What are you some underrated or lesser known science fiction movies that you recommend?
I’ve never met anyone that has seen this movie despite it being relatively recent and with some popular actors, but I’d highly recommend Prospect (2018). https://www.imdb.com/title/tt7946422/
It’s not a very big budget movie, but it has great aesthetics I think and an engaging story. I’m looking for some new science fiction movies to watch either old or new.
Not lesser known, but maybe under-appreciated. I rewatched “Oblivion” the other evening and enjoyed it. I perused reviews afterward and they all panned the movie for being too long and plodding at two hours, which makes sense I guess. But, honestly, after the subsequent decade of three- and four-hour blockbuster schlock, “Oblivion” now feels like a taut little thriller.
Oblivion ain’t the best sci fi movie, but it does hold up. Sound track and aesthetics were beautiful.
Yea M83 Soundtrack is gorgeous
Not so much underrated but certainly overlooked -Primer. Also Predestination. Will check out Prospect.
Event Horizon!
Cube if you consider it sci-fi. Trancers is campy fun. Moon of course. Sphere (the book is better though) is often overlooked. Dark City (make sure it’s the version without the opening narration). eXistenZ. Gattaca. The Thirteenth Floor. Source Code. Paycheck is fun. The Jacket. 12 Monkeys. Pi. Equilibrium. Logan’s Run. The Abyss
Prospect is amazing for the sense of environment it gives, the story is pretty good and Pedro Pascal is absolutely great in it, plus the girl is no slouch either. I like it enough I ordered the blue ray of it immediately after seeing it the first time.
Buckaroo Banzai is another one everyone should see at least once. So very weird, but also a lot of fun! “Laugha while you can, a-monkey boy!”
Also, Timecrimes (2007) is a small movie out of Spain about what NOT to do if you find yourself stuck in a time loop. (And of course, this isn’t exactly unknown but Terry Gilliam’s 12 Monkeys is one of my all time favorites about time travel in case anyone hasn’t seen that yet for some reason.)
My favorite Buckaroo Banzai quote is from the intro. “Don’t tug on that, you don’t know what it’s hooked to.” The perfect motto to live by while maintaining legacy software systems. :-)
We have a soft spot for low-budget time-travel movies, like Primer, Time Crimes, and Triangle. Safety Not Guaranteed is also fun even though the Time Travel aspect isn’t central to what’s going on. The Endless is a must-see.
I quite enjoyed the French movie Oxygen from 2021, directed by Alexandre Aja. It’s about a women waking up in a failing cryopod without any memory how she got there.
I liked ‘Pandorum’. It’s my standard for “wake up from pods, something is wrong” sci-fi.
I’m going to say The Last Starfighter. It’s quite old at this point, and it’s derivative of a lot of other things, but it is a lot of fun.
deleted by creator
Titan AE
I’m a huge fan of the like microbudget (like 50k) psychological sci-fi film Coherence. They make the most out of their cast who semi-improvise much of the dialog and go the lo-fi approach to wonderful effect. It is easily found on several different streaming services, and is truly an underseen gem.
That definitely sounds interesting to me. I’ll give that a watch.
You might like Moon. It’s not exactly microbudget, but it’s something that could have been made anytime from 1970 to 2020
Moon is great! Definitely slots into the realm of lower budget and more psychological.
Coherence was much better than I expected when I first saw it, they really stuck the landing on the organic improv approach. And it’s even more impressive given the premise, quantum anything has the potential to get messy.
For some similar microbudget stuff, I’d recommend Moorhead & Benson’s first few projects together. The “M&B cinematic universe” of Resolution, The Endless, and Synchronic is a fun ride.
Never seen any of Moorhead & Benson’s stuff, I’ll have to check it out, seems interesting.
- Infinity chamber (2016)
- Mirage (2018)
- Cypher (2002)
Edge of Tomorrow since it hasn’t been mentioned yet. Blew my mind the first time I watched it. I got sucked in and quickly suspended all disbelief. Then came the scene at the shack by the helicopter… I heard other people saw it coming but they totally got me with it. Such a pleasure to have my mind space tickled like that.
Blunt is an absolute blast as an action lead, surprised she has not got more, I think the Cruise effect almost causes people to play it down as serious as he is very polarising
Yes! I think this is the first movie I saw Emily BLunt in and thought she was bad ass!
You should check out the manga that movie is based on,
All You Need Is Kill
Koma - A Russian movie that (on the outset) sounds like an Inception knockoff but is good in its own right.
Life - Kind of a beat-by-beat “alien eats the crew” movie, but rather enjoyable.
Monsters - I found this one at the dollar tree of all places. It was shot with a skeleton crew (basically 5 people), but is well-acted, emotional, has a great score. Is still 100% sci-fi, though.
Clinic - A movie about a retirement community that holds a dark secret (also salvaged from the dollar tree 🤣). It’s low-budget, but very well-acted, sets an anxious tone throughout so always feel on edge (in a good way).
Supervized - Honestly, reading the previous one of a retirement community reminded me of “Supervized,” a unique take on the superhero genre. Played out like a comedy, but provides an interesting commentary on aging.
Otherlife - A New Zealand sci fi/suspense film about a dream technology that’s being experimented with to keep people imprisoned (because 1 minute = 1 day, so 30 year sentence = 3 hours type of thing)
Monsters is available on Amazon Video - recommended viewing. You’re right, it was really quite decent for being a low-budget movie.
In the social media/‘geek’ sphere it is now overrated almost but when released and in the wider world fifth element was underrated. A big Bruce Willis action flick got almost no love at box office or video rental, it only really relied on word if mouth when on TV to become the cult classic it is today.
I remember when it was new, seeing a review that claimed the only entertaining thing about the movie was watching the director waste 100 million dollars. I guess they didn’t like Chris Tucker.