Sept. 1 is the 107th anniversary of the premiere of what’s probably the world’s first science fiction film, A Trip to the Moon.
(Yes, we know 107 is not a round number. It’s a prime number, which for these purposes, is even better. So, be silent, earthling!)
To mark the occasion, we asked the staffs of Wired.com and its companion magazine, Wired, to tell us their favorite science fiction flicks. We’re not claiming these are the best, or the greatest, or anything else but our favorites.
Here they are, in chronological order, more or less — there’s an outlier at the end of today’s installment, Today we cover anything that’s pre–Star Wars. Tomorrow we’ll show you our faves from Star Wars (1977) up to 2009.
Flip through ’em, and then tell us what your favorites are.
The Thing From Another World (1951)
Don’t kid yourself. This is a Howard Hawks movie. He took charge of the script, and he directed — but let Christian Nyby take the credit so he could get into the Directors Guild (according to legend). A tightly written (Charles Lederer, based on the short story “Who Goes There?” by John W. Campbell Jr.), neatly acted and professionally directed movie. No frills. No gore. Just humans fighting for their lives. —John Scott Lewinski
The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T (1953)
Does this qualify as sci-fi? It gave me nightmares as a kid. —Kim Zetter
Them! (1954)
I’m going to go for this great sci-fi horror story of the giant ants that came out of the White Sands of Nevada after being created by the hubris of man’s atomic bomb testing. The ants eventually take on L.A. (Go, Giants?) But the movie’s lesson wasn’t learned, so Stanley Kubrick eventually had to direct Dr. Strangelove, a fantastic movie that unfortunately is not science fiction despite the centrality of the so-called Doomsday Machine to the plot. —Ryan Singel
Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956)
Taps into ’50s paranoia, “bringing a new dimension in terror to the giant SuperScope screen!” —Stephanie Dale
The Fabulous World of Jules Verne (1958)
A Trip to the Moon may be the oldest sci-fi flick, but this wonderful Czechoslovakian movie looks like it was made even earlier. A mixture of stop-motion and Terry Gilliam–style cut-out animation perfectly recreates the look of the fantastical engravings that appeared in Jules Verne’s seminal science fiction novels. It’s easy to imagine that this is what Verne’s 19th century contemporaries saw in their mind’s eye when they read his books. —Chris Baker
The Creation of the Humanoids (1962)
I first saw this low-budget gem on late-night TV more than three decades ago. It’s an awkward production, but the post-apocalyptic imagery of humans oppressing robots even as the machines become indistinguishable from their creators lodged itself in my brain. The film is an obvious precursor to Blade Runner and in some ways much closer to Philip K. Dick’s original story. —Ted Greenwald
Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964)
The character names are fantastic; President Merkin Muffley, Major T. J. “King” Kong, General Jack D. Ripper, General “Buck” Turgidson and Colonel “Bat” Guano. Not to mention the great writing: “Fluoridation is the most monstrously conceived and dangerous communist plot we have ever had to face” and “Gentlemen! You can’t fight in here! This is the war room!” And Stanley Kubrick’s visual styling is awesome! — Jon Snyder
If only for Miss Foreign Affairs. But Dr. Strangelove probably qualifies more as political farce than science fiction. —Tony Long
I love Strangelove, too, but I can’t classify it as sci-fi. — Marty Cortinas
Fahrenheit 451 (1966)
What would the world be like without the written word? François Truffaut’s colorful, textless take on Ray Bradbury’s novel is a masterpiece. —Randy Alfred
Fantastic Voyage (1966)
Shrunken surgeons and a saboteur aboard a miniaturized ship that’s injected into a patient’s bloodstream for a critical operation. I’m still waiting for this to become sci-fact. —Kim Zetter
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)
The first science-fiction film to get everything right. Provocative, visually stunning and culturally indelible. —Michael Calore, seconded by Chuck Squatriglia
Planet of the Apes (1968)
Simply for Charlton Heston’s over-the-top performance. It’s a madhouse! —Marty Cortinas
Solaris (1972)
The USSR’s answer to 2001 in the space-flick race. Like Stanley Kubrick’s masterpiece, Andrei Tarkovsky’s meditation on the loneliness and paranoia of deep-space exploration is more psyche-fi than sci-fi, but its stimulating plot, bizarre production and odd humor make it a winner. Skip the Soderberg remake. —Michael Calore
Silent Running (1972)
I need to see it again. Space eco-terrorism with robots! —Marty Cortinas
Soylent Green (1973)
Edward G. Robinson’s last movie, overpopulation horror, cannibalism, euthanasia, class wars: It’s got a lot going on. —Marty Cortinas
Day of the Dolphin (1973)
“Fa, Pa, go — now!” Oh, that was Sooo sad. —Annaliza Savage
Zardoz (1974)
Oh my god, it’s the best floating head movie ever! (And John Boorman made Excalibur, too.) —Annaliza Savage
A Boy and His Dog (1975)
(Not just because I now own a dog.) One of the most chilling visions of the future ever. Extra marks for being a rare example of a Don Johnson movie that doesn’t suck. His portrayal of a desperate, emotionally vacant apocalypse survivor is surprisingly convincing. —Evan Hansen
Logan’s Run (1976)
A future without underwear. —Lee Simmons
Lassie Come Home (1943)
Does this count? Lassie was certainly very smart, and Timmy could understand her when she barked. That has certain sci-fi qualities, I’d say. —Tony Long
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