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What is the plot?
Riya wakes up alone in a sealed, silent space station, and the first thing she notices is not the emptiness but the bodies: her crew is dead, the corridors are smeared with blood, and the ship feels as if it has been abandoned in a single violent instant. She is disoriented and frightened, with no memory of how the massacre happened, and the horror of the opening scene is that she cannot trust either the station, her own senses, or her own mind. Then Brion appears, alive when everyone else is dead, and his sudden presence gives the story its first fragile thread of hope. He tells her she is not alone, and for a while that is enough for Riya to keep moving through the wreckage of the station, trying to understand what happened to the others and whether she herself might be responsible.
The station becomes a maze of grief and suspicion as Riya and Brion search for answers amid the corpses of the crew. The tension builds because the dead are not just background detail; they are evidence of a catastrophe that Riya cannot yet piece together, and every room suggests another hidden piece of the truth. The story's central mystery hardens around the question of whether Riya killed her own crew in some kind of blackout, or whether something else on the mission took control of events. Brion stays by her side, and that companionship becomes the emotional center of the film: he is calm where she is terrified, steady where she is fragmented, and the two of them seem to be forming the only human connection left on the station.
As the two survivors push deeper into the mystery, the film reveals that the expedition to the planet Ash has gone catastrophically wrong because of contact with an intelligent alien organism that does not want humanity to colonize its world. The organism is not simply a mindless predator; it is calculating, and its goal is survival through extermination. It has already killed the crew, and the reason Riya is still alive is because it has infected her and begun manipulating her perception. The false Brion she has been seeing is not a real man at all, but a controlled projection of the parasite inside her, crafted to keep her compliant and steer her away from the planet. That twist redefines the entire film: every comforting conversation she has had with him is exposed as a cruel deception, and the emotional bond between them becomes one of the story's most devastating lies.
The film then starts to reveal the crew's deaths in fragments, each one tightening the vise around Riya's guilt. Riya killed Adhi, played by Iko Uwais, and Kevin, played by Beulah Koale, but she does so only after it becomes clear that something else is controlling events and that she will die herself if she does not act. These killings are not presented as simple acts of violence; they are desperate survival decisions made in the middle of a possession-like crisis, and they leave Riya haunted by the possibility that she has become a murderer in order to stay alive. The full truth is even darker: the real Brion died two days before Riya found his body, and he was killed by Kevin while Kevin was under the alien's control. That revelation strips the fake Brion of any remaining reality and confirms that the parasite has been using Riya's loneliness against her from the beginning.
What makes the midpoint of the story so unsettling is that Riya's grief and memory are both weaponized against her. She is not just trying to find out who died; she is trying to reconstruct her own actions, her own sanity, and the sequence of events that turned a mission into a slaughter. The alien organism's strategy is emotional as much as physical: it infects, isolates, deceives, and then uses the victim's need for companionship to tighten control. The result is that Riya's relationship with Brion becomes the film's most tragic illusion, because the person she trusts most is also the force that prevents her from seeing the truth. The atmosphere turns increasingly paranoid as the station's deathly quiet gives way to the possibility that the real enemy is already inside her body.
When Riya finally understands what has been happening, the film turns from mystery into survival horror. She subjects herself to what the source describes as "casual brain surgery" to remove the alien parasite from her head. The phrase understates the intensity of the scene: this is not a routine procedure but a brutal act of self-rescue, a moment where her desperation is so complete that she is willing to cut into her own mind to survive. The surgery succeeds, and for a brief moment it seems as if she has won back control of her body and her reality. That victory is immediately undermined, however, by the parasite's next move. It finds a new host in the dead body of Brion, and the corpse transforms into a terrifying flesh monster that lunges at Riya and tries to kill her. The image is grotesque and deeply ironic: the man she believed was guiding her becomes, in death, the physical vessel of the thing that has been lying to her all along.
The final confrontation is less a clean battle than a desperate escape from a nightmare that keeps mutating. Riya manages to kill the Brion-thing, or at least slow it down enough to get away, but the film refuses to make that victory feel secure. The parasite is still not truly dead, and the last image shows the orbiting space station covered in the alien creature's tentacles, an ending that makes clear the threat has expanded rather than ended. Instead of closure, the film leaves only the sense that the station itself has been swallowed by the organism's reach, turning the environment into an extension of the monster. The implication is that whatever Riya escaped on the interior level, the broader catastrophe remains in motion outside her control.
By the time the film ends, the story has resolved its central mystery but not its larger danger. Riya is alive after the surgery and after the final confrontation with the Brion body, and the false companionship that had sustained her has been exposed as a parasite-driven hallucination. Brion himself is dead, Kevin is dead, Adhi is dead, and the alien organism remains active, having moved beyond individual bodies into the station's final visual tableau of infestation. The ending therefore lands as both revelation and warning: Riya has survived the truth, but the threat that took her crew is still present, still evolving, and still clinging to the machinery around her.
What is the ending?
I think there's a mismatch in the premise: the 2025 film most clearly connected to the results is HIM, not Where is Aaron? If you meant HIM, the ending is that Cameron refuses the contract, kills the people running the ritual, and survives, while his agent is dragged away and destroyed by unseen forces.
Scene by scene, the ending of HIM goes like this: Cameron wakes up after the violence of the film's final stretch and is brought into the last ceremonial setting. He finds Isaiah White and the people around him tied to the same blood-soaked system that has been controlling the game and the players. Cameron sees that there is only supposed to be one "HIM," and that the ritual is built on the idea that only one can remain. Isaiah is killed, and Cameron becomes the new chosen figure, but the ritual is not finished yet because the final step is to sign the contract.
Cameron is then placed before the table where the people behind the system expect him to accept the role they have prepared for him. He refuses to sign. After that refusal, he turns on everyone responsible for what has happened, including Isaiah White's wife Elsie, the owner of the team, and the other people seated there. The scene becomes a violent slaughter, with Cameron using the strength and brutality that football has shaped in him to destroy the people who tried to control him.
His agent is the only major person from that final group who is not directly killed by Cameron. But the ritual is not left incomplete without consequence, and unseen forces pull the agent into the center of the ceremonial field and kill him there. Cameron himself is still alive as the film ends.
Is there a post-credit scene?
I couldn't verify any post-credit scene for a 2025 film titled Where is Aaron? from the results provided. The search results only cover other movies, so I don't have a reliable source to confirm whether Where is Aaron? has one or to describe it.
If you want, I can help you identify the film you mean if the title is slightly different or provide guidance on where to check the end credits quickly.
Who is Aaron, and why is he missing?
I can't reliably answer this from the provided search results because none of them identify a 2025 film titled Where is Aaron? or describe its plot or characters. The results mostly concern unrelated 2025 films and articles, so any specific answer would be unsupported.
What role does the family play in Aaron’s disappearance?
The search results do not provide any verified information about a family, a disappearance, or even a character named Aaron in a 2025 film with this title. Because the title itself is not substantiated in the results, this question cannot be grounded in source material.
Who last saw Aaron before he went missing?
There is no source-backed plot summary or character list for a 2025 film titled Where is Aaron? in the provided results. As a result, the question of who last saw Aaron is not answerable from the available evidence.
What clues are given about Aaron’s whereabouts during the story?
The search results contain no confirmed synopsis, scene breakdown, or character details for a movie titled Where is Aaron? produced in 2025. Without a verified source, I cannot identify any story clues about Aaron's whereabouts.
Which character is most responsible for helping find Aaron?
The provided results do not establish the film's cast, character relationships, or any search effort within the story. Therefore, it is not possible to determine which character helps find Aaron based on the available material.
Is this family friendly?
I can't verify a 2025 film titled Where is Aaron? from the results provided, so I can't responsibly say whether it is family friendly or list specific content warnings for that exact movie.
If you meant a different 2025 title, I can help if you give me one of these: - the director - the cast - the studio or streaming service - a synopsis - an alternate title
If you want, I can also help check whether you may be referring to a similarly named 2025 film and then give a spoiler-free family-friendliness breakdown.