Tenet [2020]
You don’t have to fully understand Tenet to enjoy lavish and extravagant action sequences, intriguing time travel concepts, and beautiful cinematography.
You don’t have to fully understand Tenet to enjoy lavish and extravagant action sequences, intriguing time travel concepts, and beautiful cinematography.
Formulaic but visually appealing, Project Power is one of those forgettable timewasters. It will be referred to as that Jamie Foxx superhero movie.
Doubling as a road trip movie, Neon City is a decent post-apocalyptic Mad Max ripoff with a fun cast, fully fleshed out world, and a strong western vibe.
Refreshing and visually appealing, Love and Monsters is an fun adventure offering a different perspective on the post-apocalyptic genre.
DeepStar Six is an undemanding and character-oriented underwater science fiction thriller reminiscent of Alien with a good cast and decent atmosphere.
So, you’ve run out of all great science fiction movies from the eighties? Not a problem, just switch to the good ones like mysterious and charming Moontrap.
I must report that Underwater turned out to be a pretty solid science fiction movie with a couple of gimmicks that ultimately pushed it towards a solid eight.
It’s the little things that I find amusing, like people smoking aboard a spaceship, a staple of the eighties and nineties science fiction movies. Plus a female android dressed in vinyl because it looks futuristic and not as a dominatrix.
One of the principal themes of Teleios or Beyond the Trek revolves around the definition of what it means to be human. The story seems familiar and yet intriguing, reminiscent of Star Trek. This is not a space opera with huge battleships or aliens but more of a philosophical slow-burner working within the limits of the low budget.
Parasite is a cheesy low-budget B movie about a scientist trying to find a cure against a deadly parasite while traversing the post-apocalyptic wasteland.
Visceral and gory, Mindwarp is an underrated post-apocalyptic movie that combines this environment with virtual reality and a lot of philosophical motives.
Leviathan borrowed so many elements from Alien and The Thing, that we shouldn’t be mad but amazed at what ultimately turned out to be a charming homage.