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Solaris, not the remake but the original by Tarkovsky, Solaris (1972) - IMDb[^]
And no, it's not about an operating system
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Independence Day (I)
And my favourite recent sci-fi:
The Edge of Tomorrow
Anything that is unrelated to elephants is irrelephant Anonymous
- The problem with quotes on the internet is that you can never tell if they're genuine Winston Churchill, 1944
- Never argue with a fool. Onlookers may not be able to tell the difference. Mark Twain
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Not bad but not classics - ID4 would have been a better film if it hadn't been so cheesy.
Keep your friends close. Keep Kill your enemies closer.
The End
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Gattaca
Ethan Hawke, Uma Thurman, Jude Law at their beginning
one of my favourite...
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Existenz - ok it's Cronenberg so it's bound to be a bit yucky in parts, however I thought the ideas and story line were done well and it's layers within layers are interesting.
TimeCrimes - perhaps the best time travelling movie I have seen where everything actually hangs together and makes sense.
The Man From Earth - like Gattaca its more like a play than a movie. The movie is a long conversation between a group of friends, one of whom has an interesting secret they reveal within the movie. The interesting part is seeing how people respond to what he reveals.
Avalon - a Polish Japanese collaborative film about a distopian future and a VR game.
Stalker - ok it's long and boring, actually no it's not! It's a brilliant film!
“That which can be asserted without evidence, can be dismissed without evidence.”
― Christopher Hitchens
modified 2-Mar-18 3:24am.
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Ah yes, The Man from Earth - an excellent movie based on a great story. Will add it. TimeCrimes also pretty good.
Keep your friends close. Keep Kill your enemies closer.
The End
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Soylent Green (wonder what that is?)
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Of course and Omega Man.
Keep your friends close. Keep Kill your enemies closer.
The End
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Dark Star deserves a mention.
98.4% of statistics are made up on the spot.
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You seem to be missing:
Aliens
Blade Runner 2049
Dredd
Flash Gordon
Gravity
Guardians of the Galaxy
Inception
Looper
Moon
Pitch Black
Starship Troopers
Sunshine
Twelve Monkeys
Regards
Nelviticus
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Starship Troopers was so bad I couldn't finish watching, must have missed the good part.
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Perhaps Moon and Pitch Black.
Keep your friends close. Keep Kill your enemies closer.
The End
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Soldier - An underestimated film with Kurt Russell in the lead role.
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Certainly The Blob (1958 version) should be in there. Corny, freaky, weird, hilarious, classic.
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Buckaroo Banzai across the 8th Dimension
Repo Man
"Newer" is NOT automatically better, only Different. (And more complex and bug ridden when it comes to all of the "boutique" languages / frameworks out there
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Invasion Of The Body Snatchers (both the 50s and the 70s versions)
Might be more horror than SF.
Silent Running
Maybe someone's already suggested them (i'm catching up with the thread)
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Silent Running - great film. The other 2 - meh - not so much.
Keep your friends close. Keep Kill your enemies closer.
The End
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You remember that movie where Bruce Dern is crazy? That's not narrowing it down!
I cringe at the song in Silent Running. Hate that singing style.
The interior scenes were filmed in an aircraft carrier, as I remember, and there were humans inside the three robots.
Though if the domes were capable of running on their own, they could have stuck them on a mined-out asteroid and not tied up the freighters in the first place. Suspension of disbelief.
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Two movies that fit the catagory 'Science Fiction' that weren't special effects or action films, but I always thought were well thought out science fiction plots:
Colossus the Forbin Project
The Andromeda Strain
I especially liked Colossus because of all of the 60's 'computer taking over the world plots' on TV shows and movies, which were all were defeated by asking the computer some vague question like 'why' or 'compute Pi to the last digit'.
---someday something witty will be placed here----
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Colossus had some interesting ideas. It and the Soviet computer communicated starting with simple math and developing their own undecipherable language. And at the end it appears that its only goal is to prevent war, but we don't see where the line between war and any violence is.
What happens next, assuming the computer is unbeatable, would make an interesting SF novel. Or maybe it leads to ST:tOS?
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I think the ambiguous ending is part of reason why most people have never seen or even heard of it. It's not a triumphant 'man over machine' ending that is very common even today, and we never find out what ultimately happened to humanity in general or Forbin in particular.
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The ending makes it more like an SF novel. Movies from that era tended to go for the triumphant ending or the end of the world.
Something I'd like to see: The humans pull the "I am lying" trick, and the AI replies "That is merely a paradox, and a childish one at that." and zaps them.
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Actually, the movie was written from the novel "Colossus" by D F Jones, and that novel has two sequels. I was unable to finish them, however: a little DULL.
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This is CodeProject, and no one mentions Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy? I think you all should get a down-vote of 42!!
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