Your top 5 sci-fi movies (and why)


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Should someone start a new thread for all this debate about the value of work? I'm not seeing how it's related to "Your top 5 sci-fi movies (and why)."
It's a digression, certainly, but sci-fi is about ideas, and questions like the one we're discussing.
Wall-E is one of the movies people have talked about as a favorite.

We got here because someone brought up that Wall-E showed us a world where humans are freed from the need to work, and opined that this reduced human life to meaningless comfort and reproduction. Even expressing the extreme position that it would make us no better or more than viruses!
 


It's a digression, certainly, but sci-fi is about ideas, and questions like the one we're discussing.
Wall-E is one of the movies people have talked about as a favorite.

We got here because someone brought up that Wall-E showed us a world where humans are freed from the need to work, and opined that this reduced human life to meaningless comfort and reproduction. Even expressing the extreme position that it would make us no better or more than viruses!

The digression is ridiculous, though, because it's explicitly shown in the movie that the Axiom is not "Edenic" in any way. The system is a non-sustainable repetion of what happened on earth. The humans are not happy. They are miserable and devolving in a floating time bomb, oblivious to the expiration date. This is all laid on pretty thick. It's even implied that they don't reproduce. It's like the people arguing random philosophical platitudes haven't even watched the movie being discussed.

If nothing else, the fact that no one has used a movie reference in the whole side discussion should be a giant red flag.

Here's a semi-hot take to get things back on track: The Day the Earth Stood Still is overrated. Everybody remembers the great opening and the great ending, sure. But the middle part where Klaatu tries to hide out on earth, befriend a kid, and figure out money is both silly and boring. There's basically a half hour of dead time that's just there to justify it being a movie instead of an episode of The Outer Limits. Still a classic, but there's a reason it's remembered as classic sci fi and not a cinematic masterpiece.
 

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