Tag: sci-fi movies

  • Ten Coolest Movies about First Contact

    Ten Coolest Movies about First Contact

    First contact will likely be a messy, terrifying affair if it happens in the foreseeable future. Humanity is a divided, tribal and superstitious lot even today. However, the potential of world-changing, seismic shifts in politics and Earth is great when it comes to first contact scenarios. When or if alien life makes contact with Earth, any number of factors could change the dynamic of the interaction. While we can’t imagine what real first contact will look like, there are some pretty cool movies about it. Today, we’re looking at the ten coolest movies about first contact!

    Ten Coolest Movies about First Contact

    Flight of the Navigator

    Photo Credit: Nerdist

    This fun, upbeat 80’s movie depicts the adventurous David, a young boy who encounters an alien race. He is transported to their home planet and back at light speed. The journey causes him to return a decade after he left, though, causing his younger brother to be six years older than him when he returns! This film is a classic, full of fun and optimism.

    District 9

    Photo Credit: Digital Spy
    On the other end of the spectrum is the dark and gritty District 9. Imagining first contact as an allegory for apartheid, District 9 takes place in South Africa. Following the appearance of a race of aliens on Earth, the South African government segregates them into ghettoes and treats the aliens as subhuman. This is sci-fi at its best: forcing us to examine our prejudices through the lens of a new perspective.

    Independence Day

    Photo Credit: Den of Geek
    Sometimes first contact doesn’t go that smoothly. In this classic sci-fi action film, Will Smith stars Stephen Hiller, a pilot tasked with defending Earth from an alien invasion. This film envisions what kind of response Earth would have if it was suddenly, violently invaded by aliens. Themes of colonialism, bravery and determination run throughout. This film was pivotal, both for Hollywood blockbusters in general and for Will Smith’s career in particular. It also has one of the coolest speeches in the history of sci-fi movies, courtesy of Bill Pullman’s Thomas Whitmore character.

    Close Encounters of the Third Kind

    Photo Credit: Orlando Weekly

    This Spielberg classic follows Roy Neary, a blue-collar worker who makes contact with an alien race. The resulting effects that the UFOs have on Roy form the film’s dramatic tension. Roy’s relationship with his wife and children is strained as he obsesses over the UFOs. Finally, when the aliens make contact with Earth, Roy is selected to go with them so that they might learn more about humans.

    The Day the Earth Stood Still

    Photo Credit: IMDb

    This mid-century classic sci-fi film works largely due to its near Biblical proportions. A stranger from space named Klaatu descends to Earth to issue a warning to the leaders of its countries. He warns that all humans must begin living in harmony, acting as one united race. Otherwise, forces from beyond the stars will consider humanity (and its burgeoning atomic power) a threat. Such a threat would be met with lethal force. The film’s messianic imagery and timeless tale of nonviolence make it a classic worth watching.

    Starman

    Photo Credit: Variety

    A love story dressed up as sci-fi, Starman follows the titular character, played by Jeff Bridges, as he falls to Earth to learn about humans. The naïve but affable Starman takes the form of a widow’s recently deceased husband, much to her surprise and horror. The widow, named Jenny, gradually warms to the Starman, and the two go on a quest to a crater that houses Starman’s ship. The journey is long and fraught with danger, as the Army tries to apprehend the alien in order to study him. Along the way, the two fall in love, showing that love can transcend even the stars.

    The Abyss

    Photo Credit: Hollywood Reporter

    The Abyss, an excellent James Cameron sci-fi romp, explores a unique type of first contact. In this film, aliens have been on Earth for quite some time. However, they live deep beneath the ocean. Combining Cameron’s love of deep-sea exploration and sci-fi, the Abyss was a watershed moment for sci-fi effects. With top-notch acting and gripping storytelling, this is another sci-fi flick you owe it to yourself to watch!

    Super 8

    Photo Credit: YouTube

    Directed by J.J. Abrams and produced by Steven Spielberg, Super 8 is as much a coming-of-age story as it is a tale of first contact. Channeling the feel of classic 80’s films like ET and the Goonies, this throwback movie follows a group of kids who discover that the military is hiding an alien. This alien is peaceful, however, and just wants to go home. If the premise sounds familiar, that’s largely because it has been done more recently in Stranger Things, another excellent sci-fi.

    The Man who Fell to Earth

    Photo Credit: Winnipeg Film Group

    David Bowie was an odd man, and his appearances in film are a testament to that. He was also a complete genius, which this excellent film confirms. Bowie plays Thomas Jerome Newton, a very humanoid-looking alien. He comes to Earth seeking water for his home planet, which is in the middle of an apocalyptic drought. The film, equal parts melancholic and meditative, is a long look at what makes us human. Vices like alcohol and sex addiction plague even the titular man who falls to Earth, making us examine what it is to be human.

    Star Trek: First Contact

    Photo Credit: Den of Geek

    The hint, after all, is in the name. Star Trek had, up to this point, only hinted at the historical event that led to first contact with the Vulkan race. In this Next Generation film, however, the crew of the Enterprise travels back in time while pursuing the Borg. They discover that they arrive a day before Zefram Cochrane completes work on the first human warp drive. That event will lead to the Vulkan Empire taking note of humanity and extending an invitation to join the galactic community.

  • The Best Sci-Fi Horror Movies of All Time

    The Best Sci-Fi Horror Movies of All Time

    Sci-fi, as a genre, is very useful for probing to the depths of the human mind. It can be useful as a lens through which to critique and comment on our society and our humanity. When applied in the right ways, it can also be very effective at scaring the daylights out of us. Combining the high-tech with the hair-raising, these are the best sci-fi horror movies of all time!

    The Best Sci-Fi Horror Movies of All Time

    Frankenstein

    Photo Credit: Country Life

    Likely the first tale ever told that could be considered sci-fi horror, Frankenstein is an unsettling tale of madness and genius. You know the story: Dr. Frankenstein digs up corpses, hacks off the choicest bits and stitches them all back together. Then, he gives the resulting monster life through the power of science and a terrible storm. This film is effective nearly 90 years after it was created due to the lasting horror of its premise. A genius who has used his intellect to go beyond the values of common morality is a timeless archetype. This story reminds us to not let our push to innovate cause us to leave our humanity in the past.

    Cloverfield

    Photo Credit: Consequence of Sound
    Part Godzilla, part Blair Witch Project, this found-footage thriller follows a group of young adults as a terrifying monster rampages through New York. The shaky-cam style of shooting may be a bit motion-sickness inducing, but the film upsets through more than its cinematography. Well-acted and genuinely scary, this is a great example of how to make monster movies scary.

    Videodrome

    Photo Credit: Little White Lies

    It’s impossible to talk about sci-fi horror without mentioning David Cronenberg. This iconic work solidified Cronenberg’s uniquely unsettling eye for grotesque body horror. The film follows Max Renn, a TV producer played by James Woods. The station Max works for is looking for a new type of programming, and they intercept a signal of a brutal program called Videodrome. In the show, people are tortured and killed for entertainment. As Max digs into the odd broadcast, things take a turn for the surreal.

    Sunshine

    Photo Credit: Screen Geek

    Equal parts sci-fi exploration and bone-chilling slasher film, Sunshine expertly weaves the two genres together. Rather than feeling unwieldy with its dual influences, it deftly excites and provokes thought by playing the two genres off one another. The immediate horror of a crew of astronauts being hunted by a deranged killer is gripping. However, the stakes make the action that much more intense. If the crew fails in their mission, the Sun will die, and Earth will freeze. As such, the action is both immediately pressing and of monumental significance for the human race.

    I am Legend

    Photo Credit: Den of Geek

    Will Smith stars in this brutal post-apocalyptic horror film. The only apparent survivor of some man-made disease, Smith’s character attempts to survive in the mutant-strewn wasteland that the world has become. While evading mutants and scavenging for food he also attempts to synthesize a cure for the strange disease. As psychologically gripping as it is scary, I am Legend is a distinctly unique and engaging film.

    Event Horizon

    Photo Credit: Consequence of Sound

    Theorizing that Hell is simply another dimension adjacent to our own, Event Horizon brings ample scares from its otherworldly premise. When a strange ship appears in the Solar System, a crew of explorers travels inside to learn more about its origins. However, they quickly find that the ship’s previous crew are all dead. Logs on the ship show that they somehow entered Hell using the ship’s experimental engines. The explorers find their minds and bodies twisted and broken by the horrible things waiting within the Event Horizon.

    28 Days Later

    Photo Credit: Movies and TV Stack Exchange

    Normally, the zombies in these types of movies shamble toward you aimlessly. In this film, they sprint towards you like horrifying rabid dogs. Oh, and they’re not zombies, technically, because they’re still alive. That’s why they’re so fast. Beautifully shot, well-acted and expertly-told, 28 Days Later is a deep introspection into the psychology of living in a world after humanity has vanished. Surprisingly realistic and delightfully deep, this is a movie you need to watch.

    The Fly

    Photo Credit: Metro

    This Kafkaesque tale is another from Cronenberg. The Fly stars Jeff Goldblum as scientist Seth Brundle. Brundle experiments with molecular transportation, and a lab accident results in his atoms being entangled with those of a fly. He begins to exhibit more insect-like characteristics and gradually devolves into a grotesque monster. This film is notable for bringing Cronenberg’s unique style of body horror to mainstream attention. Gross, gripping and thought-provoking, this is quintessential Cronenberg.

    The Thing

    Photo Credit: Roger Ebert

    John Carpenter’s remake of the classic film The Thing is an utterly unsettling film. The film depicts the struggles of a group of scientists to survive while being hunted by a shapeshifting monster. Set in Antarctica, the film’s lonely isolation is its strongest theme. One after the other, the scientists are killed by the Thing, only for it to take their form and pretend to be them. The audiences watches as the scientists slowly begin to doubt one another and lose their sanity in the process.

    Alien

    Photo Credit: Playbuzz

    The very finest sci-fi horror film ever made, Alien is iconic for all the right reasons. Starring Sigourney Weaver as the ever-badass Ripley, this movie was huge at the time of its release. Focusing on the isolation and fear that comes with being in space, the film works on many levels. As visceral as it is psychological, Alien is a prime example of how to make a good horror film. Direct Ridley Scott expertly avoided clichés that would have otherwise marred the excellent movie. If you haven’t seen it, you owe it to yourself to check this classic out.