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Timothée Chalamet and Zendaya stand face to face as Paul Atreides and Chani wearing stillsuits in the desert in Dune: Part Two Image: Warner Bros.

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The best sci-fi movies you can watch at home

From old classics to new, under-the-radar gems

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Science fiction, to echo Ursula K. Le Guin, is not predictive, but descriptive. While most science fiction films attempt (and fail) to extrapolate the ideas and concerns of their respective present to predict what the world may look like in the not-so-distant future, these extrapolations ultimately amount to stories that exist in conversation with the hopes and fears of the times in which they were conceived.

All of this is to say that science fiction (i.e., speculative fiction) is a genre of possibilities and introspection, one whose long legacy through the medium of cinema has produced countless iconic works whose thematic depth and aesthetic resonance have enlivened and inspired the imaginations of countless more generations. From Fritz Lang’s Metropolis and Andrei Tarkovsky’s Solaris to Andrew Niccol’s Gattaca and more, the history and legacy of science fiction in film is one of futures past that have since gone on to shape and inform our view of the present, all while entertaining and edifying audiences new and old alike.

We’ve created a list of some of our favorite sci-fi films currently available on streaming, movies that continue to inspire us look to the future and imagine worlds and ideas both fantastical yet nonetheless inextricably rooted in our reality. Here are the best sci-fi movies available to stream on Netflix, Hulu, Max, and more.

Our latest update added Dune: Part One and Part Two as our editor’s pick.


Editor’s pick: Dune: Part One & Part Two

A trio of sandworms crash through the shield wall in Dune: Part 2. Image: Warner Bros. Pictures

Director: Denis Villeneuve
Cast: Timothée Chalamet, Rebecca Ferguson, Zendaya
Where to watch: Max

In 2021, Denis Villeneuve managed to achieve something not even the great David Lynch could: successfully taking Frank Herbert’s notoriously idiosyncratic sci-fi epic Dune and transform it into a bona fide cultural phenomenon. Over the course of two films (so far), Villeneuve takes the feudal politics, surreal world-building, and cerebral exploration of religion inherent to Herbert’s book and renders them in a way that feels not only legible, but electrifying.

The two-part epic follows the story of Paul Atreides (Timothée Chalamet), the heir to a powerful noble family in the far future, who is taken in by the Fremen people of the desert planet Arrakis after his family’s longtime adversaries succeed in killing his father and defeating his armies. Eager for revenge, and blessed with supernatural cognitive abilities and intuition, Paul must win the loyalty of the Fremen in his bid to avenge his father, all the while knowing that such a path will set in motion a galaxy-spanning war of unimaginable bloodshed and horror.

Dune is many things: a tragic love story, a treatise on the perils of putting faith in charismatic leaders, a biting critique of vampiristic imperialism and the subjugation of native populations. That Dune: Part One and Dune: Part Two manage to be all these things, while also remaining a deeply entertaining story on their own, is a testament not only to the strength of the source material but to the clarity of Villeneuve and company’s vision in bringing it to life on screen. Here’s hoping that he can pull off a hat trick with Dune: Messiah, the forthcoming third and final installment in the director’s trilogy. —Toussaint Egan


Akira

Kaneda skids his motorcycle in Akira Image: Tokyo Movie Shinsha/Funimation

Director: Katsuhiro Otomo
Cast: Mitsuo Iwata, Nozomu Sasaki, Mami Koyama
Where to watch: Hulu

Sometimes animation starts to look quaint or dated as styles and technologies change, but Katsuhiro Otomo’s landmark anime movie Akira still looks as startling on the screen today as it did back in 1988. Its ultimate intent, drawn from Otomo’s much longer and more in-depth manga series, can be hard to follow, depending on which translation you get — its point about human evolution is slightly fuzzy, and its impulsive, dim juvenile-delinquent protagonist isn’t up to seeing any of the scope or depth in what’s going on, let alone explaining it to the audience.

But the action is impeccably executed, and the emotions behind it are acute and powerful. When a bike gang in the far-future, post-apocalyptic setting of, er, 2019 Neo-Tokyo encounters a mysterious child with strange powers, one gang member gets abducted by the government, and another tries to hunt him down. Their history together and their shifting personal dynamic helps inform a sometimes gritty, sometimes hallucinogenic story about secret experiments in human potential, carried out as political unrest tears the city apart. The visuals are incredibly rich and vivid, and the tension runs high throughout the film, at all levels of its stratified society. Akira has been imitated for decades because there just wasn’t anything else like it in 1988. For the most part, there still isn’t. —Tasha Robinson

Alien

(L-R) Yaphet Kotto, Sigourney Weaver, and Ian Holm in Alien. Image: 20th Century Studios

Director: Ridley Scott
Cast: Sigourney Weaver, Ian Holm, John Hurt
Where to watch: Hulu

In 1979, Ridley Scott changed the face of science fiction cinema forever. Then, three years later, he went and did it again. I’m not talking about Blade Runner (at least, not today), but rather the sci-fi horror classic that went on to spawn a legacy of sequels, prequels, and imitators much like a horde of hapless face-hugger-gripped humans incubating a brood of acid-spewing nightmares.

I don’t need to tell you what happens in Alien. After all, if you’re either a regular Polygon reader or someone even faintly familiar with science fiction horror, you know what the gist is. It’s the film that catapulted Sigourney Weaver to stardom, the movie that nearly every sci-fi horror game set in outer space lives in the shadow of, and an unambiguous masterpiece of world-building and creature design that is arguably yet to be eclipsed.

If you somehow have never seen Alien before, you owe it to yourself to watch it at least once. And if you have seen it before, I have some good news for you: It’s just as good as your remember it was. —TE

The Creator

Two robot police officers, crouching in a tropical locale, aim shotguns in The Creator. Image: 20th Century Studios

Director: Gareth Edwards
Cast: John David Washington, Gemma Chan, Ken Watanabe
Where to watch: Hulu

Gareth Edwards’ long-awaited follow-up to Rogue One: A Star Wars Story was one of the most anticipated genre films of 2023. The logline of the story’s premise alone was enough to pique interest: An original sci-fi action adventure inspired by films like Apocalypse Now and Baraka about a special forces agent fighting in a war against artificially intelligent robots.

While the film didn’t quite manage to amass the audience 20th Century Studios would’ve like back when it released last September, I strongly believe the legacy of The Creator will endure in the years to come on the quality of its strongest aspect: The art direction and worldbuilding of its universe.

The futuristic world of The Creator’s vision of 2065 calls to mind the scrupulous iconic design of Blade Runner’s dystopian Los Angeles. It’s a world that feels fully lived-in, with human beings existing alongside a race of insectile-like androids; a world where towering angular megastructures loom opposite rolling hills of unspoiled pastoral landscape.

There’s a lot of cool, speculative tech on display, from portable brain scanners that can neurologically revive people on the verge of death in android host bodies to floating fortresses that rain death from above via gigantic holographic crosshairs. Say what you might about the plot, but The Creator is unimpeachably one of the best looking sci-fi movies in recent memory, and well worth watching for that fact alone. —TE

Dark City

Rufus Sewell as John Murdoch strapped inside an apparatus, with Kiefer Sutherland as Dr. Daniel Schreber standing in the background. Image: New Line Cinema

Director: Alex Proyas
Cast: Rufus Sewell, Kiefer Sutherland, Jennifer Connelly
Where to watch: Available to stream on Tubi with ads

Alex Proyas’ neo-noir reality-bending movie Dark City came out just a year before The Matrix, and while they were both made in a vacuum, both sets of creators pick at similar themes (and The Matrix even reused some of Dark City’s sets, tying them even closer together). In any case, it’s a dope film.

Set in a strange, inscrutable city seemingly cast under a veil of perpetual night, the film stars Rufus Sewell as John Murdoch, an amnesiac who mysteriously wakes up in bathtub and finds himself accused of the murder of a young woman. Evading capture, Murdoch wanders through the streets of this metropolis in search of answers to who he was and what happened, all the while stalked by mysterious trench coat-wearing figures who harbor the truth of the city’s true nature and function.

With supporting performances by William Hurt as Inspector Bumstead; Jennifer Connelly as Murdoch’s wife, Emma; Richard O’Brien as the sinister Mr. Hand; and an incredibly out-of-character performance by Kiefer Sutherland as a nebbish scientist named Daniel Schreber, Dark City may not be the same cultural juggernaut as the Wachowskis’ Matrix franchise, but it certainly stands as one of the most visually memorable and adventurous sci-fi movies of the late ’90s. —TE

The Day the Earth Caught Fire

A lone man walking down a deserted city street in The Day the Earth Caught Fire. Image: Universal Pictures

Director: Val Guest
Cast: Janet Munro, Leo McKern, Edward Judd
Where to watch: Criterion Channel, Kanopy

This haunting, prescient disaster movie from 1961 imagines that the Earth has been knocked out of its orbit by simultaneous nuclear bomb tests conducted by both the U.S. and the Soviet Union. As the world tilts off its axis and starts to spiral toward the sun, the poles change and the temperature rises, driving the inhabitants of postwar London into a delirious, sweaty fever. We see all this through the eyes of the journalists of the Daily Express newspaper as they cover the story and report on one last desperate attempt to save the planet.

Although this British film directed by Hammer veteran Val Guest has a small scope and low budget, it manages to encapsulate the terrifying enormity of the situation through desolate, matte backgrounds; a burnt sepia tint on its crisp, widescreen monochrome photography; and telling details like melting road surfaces, mist rolling off an evaporating River Thames, and the bulky radiator strapped to the roof of every car. To keep the story moving, there’s a sweet romance between leads Edward Judd and Janet Munro, and a businesslike journalistic procedural led by the great Leo McKern as the paper’s science editor. (The film shot at the real Daily Express offices and featured the paper’s real editor, playing himself.)

The terrific script, by Guest and playwright Wolf Mankowitz, is spicy, impassioned, and precise in its doomsaying. Looking for a different angle on the then-gathering storm of nuclear apocalypse, Guest and Mankowitz hit upon a prophetic vision of global heating that would end up resonating long beyond the end of the Cold War. The Day the Earth Caught Fire’s bleak but open ending, more effective than any triumph or defeat could be, is even more relevant and chilling now than it was 60 years ago. —Oli Welsh

Fantastic Planet

A large blue alien with red eyes and a strange wristwatch cradles a human infant in the palm of its hand in Fantastic Planet. Image: Criterion Channel

Director: René Laloux
Cast: Jennifer Drake, Eric Baugin, Jean Topart
Where to watch: Criterion Channel, Max

Fantastic Planet is one of those films that’s nearly impossible to describe, in part because no explanation can quite convey just how bizarre it is. It’s set on the fictional planet of Ygam, where gigantic blue humanoids (“Draags”) and humans (“Oms”) coexist. Humans are not the protagonists of this society, however. Their existence on Ygam is more akin to that of an insect: wild creatures who are mostly regarded as nuisances, and occasionally enslaved as pets. Their population is controlled through periodic genocide.

The film is based on the 1957 novel Oms en série by dental-surgeon-turned-author Stefan Wul, whose reputation for subverting the classic science fiction tropes of the era earned him cult status within the genre. The allegorical aspects of the story are arresting enough on their own, but the big-screen adaptation, coupled with its surrealist paper cutout animation style and psychedelic jazzy soundtrack, is basically a 70-minute-long acid trip. If you’re into that sort of thing, then Fantastic Planet is an absolute must-watch. And if you’re not, well, it’s still a great movie to play in the background at parties. —Tara Long

The Host

Kang-ho Song as Park Gang-Doo running from a terrifying creature in The Host (2006). Image: Magnolia Pictures

Director: Bong Joon-ho
Cast: Song Kang-ho, Byun Hee-bong, Park Hae-il
Where to watch: Hulu

Before launching Snowpiercer or setting Okja free, Oscar winner Bong Joon-ho unleashed The Host, a biting creature feature that draws as much from Steven Spielberg’s preoccupation with fatherhood as from American military intervention in South Korea. The tight-knit Park family — including stoic patriarch Hee-bong (Byun Hee-bong), his shiftless son Gang-du (regular Bong collaborator Song Kang-ho), and enterprising granddaughter Hyun-seo (Go Ah-sung) — find themselves at the center of a monster attack and a government conspiracy.

What starts off as a thrilling Godzilla riff, complete with an all-timer of a monster reveal, quickly morphs into what would become Bong’s signature style: a sly satire that’s surprisingly heartfelt. The familiar anger at the sight of incompetent military officials is quickly followed by shocked laughter at the Parks’ overwrought mourning, and later, more than a bit of sympathy for the beast. (OK, maybe that’s just me.) Bong’s nimble filmmaking — combining classic keep-away technique with the boldness of a rising talent — sets a new standard for not just monster films, but, more broadly, for sci-fi storytelling. —Danette Chavez

Metropolis

Rotwang, his Machine-Person, and Maria from Metropolis (1927). Image: Kino Lorber

Director: Fritz Lang
Cast: Alfred Abel, Brigitte Helm, Gustav Fröhlich
Where to watch: Tubi, Pluto TV

Fritz Lang’s 1927 silent masterpiece is one of the finest examples of German Expressionism and of science fiction storytelling on film. One of the first feature-length sci-fi movies ever made, Metropolis was a huge undertaking that took multiple years and the modern equivalent of about $24 million to make.

Set in a dystopian future, Metropolis depicts a class struggle that unfolds around star-crossed lovers on opposite sides of the conflict. At about 150 minutes, it’s one of the longer silent movies from the era, but interested viewers will be rewarded with one of the most influential science fiction movies ever made and some of the most stark architecture and set design ever put on film. It’s a monumental achievement in practical filmmaking that still astonishes to this day, while doubling as a political message for social change. As the film’s closing intertitle says, “The Mediator Between the Head and the Hands Must Be the Heart.” —Pete Volk

Prospect

Pedro Pascal walks through the woods with a spacesuit on in Prospect Image: Gunpowder & Sky

Directors: Zeek Earl, Chris Caldwell
Cast: Pedro Pascal, Sophie Thatcher, Jay Duplass
Where to watch: Peacock, Tubi

Prospect is the sort of low-budget sci-fi film that punches way above its weight, with an attention to detail and earnest performances that so many blockbuster films lack. The film is about desperate lunar prospectors seeking out precious gems on an alien moon (shot on location in a lushly surreal Pacific Northwest). Pedro Pascal’s performance as a mercenary is a highlight, full of roguish charm and intimidating charisma that makes him instantly captivating whenever he’s on screen.

The practical effects also do an extraordinary job of making this small-scale story feel like part of a much larger universe. For example, the gems sought by every major character in the film must be carefully harvested from fleshy spore pods. This requires an exacting process involving multiple chemical agents and precise timing, lest you spoil the treasure and make it worthless. Not only does this ratchet up the tension in many scenes, it says everything about the setting without saying a word; you quickly see just how hard these characters have to work just for a single little gem. It’s what Prospect is ultimately all about: what it takes to survive out here on the ragged edge. —Clayton Ashley

Solaris

Donatas Banionis as Kris Kelvin standing in a field of reeds and cotton surrounded by fog in Solaris (1972) Image: Criterion Collection

Director: Andrei Tarkovsky
Cast: Donatas Banionis, Natalya Bondarchuk, Jüri Järvet
Where to watch: Criterion Channel, Max

What begins as an investigation into a space station’s severed communication lines becomes a contemplative deep dive into a mind untethered by grief. Although Solaris may be the most approachable of Andrei Tarkovsky’s movies — the Russian director’s portfolio ran the gamut from dazzling to confounding — it’s still one of the denser science fiction epics, acting as a sort of cousin to 2001: A Space Odyssey. Both movies are obsessed with mining the inexplicable aspects of the cosmos. They also both place bewildered protagonists in situations too vast and complicated to ever understand. But while Kubrick’s adventure into the stars becomes colder and more removed as its run time progresses, Solaris is dead set on celebrating the humanity of its lost explorers, trapped in the orbit of a planet that knows their every regret. —Mike Mahardy

Space Sweepers

Three human space sweepers and their android buddy look down with sweaty horror on something offscreen in Space Sweepers. Image: Netflix

Director: Jo Sung-hee
Cast: Song Joong-ki, Kim Tae-ri, Jin Seon-kyu
Where to watch: Netflix

This Korean space drama is a gorgeous sci-fi blockbuster with a little something for everyone. Jaw-dropping battle sequences in space! A lovable robot who wants to look human! A tough guy who becomes super protective of a vulnerable crewmate! Trenchant commentary on capitalism and how billionaires respond to the climate crisis! Seriously, Space Sweepers has it all.

A crew of lovable scamps comes across a weapon of mass destruction ... that is also a robot child. Their desire for money and their fondness for said robot child clash as they grow into a real family unit together. Made for a fraction of the cost of its Hollywood counterparts, Space Sweepers looks better than most recent American sci-fi blockbusters and is carried by a core group of characters (and actors) that make you want to stay along for the ride well past its 136-minute running time. —PV

Timecrimes

A masked man in a trench coat brandishing a scissor blade in Timecrimes Image: Magnolia Pictures

Director: Nacho Vigalondo
Cast: Karra Elejalde, Nacho Vigalondo, Candela Fernández
Where to watch: Tubi

I’m not going to say too much about Timecrimes; this Spanish time-travel chiller from 2007 is really best experienced if you know nothing past its first 10 minutes. A well-to-do, if slightly hangdog, middle-aged suburbanite called Héctor (Karra Elejalde) observes, through binoculars, a young woman take off her clothes and apparently collapse in the woods behind his home. Going to investigate, he is surprised and stabbed in the arm by a mysterious stranger with a bloody, bandaged head. So begins one of the most ingeniously plotted time-travel films of all time, and one of the few pieces of time-travel fiction I’ve ever encountered to successfully close its paradoxical loop — never mind do it so elegantly, and with such a wonderfully tart twist of Hitchcockian bitterness. —OW

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