The sci-fi genre has always been about the future, but there are a few great movies which apply sci-fi concepts to historical periods. These can create interesting alternative histories, as well as some of the most unexpected spectacles that the genre has to offer.
Sci-fi delves into the past less than any other genre, simply because sci-fi is built on speculation and advanced technologies. Inserting either of these ideas into real-world history seems sorely out of place when it isn’t executed with care. Only a few historical sci-fi movies have the intelligence to avoid looking like cheap “what-if” pulp fiction.
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65 (2023)
65 Delivers Futuristic Sci-Fi Action In A Prehistoric Setting
65 stars Adam Driver as an astronaut who crash lands on an alien planet and has to find his way home. In a Planet of the Apes-style twist, the planet in question is Earth, with the key difference being that the story takes place 65 million years ago, on the day that the dinosaurs are about to be wiped out by an asteroid.
65 offers a lot more than raucous video-game fun.
65 has plenty of schlocky B-movie charm, but Driver’s performance brings enough intensity to sustain some genuinely gripping moments. Although the concept of fighting dinosaurs with laser rifles is immediately eye-catching, 65 offers a lot more than raucous video-game fun.
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Apollo 10 1/2: A Space Age Childhood (2022)
Richard Linklater Uses Sci-Fi To Reflect On His Childhood
Apollo 10 1/2 isn’t necessarily an autobiographic movie, but it might as well be, since it draws so heavily from Richard Linklater’s childhood experiences growing up in the suburbs of Houston. It spends just as much time listing old TV shows and music from the 1960s as it does exploring its sci-fi premise.
Apollo 10 1/2 uses sci-fi to illustrate the boundless reach of childhood imagination, and the way that memories can all get smeared together until they no longer make sense. One could argue that Apollo 10 1/2 shouldn’t really count as sci-fi at all, since Stanley’s trip to the moon is heavily implied to be a dream.
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Prey (2022)
Prey Brings The Predator Franchise Back To Basics
Prey has been hailed as the best movie in the Predator franchise since the original, partly because it takes things back to basics. Prey manages to make its fearsome alien monster seem just as shocking as it once was, although the 18th century Great Plains setting is a touch of brilliance.
The success of Prey paved the way for Predator: Killer of Killers, which applies the same basic idea to three different time periods in an anthology format. This offers another opportunity to see people from different historical cultures squaring up to a predator.
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Poor Things (2023)
Yorgos Lanthimos’ Steampunk Fable Puts A Twist On The Frankenstein Myth
Yorgos Lanthimos’ movies stand out with their unsettling atmospheres and stilted dialogue. Lanthimos has deployed his idiosyncratic style for dark comedy and haunting psychological horror, and with Poor Things he adds sci-fi to his list of accomplishments.
Poor Things is based on the book by Alasdair Gray, which is a twisted kind of Frankenstein fable. Lanthimos’ adaptation keeps the period setting and the grotesque body horror of many other Frankenstein stories dating back to Mary Shelley’s original novel, but he adds plenty of his own touches.
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Godzilla Minus One (2023)
Godzilla Returns To Its Origins
It can be hard to keep track of all the Godzilla movies since the franchise started in the 1950s, but Godzilla Minus One has been praised as one of the very best. This could be because it recaptures what made the concept so powerful in the first place, with Godzilla being used to create an allegory about Japan’s collective post-war trauma.
Godzilla Minus One takes place in the immediate aftermath of World War II, as Japan is struggling to rebuild both financially and psychologically. While the visual effects have been lauded by critics, Godzilla Minus One works well because it tells an interesting story, both on a broader societal level and with its three-dimensional characters.
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Captain America: The First Avenger (2011)
Marvel’s Worldbuilding Adds A New Dimension
The MCU is one of the most ambitious franchises in the history of cinema, because it tries to establish an entire alternate reality that seems just as lived-in and believable as our own. Captain America: The First Avenger was a key step in this process, since it uses elements of real-world history to add weight to Captain America’s backstory.
The First Avenger is an interesting amalgam of truth and fiction. The worldbuilding relies on drawing parallels between Captain America’s story and the real history of wartime propaganda. It’s also interesting to see the way that The First Avenger uses the Nazi war machine as a shortcut to understanding the true evil of its villain.
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Back To The Future (1985)
The Back To The Future Movies Hop Around To Different Eras
A lot of time travel movies either journey into the future or hop around within the same basic timeframe, partly because this is the easiest way to avoid all the tricky sci-fi paradoxes that crop up with backwards time travel. Back to the Future embraces the chaos of these paradoxes, as Marty McFly travels back to the 1950s and starts meddling in his own creation.
Each Back to the Future movie takes place in a different era. The second movie stands out by heading into the future, but otherwise, the franchise is happy to poke fun at the past. Back to the Future‘s loving recreation of the 1950s sets up plenty of great jokes, as does its Western outing in Part III.
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The Iron Giant (1999)
The Iron Giant Presents A Child-Friendly Anti-War Fable
The Iron Giant is based on the popular children’s book by Ted Hughes, although Brad Bird makes plenty of changes to the story. Hughes’ story came from the idea of a gun who doesn’t want to be a gun, and this encapsulates the way that the giant’s innocent, naive demeanor makes him such a lovable hero.
The Iron Giant echoes the public’s fascination with alien invasion stories during the Cold War, but it isn’t nearly as bleak as something like The Body Snatchers, for instance. Instead, The Iron Giant is a delightful tale about how friendship and curiosity can be more powerful than paranoia and skepticism.
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The Prestige (2006)
Christopher Nolan’s Period Drama Adds A Splash Of Sci-Fi
Many of Christopher Nolan’s movies are famous for their unique sci-fi concepts, but The Prestige doesn’t even reveal itself to be a sci-fi movie at all until late in the game. What starts out as a relatively grounded drama about two feuding magicians in Victorian London evolves into something much weirder and darker.
The sci-fi twist in The Prestige comes from the different ways that Angier and Borden execute their “Transported Man” tricks, in which they seem to teleport across the stage. The ending of The Prestige reveals their methods, and the differences highlight the true values of each man.
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The Shape Of Water (2017)
Guillermo Del Toro’s Ambitious Genre Cocktail Updates The Creature Feature
Guillermo del Toro once again proved his credentials as the master of the modern monster movie with The Shape of Water, which blends some familiar elements with the basic framework of a quirky romance. Somehow, del Toro balances these conflicting ideas and genres expertly.
The Shape of Water was a worthy Best Picture winner.
The Shape of Water was a worthy Best Picture winner, with great performances, a charming score and a deeply moving narrative. The story takes place at the height of Cold War paranoia in the United States. This turns out to be the perfect setting for a cinematic love story like no other.