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The 50 Best Dystopian Movies of All Time

Posted on 6/1/21 at 5:12 pm
Posted by RLDSC FAN
Rancho Cucamonga, CA
Member since Nov 2008
51452 posts
Posted on 6/1/21 at 5:12 pm
quote:

That dystopian movies have become a genre all their own speaks to our fears of the future. As oppressive regimes across the globe turn to technology to control their populaces—and we see our own government putting kids in cages and eroding privacies we’ve long taken for granted—we get a glimpse the terrifying possibilities of where we may be headed. It’s natural for us to explore those what-if scenarios in film, something we’ve been doing since at least 1932 when Fritz Lang brought Metropolis to life.

Not to be confused with post-apocalyptic films (though the two may overlap), dystopian films deal with a decidedly human threat from those in control. Dystopian societies are marked by mass suffering and great injustice, and we don’t always have to look for fiction to see examples. For our purposes here, we’ve focused on Earth, eliminating films where the threat is from another planet. We’ve also eliminated post-apocalyptic films where society hasn’t been rebuilt to the point of a functioning government. That’s left a still very wide swath of cinema to consider, from sci-fi looks into the distant future to cautionary tales of a much more recognizable world in our present or even past. This may not be escapism, but as the increasing number of dystopian movies, novels and TV series prove, we remain captivated by stories of societies gone wrong and the struggle of individuals to overcome.


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10. A Clockwork Orange (1971)

Director: Stanley Kubrick


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9. Children of Men (2006)

Director: Alfonso Cuarón


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8. Stalker (1979)

Director: Andrei Tarkovsky


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7. Akira (1988)

Director: Katsuhiro Otomo


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6. Metropolis (1927)

Director: Fritz Lang


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5. WALL-E (2008)

Director: Andrew Stanton


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4. Robocop (1987)

Director: Paul Verhoeven


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3. The Matrix (1999)

Directors: The Wachowskis


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2. Brazil



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1. Blade Runner (1982)

Director: Ridley Scott

Just as The Road Warrior set the look and tone for countless post-apocalyptic cinema-scapes to follow, so too did the world of Ridley Scott’s dingy, wet and overcrowded Blade Runner set the standard for the depiction of pre-apocalyptic dystopias. But he also had Harrison Ford, Sean Young, Rutger Hauer and a cast of actors who all bring this Philip K. Dick-inspired tale of a replicant-retiring policeman to gritty, believable life. Beneath the film’s impressive set design and inspired performances lies a compelling meditation on the lurking loneliness of the human (and, perhaps, inhuman) condition that continues to resonate (and trigger new creations, like Villeneuve’s Blade Runner 2049) to this day.



rest of the list
Posted by nes2010
Member since Jun 2014
6753 posts
Posted on 6/1/21 at 5:35 pm to
Not one Mad Max movie made the top 50?
Posted by Sun God
Member since Jul 2009
44874 posts
Posted on 6/1/21 at 5:42 pm to
Robocop is about Detroit being a shithole

Not dystopian in the slightest
Posted by JetsetNuggs
Member since Jun 2014
13884 posts
Posted on 6/1/21 at 5:46 pm to
Book of Eli should be on the list and probably top 10
Posted by OMLandshark
Member since Apr 2009
108098 posts
Posted on 6/1/21 at 5:51 pm to
Not a single Mad Max film on the list? Not even in the Top 50? It’s a Top 5 most memorable dystopian hellscapes. Instead they put in the Lego movie? What the hell is that doing on the list? The second movie was way more dystopian than the first. I also don’t consider The Truman Show a dystopian movie either, more of Utopian nightmare. I thought the implication is outside the Dome that the world was pretty normal. And Idiocracy is way too low on the list.
This post was edited on 6/1/21 at 5:53 pm
Posted by arcalades
USA
Member since Feb 2014
19276 posts
Posted on 6/1/21 at 6:10 pm to
1. The Matrix




2. Planet of the Apes



rest
Posted by OMLandshark
Member since Apr 2009
108098 posts
Posted on 6/1/21 at 6:11 pm to
I think the Blade Runner Universe is the undisputed champ here. It’s just that good and intricate.
Posted by Saint Alfonzo
Member since Jan 2019
22142 posts
Posted on 6/1/21 at 6:29 pm to
quote:

Not one Mad Max movie made the top 50?


That's ridiculous, the Mad Max movies basically invented the genre. Not one Resident Evil movie either or I Am Legend. List is junk.
Posted by brewhan davey
Audubon Place
Member since Sep 2010
32775 posts
Posted on 6/1/21 at 6:36 pm to
Idiocracy should be top 10, if not top 5.
Posted by EuphoricSSP
Member since Feb 2021
822 posts
Posted on 6/1/21 at 6:41 pm to
No Mad Max?

List.Is.shite.
Posted by cgrand
HAMMOND
Member since Oct 2009
38642 posts
Posted on 6/1/21 at 6:45 pm to
quote:

Not a single Mad Max film on the list? Not even in the Top 50?
quote:

Not to be confused with post-apocalyptic films
Posted by OMLandshark
Member since Apr 2009
108098 posts
Posted on 6/1/21 at 6:56 pm to
quote:

Not to be confused with post-apocalyptic films


Then Children of Men should be taken off the list. In 80 years there probably won’t be a living human.
Posted by ldts
Member since Aug 2015
2677 posts
Posted on 6/1/21 at 7:09 pm to
quote:

17. World on a Wire (1973)


This is an excellent film that probably doesn't get the attention it should. If you subscribe to the criterion channel and have about three and a half hours it's a really good watch.
Posted by HabaneroBuck
Up a ways.
Member since Oct 2020
1359 posts
Posted on 6/1/21 at 7:12 pm to
I kind of agree with omitting Mad Max in the sense that it's post-apocalyptic, where basically lawlessness reigns. Dystopian refers to authoritarianism and urban decay taken to its logical conclusion, a la 1984 (which should be top ten based on the source material alone).

I grew up a huge fan of Escape from New York, but I probably rate Robocop the highest because of the fullness of the vision brought to the screen. Ultra-violence, inane television ads, corporatocracy, rampant drug use, rampant violent gangs working in conjunction with political power, etc.

Dark Mirror has some episodes that absolutely deserve mention as well.
Posted by Jack Ruby
Member since Apr 2014
22712 posts
Posted on 6/1/21 at 7:14 pm to
Yeah Children of Men is basically a future documentary at this point.

Mad Max virtually INVENTED the genre as we know it today and Road Warrior perfected it, inventing basically one of the two pillars of dystopian film settings, along with Blade Runner.

You can dispute how good the original Mad Max actually is, that's fine, but The Road Warrior and Blade Runner are easily the indisputable top 2. The fact that this list left off such an important franchise is simply a joke and should not be taken seriously in the least.
Posted by OMLandshark
Member since Apr 2009
108098 posts
Posted on 6/1/21 at 7:21 pm to
quote:

You can dispute how good the original Mad Max actually is, that's fine, but The Road Warrior and Blade Runner are easily the indisputable top 2. The fact that this list left off such an important franchise is simply a joke and should not be taken seriously in the least.


Yeah, I’d have Mad Max at #2 with 1984 right behind it. The adaptation is not as good as the book, otherwise that would be #1.
Posted by doc baklava
Between heaven and hell
Member since Oct 2020
808 posts
Posted on 6/1/21 at 7:22 pm to
Children of Men is outstanding.
Posted by CU_Tigers4life
Georgia
Member since Aug 2013
7495 posts
Posted on 6/1/21 at 7:40 pm to
Waterworld
The Hunger Games
Agree with why no Mad Max
No Terminator?
Demolition Man


Any of these should go over a Lego Movie
Posted by OMLandshark
Member since Apr 2009
108098 posts
Posted on 6/1/21 at 7:43 pm to
quote:

No Terminator?


Terminator is an action movie with a possible dystopian fate. Doesn’t even register. Dystopian films are there to one degree or another. Before the studios whored out, they stopped that future in T2. Not even worthy of consideration IMO.
This post was edited on 6/1/21 at 7:46 pm
Posted by CU_Tigers4life
Georgia
Member since Aug 2013
7495 posts
Posted on 6/1/21 at 7:48 pm to
quote:


Terminator is an action movie with a possible dystopian fate. Doesn’t even register. Dystopian films are there to one degree or another. Before the studios whored out, they stopped that future in T2. Not even worthy of consideration IMO.


The first Terminator spent a lot of time in a very dystopian future. 2 of the main characters are products of that time. Still better than the Lego movie
This post was edited on 6/1/21 at 7:49 pm
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