Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Mary Sue
The Mary Sue
Sarah Fimm

The 10 Best Sci-Fi Movies of The 21st Century

The future is NOW, baby! It’s the 21st century! We’re living in a sci-fi movie plot already! The seas are rising! AI is taking over! Night vision contact lenses are a thing! While the world of today can be a confusing and scary place, these films prove that as freaky as right now is, things can always get worse! Modern problems require modern solutions, and sometimes that solution is gluing yourself to your TV set and pretending those problems don’t exist! And what better way to distract yourself from the woes of today than with the 10 best sci-fi movies of the 21st century? I don’t think science could come up with a better solution than that.

Ex Machina

An android woman leans up close to another in "Ex Machina"
(A24)

Alex Garland’s Ex Machina is Turing-tested, audience approved. It’s the story of a gifted young software engineer named Caleb who wins a lottery to visit the luxurious home of his company’s CEO. The final stage of tech-bro evolution, company leader Nathan Bateman is working on a new technology that will change the world – just like everyone else in Silicon Valley claims to be doing. The difference is, Nathan might just be on to something. He’s developed a hyper-advanced humanoid robot named Ava, and he’d like Caleb’s help in figuring out if she’s truly conscious. What’s starts out as a sci-fi meet-cute soon twists into something sinister when Ava claims that she is being abused by Nathan, and Caleb is the only person who can rescue her. A cerebral sci-fi about the inner workings of the psyche, Ex Machina will have you thinking twice before saying anything disparaging about synthetic intelligence – the robots might not take too kindly to that.

District 9

A crustacean like alien looks suspicious in "District 9"
(Sony Pictures Releasing)

Neill Blomkamp’s District 9 is an age-old social parable seen through a sci-fi lens. After a damaged spaceship appears over South Africa, its beleaguered alien passengers ask for asylum on the nation’s soil. Herded into slums, the aliens (derogatorily called “Prawns”) are subject to a form of species based apartheid. Defense contractor employee Wikus van de Merwe is assigned to lead the forced relocation effort of the aliens, but he is exposed to an extraterrestrial contaminant while on the job. To his horror, he discovers his body is slowly beginning to mirror the aliens’ physiology, and he’s now turning into a member of the species that he once oppressed. District 9 is a cautionary tale, a warning that as enlightened as humanity claims itself to be, mankind can’t help but establish violent hierarchies. We do it to ourselves, and if we’re not careful, we’ll do it to other intelligent life as well.

Annihilation

Natalie Portman and Tessa Thompson in 'Annihilation'
(Paramount)

Adapted from a biological horror novel by Jeff VanderMeer, Annihilation pits a team of scientists and scholars against cosmic terrors beyond their comprehension. After an environmental anomaly dubbed “The Shimmer” began spreading itself across a now-classified stretch of wilderness, researchers are scrambling to stop its advance. When the six woman response team crosses the ephemeral border, they’re faced with an environment that is subtly, utterly alien. The Shimmer splices together lifeforms, mixing animal with vegetable with mineral in a perversion of 20 Questions norms. A slowburn sci-fi horror, Annihilation does exactly what its title suggests to the sanity of its characters – leaving them, like the environment, altered beyond recognition.

Arrival

A woman stands in a misty room with two towering, squid like aliens in "Arrival"
(Paramount Pictures)

Adapted from Ted Chiang’s short Story of Your Life, Arrival is a film about conversation with aliens. After a fleet of advanced spaceships start floating above separate points all across the globe, Earth’s nations scramble to suss out the extraterrestrials’ vibe. Are they here to help us? To annihilate us? Those are exactly the questions that linguist Louise Banks has been hired to help answer. Contrary to popular belief, learning to communicate with 20 foot tale squid things whose written language consists entirely of circles is more difficult than one might expect. As Louise learns to converse with her new Lovecraftian friends, she discovers that the aliens have come with a gift – not a different way of communicating, but a different way of thinking. It’s a story of unlikely connection, the bonds that tie together even the most seemingly opposite of life forms. Intelligence doesn’t discriminate, anyone, even a seven footed space cephalopod, can be an excellent conversationalist.

Under The Skin

Film still from Under the Skin featuring Scarlett Johansson looking out the front windshield of a van with lens flare in the foreground
(A24)

Based on a novel of the same name, Jonathan Glazer’s Under The Skin is the story of an alien that walks among us – and might even invite us back to their place for some hanky panky! A beautiful, nameless woman spends her days enticing lonely men into her cabin – where she dissolves them in a liquid pool of inky black horror. While that might not be any sane person’s idea of a good time, we get the idea that this woman might not actually be a person at all – but an extraterrestrial intelligence wearing a person’s skin. An unnerving, sometimes repulsive film, Under The Skin is an examination of humanity from the perspective of an unknowable outsider. If she likes what she sees, she sure has a funny way of showing it.

Melancholia

Kirsten Dunst, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Alexander Skarsgård, and Kiefer Sutherland look up at sky in Melancholia
(Nordisk Film / Les Films du Losange / Concorde Filmverleih)

Architect of sorrow Lars von Trier returns with Melancholia, another beautiful downer for the director’s sad oeuvre. After falling into a steep depression and calling off her marriage, newly ex-wed Justine learns that the Earth is rotating dangerously Melancholia – a rogue planet that has emerged from behind the sun. As scientists feverishly try to predict whether or not the two heavenly bodies will collide, the apathetic Justine moves in with her increasingly anxious sister Claire. At its molten, planetary core, Melancholia is an examination for the many ways humanity deals with the inevitability of tragedy and death. Some deny it, some fret over it, and some let it break them, and some meet oblivion with quiet acceptance – I’m sure you can guess which camp Justine belongs to.

Wall-E

pixar's wall-e
(Disney/Pixar)

Andrew Stanton’s Wall-E is the story of the world’s most adorable robot – a post-apocalyptic survivor programmed to believe the End Times can be solved with a little hard work! Wall-E is one of a bajillion robots created to clean up our planet, which was trashed by ever-consuming, ever-polluting human civilization. After a meet-cute with a life-scanning robot named EVE, the smitten Wall-E ends up inadvertently hitching a ride back to the spaceship she came from – a spaceship that houses the technologically dependent vestiges of the human race. Wall-E is a robot romance that doubles as a dire warning: if humanity doesn’t change course, lovestruck automatons will be forced to decide our fate – we’ll be too lazy and helpless to care. As cute as that sounds, I hope for a better future.

Everything, Everywhere All At Once

A bloodied Evelyn Quan with a googly eye on her forehead smiles confidently in "Everything Everywhere All At Once
(A24)

A sci-fi romp like no other, Everything, Everywhere All At Once is a once in a generation film from the absurdist minds of “The Daniels” – its whacky writer/director pair. Evelyn Quan Wang is a middle-aged Chinese immigrant whose life is falling apart – her marriage is broken, her daughter can’t stand her, and her laundromat is getting audited by the IRS. After being contacted by an alternate-dimension version of her husband, Evelyn learns that an evil doppelgänger of her daughter is attempting to destroy the multiverse with a bagel-shaped black hole. Alongside a group of parallel reality freedom fighters, Evelyn must hop between dimensions to confront her daughter and her greatest fear: emotional vulnerability. It’s a wonderfully weird film about embracing the courage to change reality by changing your mindset. Oh, and people with hot dogs for fingers, it’s about that too.

Coherence

A blonde woman looks suspiciously over her shoulder in "Coherence"
(Oscilloscope Laboratories)

A brilliant example of “where there’s a will, there’s a way” filmmaking, James Ward Byrkit’s Coherence only had the budget for one location – so they milked it for it all it was worth. The story revolves around a group of eight friends gathered together for a dinner party, but the festivities are interrupted by a close passing comet. After a power outage and cellphone signal loss sends them looking next door for answers, they discover that the neighboring house is a carbon copy of the one they’re in – with carbon copies of them inside. It’s a psychological sci-fi thriller that feels like A+ Twilight Zone episode, a simple idea that is stunningly terrifying in execution.

Interstellar

Matthew McConaughey in 'Interstellar'
(Paramount / Warner Bros.)

You didn’t think I’d forget Interstellar, did you? One of the 21st century’s biggest sci-fi blockbuster, this Christopher Nolan film was so influential that it actually resulted in real life scientific discoveries. A team of scientists were called in to advise on this space-journey opus, which ended up leading to a breakthrough in the study of black holes. A team of astronauts leave a dying Earth behind to look for a new habitable planet, and their search leads them to worlds that orbit of a gargantuan black hole. At the mercy of extreme environments and time dilation, the astronauts are helpless in the face of an uncaring universe – until hyper-advanced aliens decide to help out. It’s a stunningly cinematic sci-fi that feels as visually rich as a Hubble telescope image, and equally awe-inspiring.

Have a tip we should know? [email protected]

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.