15 Underrated Sci-Fi/Fantasy Movies to Watch When Procrastinating the Real World
When I avoid working on a big project or just can’t find the words to crack into the next work, I turn to the soothing dulcet vibes of sci-fi and fantasy pop culture. World-building, complex characters, and yes, magic and monsters, never cease to inspire me.
The production design alone makes it a worthy rental. Following the sparse, taut sci-fi thriller Pitch Black, Chronicles of Riddick delves into almost overwhelmingly complex mythology without explanation or apology. The sheer brazenness of Chronicles of Riddick wins me over every time.
10 Cloverfield Lane received much deserved praise this past year as the 2016-edition of a Hitchcock film, but I’m still partial to the first in the so-called anthology series. Cloverfield is found footage done right, something filmmaker still struggle with over 8 years later.
While awaiting John Wick 2 and Doctor Strange, I can get my Keanu and Tilda fixes with this supernatural comic book adaptation.
An oh-so-giffable pre-Batman Begins Christian Bale dystopian action movie, Equilibrium is like The Giver if it focused on gun-toting enforcers instead of children and the Giver was played by Sean Bean instead of an old man.
Found footage really does get a bad rap because when it’s done well as in the space voyage found footage feature Europa Report, it can be evocative and thrilling without cheapening the plot.
Tarsem Singh’s The Cell is a little too intense for me and his Immortals is just a smidge too ridiculous. The Fall starring Lee Pace and a multicultural, uber-talented cast and the most colorful shots I’ve seen in a live action movie feels juuuuust right.
While we not be getting a live action third film in this ostensible trilogy (I still have animation hopes!), the first Guillermo Del Toro-directed comic book adaptation features a nonsense Nazi-butt-kicking demon with lady troubles.
On its surface, The Host looks like the Korean Cloverfield (especially since they premiered around the same time), but in many ways The Host is more of a traditional family film than its found footage American cousin. But with monsters, of course.
It still boggles my mind how many people have yet to see any Hayao Miyazaki movies. Do yourself a favor and start with Howl’s Moving Castle, which vibrant, exuberant, emotional, and more complex than it seems upon first viewing.
Don’t you love a solid movie with no real villain besides the forces of nature? This time, it’s not Earth but Mars!
This warm-hearted adaptation still makes me tear up in the end. It also makes me forget the 2015 Pan movie ever happened.
Kooky American general Matthew Mcconaughey + Guilt-ridden dystopian resistance leader Christian Bale + Resistance deputy leader and Star Wars geek Gerard Butler + Dragons = All-around good time.
A movie about the Internet that for all the kooky avatars captures what it feels like to be a part of an Internet community. (Hi Tumblr!)
This suspenseful, star-studded space saga can be summed up in five words: Shoulda listened to Chris Evans.
Let’s take the best parts of Underworld (Lucian, Viktor, vampire armor, Lycan battles) and make it a feature length movie. Sure, why not!