Thursday, September 11, 2025
HomeEntertainment10 best sci-fi movies which gradually develop it's plot

10 best sci-fi movies which gradually develop it’s plot

Sci-fi films frequently depict an unrealistic picture of reality. Everything in the universe, including the individuals that live there, is a product of the author’s imagination, depending on his or her capacity to look into the future or consider the past.

Here are 10 sci-fi films with a patient buildup that everyone should watch.

The Lobster (2015)

Fans of Yorgos Lanthimos’ movie are rather divided. The movie receives rave reviews from one set, but not everyone is as taken with the Greek master’s work. The movie is based on a ridiculous yet fascinating notion that single individuals must find a partner within 45 days or they would be changed into the animal of their choosing. It is set in a rather dystopian future.

Sunshine (2007)

Danny Boyle filmed an equally amazing movie about a squad of astronauts who are transported to orbit on a mission to revive a dying sun. it’s an exploration on god, death, and all that lies in between. It has a strong idea and an excellent ensemble.

Coherence (2013)

The movie chronicles the strange events of a dinner party that occur while a mystery comet passes over a particular spot on a single night. A diverse cast of individuals in James Ward Byrkit’s film are subjected to an intellectual examination that gradually reveals the horror of the unknown.

Ex Machina (2014)

Garland’s sci-fi narrative of the god complex, egos, and artificial intelligence is more indicative of our current situation than of where we are heading in the future. Ex Machina, starring an alluring Oscar Isaac and a mesmerising Alicia Vikander, initially appears to be a movie about science and robots, but as you watch it, you gradually realise that it’s really a movie about people and their emotions.

Arrival (2016)

Arrival, which was directed by Denis Villeneuve, takes a really realistic perspective on the genre and accurately depicts an invasion situation. Villeneuve chose to calmly unravel the workings of a global calamity, going against the conventions of the genre.

Blade Runner (1982)

Do Android Dream of Electric Sheep, a dystopian adaptation of Philip K. Dick’s novel, is regarded as the finest science fiction movie ever made, and with good reason. In Scott’s film, basic human wants and emotions are addressed using scientific sensibility.

2001: A Space Odyssey (1966)

When it first came out, Stanley Kubrick’s movie was viewed and feared as a stark illustration of the sinister side of AI, a concern the director had gleaned as NASA prepared to send the Mariner 4 past Mars. Every bit as strange, gloomy, and lonely as its author’s imagination, 2001: A Space Odyssey exemplified it all.

Threads (1984)

If not for a handful of decent guys, Threads would have rendered the planet obsolete. It is more than just a movie. Mick Jackson’s low-budget movie, which focused on the effects of a nuclear winter on a tiny English community, created a terrifying picture of what such a winter might be like.

The Thing (1982)

Given that it is set against the backdrop of an enormous and wide Antarctica, John Carpenter’s movie is both frightening on the outside and intimidating on the inside. As the alien thing infiltrates their ranks and causes turmoil both from the outside and from within, the gang of researchers quickly begins to turn on one another.

Stalker (1972)

An eternal sci-fi treat is Andrei Tarkovsky’s rumination on man, myth, and madness. The movie, which is set in an unidentified time period, centres on a protagonist who transports characters across The Zone, a post-apocalyptic wasteland that leads to a legendary location where all of one’s aspirations from Earth are suddenly satisfied.

Sneha
Sneha
Inhouse writer at pagalparrot.com. I love writing about various topics that interests the new age readers.

Most Popular

You may like

Latest Articles