The MoFo Top 100 Sci-Fi Films: Countdown

→ in
Tools    





I had Empire at #15.

Also, where's my avatar?
__________________
"Don't be so gloomy. After all it's not that awful. Like the fella says, in Italy for 30 years under the Borgias they had warfare, terror, murder, and bloodshed, but they produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, and the Renaissance. In Switzerland they had brotherly love - they had 500 years of democracy and peace, and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock."



Beat me to it.

Anyways, Empire was not on my list. I'm not a Star Wars fan though most of the films can entertain me quite well - and Empire might be the best of the bunch. But once again, surprised how "low" this is... I was certain it would be top 5.





(hopefully this'll actually make sense tomorrow )



Woody Allen is a pedophille
The Stats
A Clockwork Orange


The first Kubrick to make the list. Clockwork Orange is also the first film to have more than two first places which is what gave it the edge over Empire.

The Placements
1st (x3)
2nd (x5)
5th (x3)
6th (x2)
7th (x3)
8th
9th
11th
14th (x2)
17th
18th
19th
21st



Woody Allen is a pedophille
PREDICTION GAME UPDATE
No one correctly predicted A Clockwork Orange as #7, so the board remains like this:
1. Raven73 - 5 Points
2. Sexy Celebrity - 3 Points
3. (tie) Holden Pike - 1 Point
3. (tie) TUS - 1 Point
3. (tie) Siddon - 1 Point



Strange that A Clockwork Orange is in the Top 10 at #7 for "science fiction" movies.
Dystopian future... yes, but that's about it as far as sci-fi elements go. It's more of a black-comedic social study than anything else and even it's near-future setting isn't really necessary to the plot. I'm not dissing it as a movie, just questioning how it's ranked so high up as a science fiction.



I had A Clockwork Orange on my list. Even though it's not one of my favourites from Kubrick, it's still a great film, far better than most Sci-Fi films, and definitely deserved a vote.



I've never thought of A Clockwork Orange as Sci-Fi and I questioned myself about voting for it. In the end, I simply based my list on what qualified, and it was my favorite movie that did. It's one of the movies I've seen the most times, mostly while drunk, and mostly for it's humor.

My list-

#1 A Clockwork Orange (7th)
#2 Strange Days (81st)
#3 Aliens (12th)
#4 The Fly (15th)
#5 The Terminator (10th)
#6 RoboCop (28th)
#8 28 Days Later (85th)
#9 E.T. (21st)
#11 Total Recall (19th)
#12 The Hidden (82nd)
#13 Planet of the Apes (17th)
#19 Children of Men (20th)
#20 Seconds (84th)
#21 Donnie Darko (83rd)
#22 Interstellar (43rd)
#23 Ex-Machina (30th)
#24 Her (25th)
#25 They Live (45th)



After the countdown, I think we're all going to need to make lists of movies we forgot about, but wished we'd remembered.
For instance, another dystopian future movie I just remembered is Rollerball (the original of course). Still don't know if I'd place it within the Top 25, but I completely forgot to think about it.



I use to think Rollerball (1975) was great sci fi, back when I was in school. I watched it again shortly after joining MoFo and did not care for it. To me, it was like how you see Zardoz (once cool, but now hokey)

My review: Rollerball (1975)



Bright light. Bright light. Uh oh.
I had A Clockwork Orange at #9. Hey, it was #9 on the last Sci-Fi List we adopted so I had no problems voting for it. I wrote this next part when I was still teaching full-time.
Well, A Clockwork Orange sucks the viewer in with a weird, otherworldly atmosphere by using high-contrast photography and a Beethoven soundtrack. It isn't science fiction. It's closer to some kind of alternate universe. Almost immediately it pummels you with sex and ultraviolence in an attempt to either turn you on or turn you off (or perhaps more significantly, both at the same time). The subject matter is rather repulsive but the cinematics are spectacular. We follow Alex and his "little droogies" around while they "shag and fag" and vicariously see things which seem beyond the pale, but Beethoven is just oh so beautiful.

Then, the flick turns a bit more serious and substantial when Alex ends up in prison and is enticed to undergo some kind of miracle therapy. I know many people who love the first part of the film but say that the next section (the point of the film) is "boring". They wanted more in-out and ultra violence. Well, we do get to that and that's the film's coup. The authorities basically use A Clockwork Orange itself as the miracle cure for Alex to become a "normal member of society". Alex is forced to watch a facsimile of A Clockwork Orange to get repulsed by rape and violence, and since Beethoven is on the soundtrack, it deeply disturbs and affects him. The whole thing is really just a political scam though with Alex as the guinea pig in the middle of a political war. However, even the "peace and freedom" types want their revenge on Alex so the whole movie comes full circle.

Now, I realize that what I'm saying here is nothing new or enlightening. It's always been there right in the film. But as time goes by, and I get more and more students who started watching ultra-violent films and pornos when they were five-years-old, and they mostly have a kid or two by the time they're 15 and they belong to gangs and want to do things like Alex does in the first part of the movie, A Clockwork Orange takes on a kind of prescience which makes it seem better now than when it was first released. But I've always been deeply disturbed because I loved the film the first time.
My List
3. The Incredibles (#98)
6. Close Encounters of the Third Kind (#18)
7. Planet of the Apes (1968) (#17)
8. Total Recall (#19)
9. A Clockwork Orange (#7)
11. Star Wars V: The Empire Strikes Back (#8)
12. The Iron Giant (#50)
13. Altered States (#95)
14. Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind (#79)
16. Return of the Jedi (#47)
17. E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (#21)
18. Gravity (#41)
19. Aliens (#12)
20. RoboCop (#28)
21. Jurassic Park (#13)
22. The Fly (1986) (#15)
23. Mad Max: Fury Road (#37)
25. Children of Men (#20)

Seen: 94/94
OFCS's Top 100 Sci-Fi Films (2010 edition): 46/94
__________________
It's what you learn after you know it all that counts. - John Wooden
My IMDb page



I use to think Rollerball (1975) was great sci fi, back when I was in school. I watched it again shortly after joining MoFo and did not care for it. To me, it was like how you see Zardoz (once cool, but now hokey)

My review: Rollerball (1975)
As I've mentioned before, I've gone through different phases with this movie. What surprised me was how much more I was able to see in it in a later viewing.

If there was a movie that would be prime for a remake (as its themes are classic, but where more messages about our current era could be inserted and would seem extremely timely wrapped up in analogies about an ultraviolent sport, dependence on technology and a ruling corporatocracy) Rollerball is it.
Unfortunately, we got that waste that they called a remake.