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Rewind: Some Girls Are Badder Than Others

In 'Aeon Flux,' Charlize Theron joins a long list of butt-kickin' women on film.

In "Aeon Flux," Charlize Theron gets to fight back against The Man in an entirely different way than she did in 2003's "Monster" or this year's "North Country." Rather than shooting misogynistic johns or filing sexual harassment suits, she joins the elite ranks of black-clad, butt-kickin' cinematic superbabes. In honor of this live-action cartoon, we now present our highly subjective Top 10 list of cinematic women you don't wanna cross.

10. Selene in "Underworld"

"Underworld" (2003) isn't a great movie. Heck, it's not even a good movie. And yet the promise of next year's sequel, "Underworld: Evolution," fills us with glee for one simple reason -- the prospect of more footage of a goth Kate Beckinsdale as death-dealing vampire Selene doing battle against the evil Lycans and looking absolutely perfect while doing it. A plot would just be gravy.

9. Leeloo in "The Fifth Element"

Luc Besson's 1997 sci-fi thriller features Milla Jovovich as the titular, elemental force, the embodiment of life and love personified as a really cute, really strong orange-headed girl who teams with a cabbie (Bruce Willis) to battle no less than the essence of Evil. While Leeloo is initially clumsy with her powers, we'd feel confident fighting alongside her -- even if we'd constantly be distracted by how frickin' adorable she is.

8. Mystique in "X-Men" and "X2"

Watch the evolution of "Aeon Flux," from the 12-minute pilot to the first episode to a scene from the film, only on Overdrive.

There's nothing more attractive than confidence. A strong sense of self can go a long way in compensating for physical drawbacks such as thinning hair, shortness or, say, blue scales covering one's entire body. In the "X-Men" movies (2000 and 2003), the Brotherhood of Mutants' shape-shifting member, Mystique (Rebecca Romijn), not only holds her own against the likes of Wolverine -- she does so while naked. You try fighting an invincible scrapper with adamantium claws while wearing no clothes (and still looking great). Bet you can't.

7. Xenia Onatopp in "Goldeneye"

Picking just one battlin' "Bond Girl" (villain or sidekick) is a difficult task. You've got your Pussy Galores, your Honey Riders, your Kissy Suzukis. But if there's one Bond babe that we'd both love and hate to tussle with, it's gotta be Xenia Onatopp (Famke Janssen) from 1995's "Goldeneye." This lusty Russian assassin revels in the glory of vanquishing her opponents by crushing them with her mighty thighs. No more comment.

6. Ursa in "Superman II"

Clad in a black leather jumpsuit with strategically placed slits, Kryptonian villainess Ursa (Sarah Douglas) finds more than liberation in the super powers she gains when released from the Phantom Zone in "Superman II" (1981). She fries snakes with heat vision, arm wrestles rednecks through walls and flattens the Man of Steel with a manhole cover. She also acquires super-cattiness, as she slinks into the Daily Planet and, sizing up Lois Lane, sniffs, "What an undemanding male this Superman must be." Mrowww!

5. Varla in "Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill!"

"Ladies and gentlemen ... welcome to violence!" So begins Russ Meyer's masterpiece, the 1965 feminist manifesto (albeit of the Valerie Solanis variety), "Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill!" Go-go dancing, Jaguar-driving, cat-fighting, man-bashing supervixens Rosa, Billie and Varla aren't exactly out for vengeance -- they're just generally angry and bored. But pity the poor straights who get in their way. While all three Pussycats are forces to be reckoned with, it's the judo-chopping Varla (Tura Satana) who leaves the biggest imprint.

Exclusive "Aeon Flux" Photos
"Aeon Flux" Photos

Photos from the animated series"Aeon Flux" comic book issue #1 previewIn Focus: Charlize Theron

4. Catwoman in "Batman Returns"

No disrespect to Halle Berry -- no, on second thought, all disrespect to Halle Berry, as her embarrassing, 2004 fashion-victim Catwoman wouldn't last five seconds in the litter box with Michelle Pfeiffer's anti-heroine in 1992's "Batman Returns." Master of whips, claws and double-entendres, Selina Kyle has Batman (Michael Keaton) wrapped around her little paw as she fights both male chauvinism and female submissiveness.

3. "Coffy"

Pam Grier never made a movie in which she didn't kick butt in one way or another, but in 1973's "Coffy," she's at the peak of her badassedness. Sent into a frenzy by the overdose of her younger sister, Coffy goes on a one-woman rampage against dope dealers, pimps and gangsters. In true gritty '70s fashion, the film's violence is visceral and brutal, and the statuesque Grier towers over the few contemporary female vigilantes of the time. "Coffy" just slightly edges out 1974's semi-sequel, "Foxy Brown," in which Grier hides a revolver in, yes, her afro.

2. Yui Hsui Lien in "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon"

Martial Arts master Michelle Yeoh has done battle in dozens of films, starting with "Yes, Madam" in 1985. But most people know her best as Yui Hsui Lien in Ang Lee's "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" (2000). Yeoh projects an ethereal nobility and intense sensuality while holding her own against anyone, male or female, wielding a blade.

1. The Bride in "Kill Bill" volumes 1 & 2

Uma Thurman's vengeance-fueled mad mama Beatrix "The Bride" Kiddo tallies up a higher body count in Quentin Tarantino's "Kill Bill" duology than our other Top Nine combined. Whether it's plucking out Daryl Hannah's eyeball or facing down a nightclub full of crazy Japanese Yakuza, she's a lethal weapon with unsurpassed style and humanity whose only weakness is revealed by a toy gun fired by her long-lost daughter.

And the list doesn't stop there. We omitted Ripley from the "Alien" movies, Lara Croft, Elektra, Trinity, "Charlie's Angels" redux, Buffy, Alice from "Resident Evil," the prison hellcats of "Caged Heat" and Barb Wire. Okay, Barb Wire? Not so much. But it is a proud heritage to which we happily add Ms. Theron. She may not get another Oscar for playing Aeon Flux, but she's won our hearts -- even if they don't look nearly as good residing on a mantle.

Check out everything we've got on "Aeon Flux."

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