Your top 5 sci-fi movies (and why)


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They debated Guardians 1 vs Guardians 3. They liked the Rocket arc if I understood correctly.
Adding Guardians to the mix (yeah, pun intended :P) I'd rank them 2, 3, & 1. 1 was fun, but 2 and 3 are stronger in their themes and thematic/character exploration. Rocket's arc especially really kicks into high gear in 2 (the ending, so perfect) and comes to fruition in 3.
 



I'd feel better with a top 100 list, because there are just so many that I think are part of my "must be watched" list. In no particular order, except for the first:

"The Day the Earth Stood Still" - A true classic and the first anti-nuke movie.
"Forbidden Planet" - Shakespeare in space and a serious Leslie Neilsen? What's not to love?
"Silent Running" - As we work to wipe ourselves out of existence, there's still hope.
"They Live" - You just have to have a silly alien invasion story.
"Logan's Run" - SciFi is at its best when it holds a light up to society. Commentary on the cult of youth in modern society for the win.
I thought about watching Logan's Run the other day to see if it held up. Haven't yet.
 


I thought about watching Logan's Run the other day to see if it held up. Haven't yet.
It doesn't, but I love it anyway. Logan's Run is in the unfortunate position of being the last great SF film before Star Wars, which just blew everything else out of the water. I was too young to see it in the theatres, and it was always on at like 2am, so I didn't see it until 1982 or so (I had tried staying up once before that but fell asleep before they got to Washington). But by the time I saw it, I'd read the Marvel comics, read the novel and its ridiculous sequels, and seen some of the tv show episodes. I was in.
 


I'm reevaluating my Star Wars is fantasy/western in sci-fi drag thesis. In terms of story and themes, I'll stand by that assertion all day long. But, given that this is a film discussion, I should be giving more weight to the look and sound of the movie.

So I asked myself, "given that SW is a purely fantasy story, would it work as a purely fantasy film?" In other words, had they shot it but swapped all the sci-fi visuals and sounds for fantasy equivalents, does it still work? Is it still the history-altering behemoth it became? And I think the answer has to be that it doesn't and isn't.

A lot of the sequences would work just fine. All of the stuff on Tattooine could be done as a fantasy film, as could the quest inside the Death Star, which is essentially a dungeon crawl.

But that opening sequence that blew my mind as a little kid? The final two space battles? Those were barely achievable with 1970s technology, and machines in space are a lot easier to do than are dragons in flight or whatever the fantasy equivalent would be. And the scale and scope of those shots...it's hard to imagine a fantasy equivalent. Not to mention the mind-blowing sound design.

And in terms of influence, SW really boosted sci-fi as a genre (there was some carry over into fantasy; they've always appealed to a similar readership). Even if it was kind of the wrong kind of sci-fi (i.e. actually fantasy) from the perspective of a lot of "serious" sci-fi authors, they weren't saying no to the book advances and screenplay options.

If there's no Star Wars, Alien and Bladerunner, in particular, don't get budgeted.
 

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