Science Fiction:
See Filmsite's extensive section on Science-Fiction Films
AFI described science fiction as "a genre that marries a scientific or technological premise with imaginative speculation. Whether it's a flying saucer whirling through space or a gleaming city on a distant planet, at the core of all science fiction is the provocative question, "What if...?" Science fiction presents stories and situations that tap our brightest hopes and darkest fears about what might, one day, turn out to be true."
(Winners marked with this icon and
ranking number)
- A.I. ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE, DreamWorks, 2001
- ALIEN, Twentieth Century-Fox,
1979 (#
7)
- ALTERED STATES, Warner Bros., 1980
- THE ANDROMEDA STRAIN, Universal, 1971
- BACK TO
THE FUTURE, Universal, 1985 (#
10)
- THE BEAST FROM 20,000 FATHOMS, Warner Bros., 1953
- BLADE
RUNNER, Warner Bros., 1982 (#
6)
- CHILDREN OF MEN, Universal, 2006
- A
CLOCKWORK ORANGE, Warner Bros., 1971 (#
4)
- CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD
KIND, Columbia, 1977
- COCOON, Twentieth Century-Fox, 1985
- CONTACT, Warner Bros., 1997
- THE DAY THE EARTH STOOD
STILL, Twentieth Century-Fox,
1951 (#
5)
- DESTINATION MOON, Eagle-Lion, 1950
- E.T.
- THE EXTRA TERRESTRIAL, Universal, 1982 (#
3)
- ESCAPE FROM NEW YORK, AVCO Embassy, 1981
- ETERNAL SUNSHINE OF THE SPOTLESS MIND, Focus,
2004
- FANTASTIC VOYAGE, Twentieth Century-Fox, 1966
- THE FLY, Twentieth Century-Fox, 1986
- FORBIDDEN PLANET, MGM, 1956
- FRANKENSTEIN, Universal,
1931
- THE INCREDIBLE SHRINKING MAN, Universal, 1957
- INDEPENDENCE DAY, Twentieth Century-Fox, 1996
- INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS,
Allied Artists, 1956 (#
9)
- THE INVISIBLE MAN, Universal, 1933
- IT CAME FROM OUTER SPACE, Universal, 1953
- JURASSIC PARK, Universal, 1993
- MAD MAX BEYOND THUNDERDOME, Warner Bros., 1985
- THE MATRIX, Warner Bros., 1999
- MEN IN BLACK, Columbia, 1997
- MINORITY REPORT, Twentieth Century-Fox, 2002
- PLANET OF THE APES, Twentieth Century-Fox, 1968
- REPO MAN, Universal, 1984
- ROBOCOP, Orion, 1987
- ROLLERBALL, United Artists, 1975
- SILENT RUNNING, Universal, 1972
- SOYLENT GREEN, MGM, 1973
- STAR TREK: THE
WRATH OF KHAN, Paramount, 1982
- STAR
WARS: EPISODE IV - A NEW HOPE, Twentieth Century-Fox, 1977 (#
2)
- STARMAN, Columbia, 1984
- THE STEPFORD WIVES, Columbia, 1975
- TERMINATOR 2: JUDGMENT DAY,
TriStar, 1991 (#
8)
- THEM!, Warner Bros., 1954
- THE THING FROM ANOTHER WORLD, RKO, 1951
- THE TIME MACHINE, MGM, 1960
- TOTAL RECALL, TriStar, 1990
- TRON, Disney, 1982
- 2001:
A SPACE ODYSSEY, MGM, 1968 (#
1)
- THE WAR OF THE WORLDS, Paramount, 1953
- WESTWORLD, MGM, 1973
Nominees: 22 of the 50 movies contained an alien presence.
Winners:
- 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)
- Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope (1977)
- E.T. - The Extra Terrestrial (1982)
- A Clockwork Orange (1971)
- The Day The Earth Stood Still (1951)
- Blade Runner (1982)
- Alien (1979)
- Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991)
- Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956)
- Back to the Future (1985)
Comments: Eternal Sunshine of
the Spotless Mind (2004) was a romantic comedy, for the most
part, not Science Fiction. Planet
of the Apes (1968) and Close Encounters
of the Third Kind (1977) should be in the top 10, as well
as The Matrix (1999). E.T.
- The Extra-Terrestrial (1982) was more a children's fantasy
film, not pure science fiction. Frankenstein
(1931) was
much more a classic horror film rather than sci-fi, as was The
Fly (1986). Terminator
2: Judgment Day (1991), although it had science-fiction
elements, was mostly an action film. Dark City (1998) should
have been a nominee. Back
to the Future (1985) was a light-hearted comedy for the
most part, although it had time-travel/sci-fi elements. |