Wow, just wow. We live in AMAZING times for sci-fi. The quality of the movies these days is just incredible. For years now CGI has been honing and improving, but instead of marvelling at superb bits of CGI in a film we are now totally immersed in an incredible and REAL world of atmosphere. I've been looking at some trailers for upcoming films (Bladerunner, Star trek etc) and the whole mood and feel are marvellous. Everything has moved on so much since we were all amazed by Terminator 2.
I feel so fortunate to be living in this time, when Sci-fi films are SOOOOOOOO good.
Comments
When i think of great sci fi I think 2001, Alien, The thing, Blade Runner, Terminator, Star Wars....
I havent seen a sci fi film in the last decade I would put up against those.
Sorry to be grumpy but I don't like much new sci-fi. To me it's all glossy overblown CGI that has little real effect, as far as the story goes.
I'm really not looking forward to the new Bladerunner. The original was one of the Great Films to me... but going by Hollywood these days, the new one might turn out to be just the usual shallow nonsense. (I'm not 100% against though, they might do this one properly I suppose...)
Interstellar, The Martian and Moon all jump immediately to mind as excellent sci-fi movies which are almost universally liked. All of them are much, much more than visual effects. Personally I really liked Sunshine as well but that one seems a bit divisive. There are plenty of modern movies that are turkeys (as with 80s/90s movies) but I think, as works of cinema, the best stand alongside the old ones coloured by nostalgia, if not in front.
Do the Marvel movies count as sci-fi? They have space in them. The first Iron Man was pretty amazing, ditto the first Avengers. The Guardians of the Galaxy movies are definitely sci-fi and much loved.
The Expanse TV series is another fine example, albeit not a film.
Other films like Sunshine, Ex-Machina, Inception, Gravity really do stand shoulder to shoulder with those earlier classics.
On the subject of modern sci-fi I saw Jupiter Ascending a few days ago. Good cast (Mila Kunis, Eddie Redmayne, Channing Tatum, Sean Bean...) and great writer/directors (Wachowskis...I love Sense8) come together to create a steaming pile of expensive, childish horseshit.
Rogue One - was the best Star Wars film since the originals IMHO (better IMNSHO as it wasn't as focussed on the kiddy audience)
Agree on Arrival, simply brilliant ! (Gravity was a bit of a chick flick tbh, though a 3D Sandra Bullock in her scanties is still a great cinematic experience )
I am looking forward to new Blade Runner (yet to catch up with Alien Covenant, but it's on the list)
Feedback
Interstellar, Inception, Arrival, Looper, Gravity, Under The Skin, Children Of Men, Moon, Serenity, new Planet of The Apes movies, both Guardians of the Galaxy films.
The new Star Wars films cant match the impact of the original but are decent sci-fi movies in their own right, considering they have now run to 14 movies the consistent quality of the Marvel movies is exceptional.
I'd like to add Moon and District 9 and Wall-E as some decent scifi films in the last decade.
From what I understand Fifth Element was born of the fact that he couldn't make Valerian with the film tech of the day... So this could be a visually stunning and totally weird film which I'm definitely looking forward to.
While it's easy to pick films from multiple decades to say sci-fi was better there have been good films, in the same way that stinkers were around in the 70s 80s and 90s Mystery Science Theatre 3000 would not have had nearly enough material otherwise.
Feedback
Some decent ones mentioned above, I really liked Moon. Time Lapse & Timecrimes are excellent films.
(No significant spoilers.)
Interstellar was a bit disappointing to me. The plot of the first half was excellent, so were the effects (largely non-CGI apparently). But in the second half, the Hollywood-style action bit when they had to save the Station by quickly docking with it while spinning was just stupid. Why did it start descending into the stratosphere? (Apart from a fake plot thing to hurry up the action.)
So to me that film has to be - half brilliant, half pants. I don't usually do the Armchair Director thing, but in this case I was really annoyed the filmmakers threw it all away in the second half.
But here to each is his own...
Agreed! One of my favourites too.
Loads of great ones mentioned. The only one that's come to mind that hasn't been mentioned is 'Attack The Block'. Not exactly in Blade Runner territory but a good watch if you haven't seen it. Less so, World's End and Paul (both Simon Pegg).
There are a ton of 50s/60s/70s B-movies that were made very watchable by being the film in Mystery Science Theatre 3000 - although I think I'm stretching the definition here.