Top 10 Science Fiction Movies

Here are the Top10 Science Fiction Movies which should be watch by every filmy fan. In this blog we will tell you about the movies which are too fantastic and best for the sci-fi movies. The movie contains a host of thrilling, intelligent, offbeat, funny and frightening scenes.
6. The Martian (2015)
5. Inception (2010)
3. Starwars: The Force Awakens (2015)
1. Edge Of Tomorrow (2014)
If you watched these movies than you are the boss and if not than don't worry we will give you the link to watch and enjoy these movies.
10. The Host (2006)
Giant-monster flicks have always been about ecological destruction, and this one is no different. Using a 2000 incident of formaldehyde dumping in Seoul as inspiration, this South Korean tale of a creature emerging from the Han River – who not only attacks people, but infects them with a virus – broke box office records in its native country and set a new standard for nature-run-amok parables. It’s equal parts politically sharp, brutally hilarious, incredibly suspenseful – and totally icky.
9. Snowpiercer (2013)
Don’t get too bogged down by the mechanics of the bizarre premise of this graphic-novel adaptation, in which the remnants of humanity struggle for survival aboard a speeding train in the wake of a global climate disaster. (A train, guys?) Just revel in this stylish, bizarre take on class warfare from South Korean director Bong Joon-ho (The Host, Okja), as revolutionary Curtis (Chris Evans) fights his way to the front of this hierarchical society on wheels, encountering homicidal schoolteachers, an army of axmen and a twisted prime minister (Tilda Swinton) along the way. Snowpiercer wears its strangeness and its singularity on its sleeve. Enjoy the ride.
8. Looper (2012)
A person could tie their noggin in knots trying to follow the timeline of Rian Johnson’s time-travelling nailbiter: So future assassin Joseph Gordon Levitt is really Bruce Willis and they’re trying to kill each other? Plus the kid with psychic powers who lives near a corn field has something to do with this? And the hit man’s weapon of choice circa 2042 is a blunderbuss?!? Johnson’s Möbius Strip of a movie is endlessly fascinating – it doesn’t simply reward repeat viewings so much as demand them – and proof that it’s still possible to do intelligent science fiction within the sausage skin of a star vehicle.
7. Mad Max: Fury Road (2015)
It took 30 years for action maestro George Miller to follow up his Beyond Thunderdome with another Mad Max … so long that he had to replace Mel Gibson with Tom Hardy as the leather-clad anti-hero. With Fury Road, the director
delivers something close to a two-hour chase scene, as Max joins forces with steely warrior and slave-liberator Imperator Furiosa to rescue a group of young women from a resource-hoarding
death-cult. From the unexpected character-depth to the geometry-defying high-speed standoffs, the movie is a prime example of how to balance thrilling post-apocalyptic spectacle with a sober social message. It’s sci-fi with its pedal to the metal.
delivers something close to a two-hour chase scene, as Max joins forces with steely warrior and slave-liberator Imperator Furiosa to rescue a group of young women from a resource-hoarding
death-cult. From the unexpected character-depth to the geometry-defying high-speed standoffs, the movie is a prime example of how to balance thrilling post-apocalyptic spectacle with a sober social message. It’s sci-fi with its pedal to the metal.
6. The Martian (2015)
Almost four decades after Alien, Ridley Scott returned to space in his adaptation of Andy Weir’s hit self-published novel, in which astronaut Mark Watney (Mat Dammon) from our Big Blue Marble finds himself marooned on the Big Red Planet. Quicker than you can say Robinson Crusoe on Mars, our hero is figuring out how to survive – and how to eventually get home. Blending Scott’s vision of life in the far reaches of our solar system with Damon’s witty, charming performance, the movie translates old-school hard sci-fi into a mainstream multiplex-friendly adventure – and gives us the cinema’s first cosmic botanist superhero. It’s not only enough to get people interested in space travel again but to pay more attention in science class. Doing so could save your life one day, kids.
5. Inception (2010)
Christopher Nolan’s big-budget, big-concept, big-everything (filming took place on four continents) 2010 blockbuster works on so many levels – subconscious, visceral, temporal – that there are endless ways to appreciate it, though as we follow a team of dream “extractors” deeper and deeper down the spiral, one can’t help but marvel at the film’s structure most of all. Nolan’s script is a multi-layered latticework of timelines and realities, dead-ends and false ledges, one that ultimately provides few answers, but asks plenty of questions. Is Leo’s top is still spinning? When does a shared dream become reality? Are we awake right now?!? Heavy stuff, man.
4.Wall -E (2008)
Thought it is set 2805 in space, Wall-E's real-world 20th-century American film. Our bubbling heroes quietly circumnavigate the earth, but apparently as Charlie Chaplin's younger Trump; Her attempt to romance an iPod-like female counterpart resembles a romance with Woody Allen's robot version of LV Singer; Vistas recalled Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey and cynical political humor Dr. Remembers Strangelove. There is no number of music, but an actual clip of Hello Dolly plays. Also, the Pixar team has probably seen a few Disney movies in its day.
3. Starwars: The Force Awakens (2015)
The first Star Wars film made outside the aegis of creator George Lucas, TFA set to recreate the magic of the original trilogy – and damned if it didn’t largely succeed in channeling the world we first saw a long time ago. This extension of modern pop culture’s definitive pop saga – in which a new generation of dark lords, derring-do heroes and determined orphans step up to the plate – was fueled by the power and charm of its hugely charismatic cast, from relative newcomers Daisy Ridley and John Boyega to A-list actors Adam Driver and Oscar Isaac. And you didn’t need to have owned New Hope bedsheets back in the day to feel nostalgic seeing returning icons Carrie Fisher, Harrison Ford and, albeit briefly, Mark Hamill. Warm, funny, and unafraid to get truly emotional (RIP, Captain Solo), it made that galaxy far, far away feel closer to home than it had in ages.
2. Ex- Machina (2014)
Much like its impromptu dance scene, which launched a thousands gloriousGIFs, writer-director Alex Garland’s movie is hypnotic, hip – and also profoundly unsettling. This gripping thriller twists the knife on one of sci-fi’s great themes – what it means to be human – by placing mortals and androids in the same confined space and then consistently shifting our sympathies. Alicia Vikander electrifies as the seductive, seemingly subservient robot that slowly gets under the skin of the male programmers (Domhnall Gleeson, Oscar Isaac) who are under the mistaken impression that they’re studying her … and not the other way ’round. A relatively low-budget film that nonetheless walked off with the Best Visual Effects Oscar, Ex Machina is a marvel of smarts over spectacle, dissecting sexism and power dynamics with a cold-blooded efficiency worthy of its steely heroine.
1. Edge Of Tomorrow (2014)
A sci-fi Groundhog Day, this vastly underrated entry boasts a videogame premise that’s appealing to both Tom Cruise’s fans and haters: What if a whole movie was devoted to killing T.C. over and over again? The diminutive action hero is at his self-mocking, amped-up best as Cage, a military P.R. exec who dies while battling vicious, spider-like aliens – only to discover that, each time, he’s beamed back to the start of that same day. Bourne Identity director Doug Liman dazzlingly stretches and twists that clever concept to its breaking point, finding seemingly infinite variations on how Cage can screw up. But MVP honors go to Emily Blunt as a hard-as-nails soldier who has to teach this lovable cad to become a proper warrior. Together, they’re like a Nick and Nora for a future age overrun by gnarly interstellar monsters.
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