You’ve seen the famous aliens, planets and scientists, but now it’s time to venture even farther into the depths of space.

  •  golli   ( @golli@lemm.ee ) 
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    11 months ago

    “underrated” and “movies that never get the credit they deserve” seems a bit hard to define. But at least subjectively I disagree with placing some of these movies on this list.

    • Asteroid City: can a movie that has just barely come out even be considered “underrated”? Feels like not enough time has passed for public opinion to truly form. Besides that it feels like it gets plenty of credit being a Wes Anderson movie.

    • Under the skin: bombed in the box office as far as I know, but imo also isn’t easily accessible for the average viewer and not mainstream. But it does seem to get plenty of praise from the critic side, so I don’t see it as underrated from this perspective.

    • Solaris and Stalker: again I don’t think they are underrated by critics and are highly praised. Just not movies that are easily accessible for the average viewer.

    • Paprika and ghost under the shell: are both a bit niche simply by being anime, but at least from the critic side I don’t see them as being underrated. I think ghost in the shell is reasonably known, Paprika maybe a bit less. So that could fit.

    • Donnie Darko: is a cult classic that definitely has a decent sized following. It’s maybe not a mainstream hit, but imo I wouldnt call it underrated.

    What I would agree with is “Ad Astra”. Definitely flawed and not perfect, but I still liked it quite a bit. So at least from my biased perspective it would count as being underrated

    • Asteroid City’s “play within a play” and that unnerving chant at the end was it’s undoing. None of that needed to be there, but the movie would have been too short without it.

  • I really enjoy classic scifi.

    The American Astronaut (my favorite movie of all time)

    Until The End Of The World (1991 - director’s cut - my second favorite movie of all time)

    The Time Machine (1960)

    The Andromeda Strain (1971)

    This Island Earth (1955)

    When Worlds Collide (1951)

    Lifeforce (1985)

    Pretty much all of the ones referenced in the opening theme for Rocky Horror… Day of the Triffids, Tarantula, The Invisible Man, etc…

    Code 46, Dagon, Interstate 60 (kinda),

    Recent gems have been Shin Godzilla, Aniara, Vesper, Doors… I am positive I am forgetting some others…

    • The wiki summary of The American Astronaut is absolutely bonkers. Then realizing that it was released on DVD post-2000 and not pre-1975 is even more crazy!

  • Saving you a click, here’s the list:

    Asteroid City (2023)
    The Andromeda Strain (1971)
    The Prestige (2006)
    Paprika (2006)
    Under the Skin (2013)
    Stalker (1979)
    Westworld (1973)
    Dark City (1998)
    Ad Astra (2019)
    Annihilation (2018)
    Attack the Block (2011)
    Solaris (1972)
    Life (2017)
    Silent Running (1972)
    Soylent Green (1973)
    The Mitchells vs. The Machines (2021)
    The Iron Giant (1999)
    Repo Man (1984)
    La Jetée (1962)
    They Live (1988)
    Them! (1954)
    The Thing From Another World (1951)
    Ghost in the Shell (1995)
    Donnie Darko (2001)
    Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind (1984)
    

    With the exception of Them! or Life, I’d argue that none of these are particularly “underrated”. To reach that category, I’d say that a movie would need to have a less-than 60 rating on Rotten Tomatoes or other similar review aggregation site to demonstrate some degree of negative or “meh” critical consensus.

    Case in point: Enemy Mine (1985).

  • My underrated picks would be **Melancholia **(2011) about a planet passing unsettlingly close to the Earth during a wedding, and **Coherence **(2013) about a group of friends gathering for a dinner party on an evening when a comet is passing overhead.

    Typing this out I realise they actually both sound quite similar but I promise you they are very, very different and worth a watch.

  • Let’s focus on movies that are about the end of humanity.

    Virus: The End

    Produced by Japan’s Toho (famously the studio of the Godzilla films), it’s an end-of-the-world flick featuring a frankly astonishing international cast in what could be considered a “conference room drama” – bottled-up high stakes human interaction in a true dystopic end to humanity. I can’t figure how I never saw this back in the 80s; I only discovered it recently and I was blown away.

    I’ll second The Andromeda Strain, it’s also a “conference room drama” and it really works. James Olson was a hugely underrated actor of the era.

    Colossus: The Forbin Project, also wire-taut conference room drama with imminent destruction hanging on every decision.

    And while we’re at it, War Games, probably the best known of all these films, and maybe the only one that doesn’t merit the categorization as a conference-room drama. But the stakes are the same.

  • Robot Jox - saw it as a kid and it blew me away. Giant robot fights! But it has just enough plot and political intrigue to not be completely cheesy. Like, why don’t we solve all our problems with giant robot fights instead of all out war? It totally made sense to 10 year old me, anyway.