The Best Sci-Fi Movies of All Time |
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Archisorcerus
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^ See the original post. It is not "my" list. Plus, if multiple votes are allowed, "other" option is a bit awkward for me. It could have been put, but I preferred not to.
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Steve Wyzard
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Wait just a minute here....
No mention of either Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow (2004) or Dark City (1998)? No "other" option???
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verslibre
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Avatar borrowed freely from many sources. That's one. Another is Alan Dean Foster's Midworld.
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Rednight
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"It just has none of the qualities of your work that I find interesting. Abandon [?] it." - Eno
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Heart of the Matter
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Wasn't Avatar a rip-off of Le Guin's novel The Word For The World Is Forest?
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Guldbamsen
Special Collaborator Retired Admin Joined: January 22 2009 Location: Magic Theatre Status: Offline Points: 23104 |
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Voted for the two Kubrick flicks, Blade Runner, The Thing as well as Brazil. Love all of those intensely.
Btw I caught people talking about The Matrix without commenting on the movies overt religious undertones. This is indeed a ‘Jesus goes karate on ya’-tale combined with the old ‘brain in a box’-scenario. |
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“The Guide says there is an art to flying or rather a knack. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.”
- Douglas Adams |
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Hugh Manatee
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I disagree that it is a teeny story. The story may be very minimalistic in its presentation, but the themes explored are huge. It was really the first movie to explore the concept of where human intelligence came from and where it is taking us.
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I should have been a pair of ragged claws
Scuttling across the floors of uncertain seas |
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moshkito
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Online Points: 17485 |
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Hi, I was there. But in my estimation, what made the film "better" was its PRESENTATION. And many theaters went out of their way to show the film with better sound equipment to help the opening (specially) bombard its way to a film. For me, it was seeing it at the CINERAMA DOME something that folks these days, will never see, and appreciate ... a film in 180 degrees and in bucket seats ... and of course, later, right across the street got to see HAIR at the old Aquarius Theater. There is something about that time and place, where the exploration of sound, space and the arts, was far out, and in many ways, many of the generations after it, have been fed stuff that is mostly commercial material by comparison. I look at 2001 as a poem of sorts ... not much else, and the film itself with a teeny story that makes little sense in its complete nature ... is not as valuable as the way it was presented visually, which is much more enjoyable. It's a bizarre thought of mine, as to how difficult it is to review 2001 for today's audiences, since there barely is any action in the film altogether, and of course it will not be enjoyed as much. But with the original settings and presentations, the film stands up much better, though folks think that a girl screaming or zombies walking is more interesting or entertaining, which I think it the issue. I don't think that any film Stanley Kubrick did is about "entertainment" at all. As such this could be a goof sci-fi film, for its totally off kilter style and view, although I think that considering this a sci-fi film is a bit strange for me. But, I am not, exactly, a sci-fi person for the most part.
Edited by moshkito - March 28 2022 at 20:37 |
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com |
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Heart of the Matter
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Body Snatchers with Donald Sutherland and Leonard Nimoy
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BrufordFreak
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^This. P.S. Still waiting for Bradley Cooper's film realization of Hyperion, my favorite Sci-Fi novel of all-time. Edited by BrufordFreak - March 28 2022 at 20:08 |
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Drew Fisher
https://progisaliveandwell.blogspot.com/ |
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JD
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^Must be a Great White North thing, I love both those classics. I first saw them on late, late night movie channels back when I was gigging. Good Call
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tszirmay
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Of the thousands of sci-fi B movies , two still resonate: Colossus, the Forbin Project (mostly for the unhappy ending) as well as the original the Andromeda Strain (which ended better, LOL)
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I never post anything anywhere without doing more than basic research, often in depth.
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Hugh Manatee
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People these days are so spoilt by CGI and special effects overload in movies these days that it is difficult to remember or consider just how much of a game changer 2001: A Space Odyssey was when it was released. It was the birth of modern sci-fi cinema and gave sci-fi a credibility that it rarely enjoyed before its release. The visuals where dazzling for its time but it also had a story that raised it above the usual monsters from space fare, a story that can be and still is contemplated long after the viewing experience. |
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I should have been a pair of ragged claws
Scuttling across the floors of uncertain seas |
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verslibre
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I saw Ferrara's Body Snatchers in the theater and while its resolution/climax is spectacularly underwhelming, it has a good dosage of the paranoia that 1978's Invasion drips... ...and gorgeous Meg Tilly's scream is EPIC!
I didn't buy the fourth (and hopefully final) version's happy ending. Kaufman's depiction of humans losing the battle to a virus-like foe with various shades of [in]visibility is mind-numbing.
Chalomet looks wooden as heck in every clip I've seen. I'm almost afraid to watch it. A friend who loves the books loved the movie, though.
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Logan
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It's the fourth film adaptation of (or based on) Jack Finney's 1955 novel The Body Snatchers (the other not mentioned is 1993's Body Snatchers, which I also have seen). I like The Invasion, but not as much as Invasion of the Body Snatchers (especially the 1970s version, which I do think pretty much a perfect film -- I've had long discussions about this with BaldJean, I think, or was it Friede?, or both who is much more into the first film). Both with that and The Fly I prefer the later versions. I find The Invasion to be be different enough to be interesting in its own right, and actually if it had been much more like my favourite, the 1978 one, I might have found it quite pointless to watch. Apparently it was supposed to have been more of remake of an earlier Body Snatchers film (the 70s one, I think), but then decided to modernise it and go a rather different way with it. Speaking of films based on novels that have been made multiple times, I finally saw Denis Villeneuve's Dune last night. Maybe, like Tenet, this needed to be seen in the cinema. I got so bored. It ended up feeling like a prequel to me. I wish it had been all one, say three or a and a half hour film rather than two,. I know lots of people, including Lynch, dislike Lynch's adaptation (and there are some better longer edits, I think), but even in any form, I enjoy it more than the recent adaptation. I could compare it to Peter Jackson's Lord of the Rings in a way, which didn't really work for me, and I would rather rewatch the much derided by some Bakshi version. I do suspect that I will like part two of the new Dune more, and even with Lynch's version, I tend to replay the second half more. I have read various reviews stating that Dune should have or deserved to win best picture at the Academy Awards (I don't care much about such awards). The obvious one that would have been worthy in my eyes is 2001: A Space Odyssey, which like Dune is epic, had strong visuals, is cold in its way, and many find boring. I love 2001: A Space Odyssey, but I know various people who consider it to be incredibly dull. To each his or her own. |
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Argo2112
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Lots of good ones here . I voted for Aliens but I could have easily said Blade Runner, Alien, The Thing, Clockwork Orange, Star Wars....
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verslibre
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Tenet = another great Nolan film that suffers outside a theatrical viewing.
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Archisorcerus
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Nice to be agreed here! I'm planning to watch Tenet soon. |
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Hugh Manatee
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If I was to be told I could only ever watch one of these movies again it would be "Brazil", although I must also give props to "Blade Runner", "2001...", "Terminator", "Matrix"... I like "nature of reality" type movies and would have liked to have seen "Total Recall" (the original, not the horrible remake) on the list.
I agree about "Inception" and his Batman films however I thought that "Tenet" was the best film I saw last year, convoluted plot and all.
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I should have been a pair of ragged claws
Scuttling across the floors of uncertain seas |
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verslibre
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It's...gold!
Paul, you got me again! I was reading through, and I realized..
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