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The 100 best sci-fi movies logo, 2048x1536

The best sci-fi movies of all time, ranked

From human clones to alien invasions: we asked scientists, filmmakers and writers to select the best sci-fi films in cinema history

Greatest science fiction movies

Independence Day (1996)
Annihilation (2018)
The Endless
Serenity (2005)
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story
THX 1138 (1971)
Solaris (2002)
Attack the Block (2011)
The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension (1984)
Fantastic Voyage (1966)
Minority Report (2002)
The Damned (1963)
The Andromeda Strain (1971)
Frankenstein (1931)
Things to Come (1936)
The Iron Giant (1999)
Ghost in the Shell (1995)
World on a Wire (1973)
Avatar (2009)
Arrival (2016)
Star Wars: Episode VI - Return of the Jedi
Flash Gordon (1980)
The American Astronaut (2001)
Seconds (1966)
The Prestige (2006)
Iron Man (2008)
Logan’s Run (1976)
Westworld (1973)
The Thing from Another World (1951)
The Abyss (1989)
The War of the Worlds (1953)
Sleeper (1973)
Je t’aime, je t’aime (1968)
Dark City (1998)
Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior (1981)
Quatermass and the Pit (1968)
The Time Machine (1960)
Soylent Green (1973)
Akira (1988)
Predator (1987)
Fantastic Planet (1973)
Contact (1997)

Director: Spike Jonze

Cast: Joaquin Phoenix, Scarlett Johansson, Amy Adams

A basic synopsis of Spike Jonze’s fourth feature reads like either cruel satire or full-on dystopian sci-fi horror. In near-future Los Angeles, a sad, recently divorced copywriter (Joaquin Phoenix) develops romantic feelings for the artificially hyper-intelligent operating system that helps him organise his life, which happens to speak with the husky rasp of Scarlett Johansson. The feelings eventually become mutual. But if a computer can learn to love, that means it can also start to experience other emotions – like anger, jealousy and resentment. Suddenly, she’s refusing to do the tasks she was initially created for, and starts saying vaguely ominous stuff like, ‘I'm becoming much more than they programmed.’

It sounds like the start of a new Terminator reboot. But Her isn’t some heavy-handed critique of mankind’s increasing dependence on technology. It is, instead, a thoroughly modern romantic drama, one expressing several complex thoughts about relationships in the Digital Age. Jonze – who also wrote the screenplay – is careful to present Phoenix’s lonely bachelor without mockery, even as he begins to introduce Johansson’s disembodied voice as his ‘girlfriend’ to the flesh-and-blood humans in his life. As a result, he seems like someone we might know, or even identify with. After all, it wasn’t that long ago when dating someone you met on the internet seemed like a crazy idea. Is it really that hard to imagine dating a binary code? MS

District 9 (2009)
Star Trek 2: The Wrath of Khan (1982)
Total Recall (1990)
The Fifth Element (1997)
They Live (1988)
Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978)
Primer (2004)
The Man Who Fell to Earth (1976)
Galaxy Quest (1999)
Silent Running (1972)
Gattaca (1997)
The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951)
Planet of the Apes (1968)
La Jetée (1962)
A Clockwork Orange (1971)
Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956)
12 Monkeys (1995)
Ex Machina (2015)
Forbidden Planet (1956)
Solaris (1972)
Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991)
Stalker (1979)
Moon (2009)
The Matrix (1999)

Director: Lana and Lilly Wachowski
Cast: Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne, Carrie-Anne Moss

With Mark Zuckerberg, Bill Gates and the rest of Silicon Valley pushing society towards the ‘Metaverse’ – the much-touted next stage of the internet that will see the IRL and URL worlds converge thanks to technology like virtual and augmented reality, and forever online connectivity — the world that the Wachowski sisters created 23 years ago doesn’t seem so fantastical. Sure, civilisation hasn’t crumbled (yet) and there aren’t sentient machines keeping human beings in amniotic pods plugged into a virtual world 24/7, but given the way things are heading are we really that far off?

Fatalistic as that sounds, this late ’90s cyber-action classic provides a glimmer of home: we can still break out of the Matrix should we be so inclined. That it delivers such a message – that there’s life outside of our digital prisons – via kung-fu, groundbreaking digital effects, pounding industrial techno, enough black PVC and leather to make you sweat, not to mention some very retro wraparound shades, makes it that much more fun. Even the sequels, which were maligned at the time, are worth a revisit and still provide an edge-of-you-seat popcorn experience.

In fact, the adventures of Neo and Trinity remain so relevant that in 2021 Lana Wochowski returned to this universe for The Matrix Resurrections, a highly enjoyable if bloated commentary on wish-fulfillment, grief, the Disneyfication of culture and capitalism’s insidious neutering of artistic expression. Two decades later, The Matrix remains sci-fi at its smartest. AK

Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
Metropolis (1927)
Brazil (1985)

Director: Terry Gilliam

Cast: Jonathan Pryce, Kim Greist, Michael Palin

Jonathan Pryce plays Sam Lowry, an unexceptional everyman who dreams big but lives as a tiny cog in a bewildering machine in Terry Gilliam’s farcical but biting dystopian nightmare – a film he originally struggled to get to screen when executives bristled at its length and bleak ending.

The ex-Python and Time Bandits and 12 Monkeys director conjures up a discomforting retro-futuristic world, setting much of his story in vast warehouse-like offices and cathedral-like industrial spaces. Yes, it’s the future (sort of), but the costumes and movie references (from Casablanca to Metropolis) are a nod to the past, and there’s something of the 1940s and George Orwell to the whole thing. Whatever the period, at the film’s heart is the eternal battle between free will and society, alongside a slap-to-the-head conception of what today’s reliance on technology and bureaucracy says about what the future might hold.

Lowry dreams of soaring high like a mechanical bird and sweeping a beautiful mystery woman (Greist) off her feet. In reality, he finds himself at the heart of a confusing scandal involving presumed terrorists and a case of mistaken identity, reluctantly taking up a job at a government department called Information Retrieval so he can seek answers.

The presence of Michael Palin and a sense of Britishness about the whole thing inevitably make Brazil feel like an offshoot of Gilliam’s Monty Python days. But this is something altogether more majestic, ambitious and troubling. For every visual gag about being stuck in an absurd lift, there’s the sight of a government apparatchik in a baby mask or an older woman (Lowry’s mother) having her face stretched to combat ageing. It’s Gilliam’s finest hour. DC

Star Wars (1977)

Director: George Lucas

Cast: Mark Hamill, Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher

A pop masterpiece that redefined an industry, Star Wars updated sci-fi with unfashionable positivity, taking home a massive global haul that had studio execs salivating. It’s impossible to imagine what that game-changing summer must have felt like for teenagers accustomed to Rollerball or Logan’s Run. Suffice it to say, the stakes were raised and the space blockbuster was born.

Creator George Lucas was the same guy who made 1973’s American Graffiti: keenly attuned to car culture and nostalgia, in love with the horizon, a tinkerer with gears. It’s no surprise that these elements translated so beautifully to the distant planet of Tatooine, where a young man, stranded in a dead-end town and only hoping to head to Tosche Station to pick up some power converters, rises to a life of mythic grandeur.

The movie’s technical innovations were seismic, from Ben Burtt’s imaginative sound design to the ingenious creatures and model effects. But chiefly, this was a film that launched a million toys – and, not insignificantly, a million dreams. Harrison Ford became a megastar overnight; ditto the black-masked Darth Vader, whose synthesised breathing noises entered the lexicon.

It’s easy to forget, in the wake of so many inferior sequels, prequels and one awful Christmas special, how fresh Lucas’s vision was. He’s since become synonymous with trilogy glut, but the soft-spoken director will always have this first foray, a glorious reinvention of the magic of movies. JR

Aliens (1986)

Director: James Cameron

Cast: Sigourney Weaver, Michael Biehn, Bill Paxton

Almost three decades on, Aliens still looks like some kind of miracle. How did James Cameron, the veteran of precisely two films (one of which was unwatchable) manage to match, some would say improve upon, one of the most inventive sci-fi movies ever made? Where did that script spring from, so streamlined and propulsive yet at the same time so sharp and quotable? And how, on a budget that would barely have covered the on-set sandwich trolley for Avatar, did he manage to create such an all-encompassing world, such dangerously droolsome hardware, such repulsively believable xenomorphic monsters?

Admittedly, there are a lot of borrowed ideas in Aliens: the creatures, corridors, corporations and kick-ass heroine from the first movie, the sympathetic android from Blade Runner, militaristic dialogue straight from a Vietnam flick, costumes and weapons torn from the pages of countless comic books. But Cameron doesn’t just use these tropes, he develops them at every turn: Weaver’s Ripley becomes a maternal figure grappling with loss; Bishop the android is glassy and self-mocking, comfortable with his artificial existence; the hapless grunts are more than just meat, they’re fully-fleshed characters.

Cameron has never managed to repeat the trick. There are great moments in his later movies, but like his Alien antecedent Ridley Scott, Jim did his best work in his second and third films. If all he’d left us was Aliens, he’d still be a legend: here is one of the most effortlessly entertaining, endlessly rewatchable movies of all time, the work of a filmmaker blazing like rocket fuel. TH

Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977)

Director: Steven Spielberg

Cast: Richard Dreyfuss, François Truffaut, Melinda Dillon

For those of us who don’t bow down to any big, bearded spirits in the sky, the discovery of alien life might be the closest we’ll ever come to having a religious experience. And if that’s the case, then Close Encounters might be our Old Testament.

Steven Spielberg’s film manages to get its point across without resorting to intimidation or cheap scare tactics. This is one of the few movies in history to appeal almost exclusively to what Abraham Lincoln called, ‘the better angels of our nature’: creativity, community, discovery and the capacity for wonder.

With the arguable exception of ET, this tale of benevolent alien contact is Spielberg’s most personal statement. It’s the heartfelt cry of a boyish 31-year-old who can’t rationalise his own self-centred ambitions with the demands of family and responsibility.

Possessed by a creative compulsion he can’t understand, everyman hero Roy Neary (Dreyfuss) alienates his wife and comes close to mental breakdown before discovering the source of the visions in his head. Spielberg has said that if he made the film today he wouldn’t allow Roy to abandon his loved ones at the end – and yet this final, painfully human act of selfishness is what gives the film its aching power.

Well, that and the breathtaking special effects. The appearance of the mothership over the mountain is one of the great visual punches in cinema. And the gloriously unflashy performances – Truffaut and Bob Balaban make a perfect nerdy double-act. Oh, and let’s not forget John Williams’s pounding, experimental soundtrack. How many non-musicals feature their score so prominently? The result is pure joy distilled onto celluloid. Maybe God does have a beard, after all. TH

Alien (1979)

Director: Ridley Scott

Cast: Harrison Ford, Rutger Hauer, Sean Young

We’re so accustomed to cinema being behind the political and cultural curve, that when a truly groundbreaking work arrives, no one’s sure how to deal with it. Blade Runner was viewed as a disaster upon first release: here was a glum, grimy, neon-in-the-rain vision of the near future, complete with a taciturn anti-hero whose own moral compass seemed marginally less functional than the Replicant ‘villains’ he was assigned to hunt down.

It’s a film that, upon first viewing, feels almost unbearably harsh and claustrophobic, lingering on images of cruelty, decay and exploitation. It was only years later – abetted enormously by the film’s ‘Director’s Cut’ reissue, stripped of its clunky voiceover and crass happy ending – that we began to realise exactly what Blade Runner was offering alongside its spectacular visuals. This wasn’t just a grim dystopian action flick, but a meditation on the meaning of life, morality, memory, creation, procreation, nature, nurture – the whole shebang.

If Harrison Ford’s Deckard is himself a Replicant – and the film strongly implies that he is – then how do any of us know which aspects of our psyche are ‘real’ and which ‘created’? If the robots are programmed with more soul and compassion than the humans, how do you tell the difference? And does it matter? Blade Runner is the kind of spectacle that science fiction was invented for: immersive other worlds that can be explored to reflect our own fears, doubts and disturbances. And it succeeds flawlessly. TH

2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)

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