The weekend is upon us and if you are looking for something to help pass the time, look no further! The Ars Technica science fiction bucket list—42 movies every geek must see ...and nine bonus stinkers from which you should run away screaming.
[...] Lists of science fiction movies are a common item for discussion on the Ars staff Slack channel—particularly short lists of the best science fiction movies ever made. But "best" is an impossible word to quantify in any broadly applicable way—one person's "best ever" might be another person's worst, especially in a genre of movies as rich and varied as science fiction.
["Science fiction" is a meta term that refers to a huge host of sub-genres, from "hard" science fiction to skiffy to all points between. For this list, we've chosen to constrain eligibility requirements to movies that deal speculatively with science and/or the future. This lets us include classics like Frankenstein (which is properly sci-fi) while excluding films that skew heavily toward fantasy. Then again, we've got Star Wars in the list and that's not a future movie, so author's discretion trumps all, I suppose!]
While the Ars staff has some bitter disagreements on which movies are better than others, it's undeniable that some science fiction movies are mandatory viewing for the modern geek. To that end, rather than try to pull together another tired "top ten sci-fi movies" listicle, we've instead polled the Ars staff to try to come up with a definitive "science fiction bucket list"—that is, a list of sci-fi movies that you should absolutely see at least once before you die. They aren't necessarily the "best" movies by any specific set of criteria, but every film on this list is outstanding in some particular way. Some were groundbreaking in their stories or subject matter, some were controversial, and some contained a character or plot twist that went on to become an archetype, referenced in and reused by countless other films. Some films on the list, like Fritz Lang's Metropolis, are pure cinematic poetry; others, like Pacific Rim, are pure popcorn fun. And, as a bonus, we even included a bonus list of a few absolutely terrible stinkers at the very bottom.
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Here is Ars Technica's list of forty-two must-see movies. See the linked Ars Technica story for writeups on each film or follow the IMDb (Internet Movie Database) link provided here.
And it may be best to avoid these:
(Score: 1) by theronb on Sunday November 06 2016, @04:16PM
Because what other movie on the list gives us the answer to "life, the universe and everything"?
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 06 2016, @09:33PM
I haven't seen it recently enough to judge it as a 'bad movie', but i remember my response to it was disappointment at how poorly it conveyed the tone of the book. I would include it on a list of books but not movies.
(Score: 2) by choose another one on Monday November 07 2016, @10:29AM
I think the fact that there are 42 movies in the damned list might be a clue...
(Score: 2) by maxwell demon on Monday November 07 2016, @09:51PM
Did you see the number of movies they listed?
But then, no, I wouldn't list the Hitchhiker movie in a list of best movies. Yes, the Hitchhiker radio play, the Hitchhiker books and the Hitchhiker TV series were all top. The movie was not bad, but certainly not top.
The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.