a young boy who guides her through the base and eventually shows her a vial of virus, the only intact vial out of a set of five. There is also a giant fanged baby, which appears to have been the first test subject for the virus, stalking the caves. The episode revolves around Æon's continued replaying of events in different ways and eventual encounters with various fatal situations before waking on a stone slab at the center of the cave system in which the base is built. The reality of these situations is uncertain, and the boy seems to have mystic powers, isolating him from the normal flow of time. After her final waking, Æon is met by the boy, who tells her 'To you, I bequeath...my inheritance', causing her to seemingly experience the flow of time. In their final encounter, they are both encompassed by a bright light. The episode ends with a very normal scene, showing Æon in normal clothing taking the 'boy' to a baseball game.[16] | |||||
8 | "Ether Drift Theory" | Robert Valley and Peter Chung | Todd French Story by: Peter Chung | September 26, 1995 | |
Æon and fellow agent and friend Lindze infiltrate a secret base called the Habitat, a place where mutants and artificial lifeforms live in a stable environment, surrounded by a sea of liquid which induces paralysis in any lifeform exposed to it. Lindze and Æon are there both to rescue Lindze's boyfriend and to destroy the facility. Soon after they arrive, Trevor and one of his human experiments arrive, destroying Æon's ship in the process, though the experiment is quickly subdued by a swarm of metal-sensitive wasps. It turns out that Lindze's lover, a scientist named Bargeld, is sick from an artificial disease and has developed a way of changing the composition of the paralyzing fluid around the base, allowing all the people trapped there to swim to safety. Through her actions, Æon destabilizes the environment, much to Trevor's anger, and everyone must work to get out before the paralyzing sea floods the base and traps them all. Bargeld dies before he can escape, and he also leaves behind the 'key' to his device for changing the sea. Æon rushes back to find it as Lindze and Trevor escape. Æon finds the key, but is trapped by the paralyzing fluid and ends up floating in the sea as the base disintegrates. In a final cruel twist, the 'key' nearly slips into the device as it drifts, but just misses and leaves everyone to their fate, Æon included.[17] | |||||
9 | "The Purge" | Peter Chung | Eric Singer Story by: Peter Chung | October 3, 1995 | |
The episode opens with Æon chasing Bambara, a vicious man who frequently causes injury or death to those he encounters. Æon, ignoring his victims, pursues him through a train and onto a building site. Bambara escapes Æon, killing a construction worker in the process, but is captured for Trevor Goodchild. He inserts a strange robot into Bambara through the man's navel and he suddenly loses his darker side, becoming friendly to those around him and quickly befriending an orphan. Trevor says the robot is a 'Custodian', an artificial conscience of his creation which he hopes to implant in all citizens. Æon then meets up with an organization of women who are opposed to Trevor's project, planning to remove the implanted Custodians and bring the operation to an end. Æon goes after Bambara's Custodian, successfully removing it although she is drugged and captured by Breen forces. Trevor meanwhile takes down the resistance movement, while a bomb planted on the train Æon was on explodes, killing the group's leader. Æon then wakes in the middle of a game show, with many of the resistance members implanted with Custodians acting as 'Hostesses' and Trevor being the presenter with two small twin girls. The object of the show seems to be to prove to Æon that she has a natural conscience. It is then that Bambara bursts in, preparing to kill Trevor. Æon pulls a lever that should instigate Bambara's death, but it only shows 'Game Host Trevor' as a complex robot. It is the audience that pulls a lever and opens a trapdoor beneath Bambara, sending him to his death. Æon leaves, assured by her actions that she has no conscience. But, as she leaves, she sees a Custodian imitating her action with the lever.[18] | |||||
10 | "End Sinister" | Howard E. Baker | Japhet Asher Story by: Japhet Asher and Peter Gaffney | October 10, 1995 | |
Trevor has designed a satellite, Aldis B, which will help speed up the evolution of humanity, but could also kill off half the living population of the Earth. Æon, determined to stop Trevor from using the satellite, steals and buries the remote. But, avoiding the search parties, she finds a hibernation pod holding a strange alien with removable eyes, psionic abilities and no breathing, eating or genitals. The Alien is captured by one of the search parties, but saves Æon when its captor throws a fire bomb. Trevor examines the Alien and sees the signs of exposure to Aldis B. He heads off to find the alien's ship, but the Alien escapes and follows him, finding both him and Æon at the ship. Aldis B has killed off everyone on the ship, leaving only the alien, who had been awaiting rescue in its pod. Æon and Trevor make love in the ship, while the Alien watches. The next day, the Alien finds Æon and offers her one of its own eyes, but Æon refuses. Then Æon offers to show the Alien human sexual pleasure. The Alien, either frightened or revolted by the idea, leaves and is captured by Breen soldiers. The Alien and Trevor, after getting better acquainted, head in a special shuttle to the Alien's amazing homeworld, while Æon decides to await his return in the hibernation pod. While Trevor learns the Alien's psionic skills, Æon sleeps through hundreds, maybe thousands, of years. Waking, she finds a strange hive-like city has taken the place of Monica and Bregna, with the entire population being Aliens. Enraged, and finding Trevor trying to fit in, Æon finds the remote for Aldis B and fires it. Trevor, who now has the Aliens' full telepathic power, tells her that the 'Aliens' are what humanity has become, and that Æon has done what he was about to do in their original time: killed off most of the human race. Æon angrily knocks out Trevor and puts him in the hibernation pod, then travels back into the city and sees the surviving or sickened aliens boarding their ship. Realising her folly, Æon returns to Trevor and enters hibernation with him. The pod is picked up by the departing ship and Trevor's voice is heard saying "Go forth and multiply".[19] |
References
- "Æon Flux episode list". epguides.com. Retrieved 11 August 2012.
- "About Aeon Flux". MTV. Retrieved 7 March 2012.
- "Æon Flux box set on Amazon". Amazon.co.uk. Retrieved 11 August 2012.
- From Æon Flux DVD release, disc three, pilot episode
- From Æon Flux DVD release, disc three, episode two (one)
- From Æon Flux DVD release, disc three, episode four (two)
- From Æon Flux DVD release, disc three, episode three (three)
- From Æon Flux DVD release, disc three, episode five (four)
- From Æon Flux DVD release, disc three, episode one (five)
- From Æon Flux DVD release, disc one, episode one (one)
- From Æon Flux DVD release, disc two, episode seven (two)
- From Æon Flux DVD release, disc one, episode two (three)
- From Æon Flux DVD release, disc one, episode three (four)
- From Æon Flux DVD release, disc two, episode six (five)
- From Æon Flux DVD release, disc two, episode eight (six)
- From Æon Flux DVD release, disc two, episode nine (seven)
- From Æon Flux DVD release, disc one, episode four (eight)
- From Æon Flux DVD release, disc one, episode five (nine)
- From Æon Flux DVD release, disc two, episode ten (ten)