
Anti-Hero: Æon Flux's actions are often morally questionable at best and she is generally portrayed as being cold, calculating, and (at least seemingly) heartless, although she does generally complete her missions for the sake of others.This happens to Æon at the end of the episode. And I Must Scream: In "Ether Drift Theory," an ocean of paralytic fluid immobilizes anybody who falls in it but leaves them aware.The blonde agent who assists Æon in "Tide" is named RU-486, whose name comes from an abortifacient pill.The other three "heroes" in War are Vaarsche Lockney, Romeo Svengali, and Donna Matrix.

AEON FLUX ANIME NAVEL PURGE SERIES
A live-action reboot series has been announced for Paramount+.
AEON FLUX ANIME NAVEL PURGE MOVIE
A licensed tie-in game was made to try and link the two, but that didn't end well a movie tie-in comic by Dark Horse Comics was a little more successful at capturing the feel of the original show, however.

The show was made into a live-action movie in late 2005 starring Charlize Theron, in which the plot, characters, themes and artistic style were unrelated enough to the original series to cause the original creator to feel humiliated when he saw it. Although creator Peter Chung is South Korean, the series is considered more in the spirit of Euro animation. The original series is often erroneously categorized as anime. The episodes tend to be fairly disconnected from each other, and center on the two main characters' (Æon and Trevor) interactions, political and personal, and the themes surrounding them. Her arch-nemesis and lover, Trevor Goodchild, is also a main character a morally-ambiguous totalitarian ruler attempting to be a benevolent dictator. The actual content proves even stranger than the art - our lead character is a highly self-motivated secret agent doing spywork (or possibly just sabotage in the name of anarchy), and is Stripperific to pretty much the greatest conceivable extent. The early shorts had no spoken words to speak of, unless you count a single "plop." As a whole, the show was a thorough deconstruction of action hero tropes and cliches. The episodes would attempt to use the art style to further the viewer's interest as opposed to wordiness. One of the most enduring images of the series is that of a human eye staring at a fly that is trapped in its eyelashes. The art style is a strange combination of Expressionism, Cyberpunk, and Gnosticism.

Possibly the best way to describe Æon Flux is that if you had ever seen it before, you would be able to recognize it immediately. Æon Flux (1991-1995) is probably the fourth-best known example of this type of series (after Beavis and Butt-Head, Daria, and Celebrity Deathmatch). Throughout the 1990s, MTV regularly produced animated programming and fronted some experimental animation.
