The best sci-fi movie from the year you were born, according to data

We are in the middle of ascience-fiction boom, especially in film. In 2026, sci-fi has continued to make a strong showing at thebox office, with movies as diverse as the animated comedy "Hoppers" and the adventure pic "Project Hail Mary" both grossing roughly $300 million worldwide thus far. And there are plenty more notable sci-fi flicks on the horizon that could see similar financial and critical success, like "Disclosure Day," "Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu," and the eagerly anticipated "Dune: Part Three," all of which are also due out in 2026.

Stacker Malcolm McDowell performs in a scene from the movie  -

Best sci-fi film from the year you were born

That's an awful lot of sci-fi, but is that any surprise? Looking up at the night sky, it's easy to understand the appeal of science fiction. It can be a difficult genre to define. Still, at its core, each work of science fiction deals with a great unknown. Said unknown can probe the mystery of what resides alongside us in the universe, or it can pose the question of what we, as humans, are capable of with technology. It is also one of the best escapes, distractions, or parallels given viewers' situations and perspectives.

The art of speculative fiction was cemented with the publication of Mary Shelley's novel "Frankenstein" in the early 19th century. Science fiction began cropping up consistently in literature. Still, it didn't reach the cinema until what many consider thefirst science fiction film: Georges Méliès' "A Trip to the Moon," released in 1902. From there, the genre spent many of its first decades mired in B-grade Hollywood classics as filmmakers struggled to visually depict the intricacies of many science fiction plots. While other genres, such as fantasy, can rely on absolute suspension of disbelief to produce a good story, science fiction is arguably unique in the demand it places on viewers and filmmakers alike: The viewer will only sacrifice what logic dictates if the world depicted by the filmmakers is somehow entirely believable.

We start our quest to find the best science fiction film from the year you were born, going back to 1920.Stackercreated an index that equally weights each film'sIMDbscore andRotten Tomatoescritic rating (when available) to rank all science fiction films in a given year. The movie with the highest Stacker Score is what you see here.

A genre that tries to put humanity in context with the makings of the universe, science fiction has spawned many of the greatest philosophical films of the 20th and 21st centuries. As the popularity of recent movies like "A Quiet Place: Day One" and "Civil War" suggests, however, we are more focused on the genre's dark possibilities than ever before. Nowadays, science fiction may be the closest thing we have to a prophetic work

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1920: Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde

- Director: John S. Robertson- Stacker Score: 81- Runtime: 49 min

A doctor drove to prove that evil and good exist in everyone accidentally unleashes his evil alter-ego: Mr. Hyde. Starring John Barrymore as both titular characters, "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" is the first of many films inspired by Robert Louis Stevenson's novel.

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1921: The Mechanical Man

- Director: André Deed- Stacker Score: 61- Runtime: 80 min

One of the first science fiction films produced in Italy, "The Mechanical Man" is about a robot that ends up in the wrong hands; to counter his criminal activities, another robot is built. The film has somewhat of a cult following, as much of its footage ispresumed to be lost.

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1922: The Young Diana

- Director: Albert Capellani and Robert G. Vignola- Stacker Score: 61- Runtime: 90 min

Starring Marion Davis in the titular role and directed by Albert Capellani and Robert G. Vignola, "The Young Diana" is about a young woman whose father pushes her to marry into British nobility, despite her feelings for a sailor. Throughout the story, Diana is also pursued by a scientist consumed with searching for the elixir of life.

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1923: Black Oxen

- Director: Albert Capellani- Stacker Score: 64- Runtime: 80 min

"Black Oxen" is not considered a science fiction film in the strictest sense, but at the heart of its romantic conflict lies a twist futuristic enough to make it the best sci-fi film of 1923. A philanderer (Conway Teele) falls in love with a beautiful European countess (Corinne Griffith), before realizing that her timeless looks may be a clue to a much larger secret.

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1924: The Last Man on Earth

- Director: John G. Blystone- Stacker Score: 60- Runtime: 70 min

As many of the earliest science fiction films did, "The Last Man on Earth" found its inspiration from Mary Shelley's novel, "The Last Man." Tapping into a timeless fear, "The Last Man on Earth" is about a plague that wiped out every fertile man on Earth over the age of 14—until an aviator (Grace Cunard) finds a reclusive man in the woods (Earle Foxe). The film spirals into a comedy as women everywhere begin to fight over Foxe.

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1925: Our Heavenly Bodies

- Director: Hanns Walter Kornblum- Stacker Score: 68- Runtime: 92 min

An experimental piece, "Our Heavenly Bodies" is a German, patchwork science fiction film that attempts the impossible: to explain human knowledge of the world and the universe in just 92 minutes. The film combines documentary clips, historical documents, and underlying fictional elements to ultimately produce a piece unlike any preceding its release.

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1926: The Adventures of the Three Reporters

- Directors: Boris Barnet, Fyodor Otsep- Stacker Score: 70- Runtime: 250 min

This Soviet spy film was released nearly a decade after WWI and the Bolshevik Revolution, serving as a compelling piece of political propaganda. The movie, also known as "Miss Mend," focuses on a trio of reporters trying to defeat an evil Western enemy intent on launching an attack on the USSR.

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1927: Metropolis

- Director: Fritz Lang- Stacker Score: 91- Runtime: 153 min

"Metropolis" is considered by many to be a pioneering science fiction film, as one of the first feature-length releases of its kind. Firmly in the science fiction realm, "Metropolis" takes place in a dystopian, urban world where the city ruler's son (Gustav Fröhlich) falls in love with a woman from the industrial working class who was forced to toil beneath the city (Brigitte Helm). "Metropolis" is still obsessed over to this day, and recent attempts have recovered most of the film'slost footage.

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1928: Alraune (A Daughter of Destiny)

- Director: Henrik Galeen- Stacker Score: 62- Runtime: 108 minutes

"Alraune" explores a german professor (Paul Wegener) as he seeks to validate old German folklore that a root buried in the Earth is said to absorb men's power as they die, and is used in love potions. He attempts to impregnate a prostitute in a strange, twisted experiment.

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1929: High Treason

- Director: Maurice Elvey- Stacker Score: 62- Runtime: 95 min

Arguably inspired by the notable "Metropolis," "High Treason" looks at conflict on the scale of a World War: The "United States of Europe" (Europe, India, the Middle East, Canada, Africa, and Australasia) come into conflict with the "Empire of the Atlantic States" (the United States and South America). Dr. Seymour (played by Humberston Wright) desperately attempts to ease tensions between the two supernations alongside his daughter, Evelyn (Benita Hume).

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1930: Alraune

- Director: Richard Oswald- Stacker Score: 63- Runtime: 103 min

Another German science fiction feat, "Alraune" (a remake of the 1928 version by the same name) is based on the same old, German myth. A root buried in the Earth is said to absorb men's power as they die, and is used in love potions; in "Alraune," a scientist (Albert Bassermann) artificially inseminates a prostitute who then conceives a beautiful girl (Brigitte Helm) incapable of love.

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1931: Frankenstein

- Director: James Whale- Stacker Score: 89.5- Runtime: 70 min

The first of many film adaptations of Mary Shelley's novel, "Frankenstein" is part horror, part cautionary tale of what happens when man tries to play God. A scientist (Colin Clive) is consumed by the desire to create human life; with his assistant, Fritz (Dwight Frye), he digs up a body and attempts to bring it to life. The result? A maybe murderous but certainly monstrous, and ultimately misunderstood, beast.

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1932: Island of Lost Souls

- Director: Erle C. Kenton- Stacker Score: 85.5- Runtime: 70 min

Give a mad scientist an island, animals, and some surgical equipment and you'll have the plot of "Island of Lost Souls." Edward Parker (Richard Arlen) finds himself on an isolated island after being thrown overboard, where he finds a scientist (Charles Laughton) accompanied only by a gentle girl, Lota (Kathleen Burke). Although the film was based on H.G. Wells' novel "The Island of Doctor Moreau," Wells felt the focus on horror in the filmdetracted from its underlying philosophical quandaries.

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1933: The Invisible Man

- Director: James Whale- Stacker Score: 88.5- Runtime: 71 min

Based on the H.G. Wells novel of the same name, "The Invisible Man" is about chemist Dr. Jack Griffin (Claude Rains), who discovers the secret of invisibility through experimentation with a dangerous drug. Struck by power, or perhaps just driven mad by the drug, Griffin begins committing a series of murders, intent on destroying the world.

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1934: Gold

- Director: Karl Hartl- Stacker Score: 69- Runtime: 120 min

As many early science fiction films go, "Gold" focuses on a scientist's misguided quest. Werner Holk, played by Hans Albers, discovers how to turn lead into gold—and faces the consequences as evil powers fight to unlock his secret.

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1935: Bride of Frankenstein

- Director: James Whale- Stacker Score: 89.5- Runtime: 75 min

The first of many sequels to "Frankenstein," "The Bride of Frankenstein" is actually considered a worthy counterpart to its predecessor: Both score a whopping 100% on Rotten Tomatoes. The film picks up where "Frankenstein" ends, with Dr. Frankenstein (reprised by Colin Clive) being goaded into creating a mate for his original monster—thus is born the Bride of Frankenstein (Elsa Lanchester).

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1936: Things to Come

- Director: William Cameron Menzie- Stacker Score: 79.5- Runtime: 100 min

Another H.G. Wells-inspired science fiction film, "Things to Come" was themost expensive film produced in England in 1936, pushing past the million-dollar mark. It is especially noted for its bold cinematic design; perhaps why critics award it 93% on Rotten Tomatoes. The film stars Raymond Massey, who plays a pilot in a world thrown into madness by war.

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1937: Skeleton on Horseback

- Director: Hugo Haas- Stacker Score: 75- Runtime: 78 min

A Czechoslovak science fiction drama, "Skeleton on Horseback" depicts a deadly plague breaking out in the midst of a war. Dr. Galen, played by Hugo Haas, attempts to find a cure—and some peace for his suffering nation.

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1938: Flash Gordon's Trip to Mars

- Directors: Ford Beebe, Robert F. Hill, Frederick Stephani- Stacker Score: 74- Runtime: 299 min

"Flash Gordon's Trip to Mars" is actually a serial film, with 15 chapters to enjoy. They were screened weekly in U.S. theaters until the series concluded. Inspired by a comic strip, the plot follows Flash Gordon (played by Buster Crabbe) on his adventures to try to save Earth from a mysterious, destructive light beam.

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1939: Son of Frankenstein

- Director: Rowland V. Lee- Stacker Score: 81.5- Runtime: 99 min

Another sequel to "Frankenstein," "Son of Frankenstein" features Baron Wolf von Frankenstein (Basil Rathbone), the son of Dr. Frankenstein, who travels to his family castle to redeem his father's mistakes. His first step? Digging up the Monster. "Son of Frankenstein" is only the third installment in the "Frankenstein" film series, but it is the last to feature Boris Karloff as the monster.

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1940: Flash Gordon Conquers the Universe

- Director: Ford Beebe, Ray Taylor- Stacker Score: 79.5- Runtime: 220 min

The third of the "Flash Gordon" serial films, "Flash Gordon Conquers the Universe" brings extraterrestrial problems a little closer to home: A plague, known as Purple Death, ravages the Earth. Flash (played again by Buster Crabbe) takes to the stars to find a cure and figure out where the plague is coming from.

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1941: Tainstvennyy ostrov

- Director: Eduard Pentslin- Stacker Score: 72- Runtime: 75 min

"Tainstvennyy Ostrov" (also known as "Mysterious Island") is a USSR-produced film set in the American Civil War. Five prisoners of war escape via hot air balloon and crash-land on an island in the South Pacific, where inexplicable things begin to happen.

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1942: The Ghost of Frankenstein

- Director: Erle C. Kenton- Stacker Score: 68- Runtime: 67 min

The fourth film in the "Frankenstein" series, "The Ghost of Frankenstein" reunites us once again with the Frankenstein family. When Ygor (Bela Lugosi) finds the Monster, he brings the creature to Henry Frankenstein's other son, Ludwig (Cedric Hardwicke). It is from this film that theFrankenstein Monster stereotype—the blinded creature walking with arms outstretched and bandages wrapped around his head—was born.

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1943: The Fighting Devil Dogs

- Director: William Witney, John English- Stacker Score: 68- Runtime: 69 min

Originally released in 1938, the serial film "The Fighting Devil Dogs" came out in 1943 as a feature version. Although not considered to be the greatest serial film ever made, "The Fighting Devil Dogs" is famous for its costumed supervillain, The Lightning (Hugh Sothern). Lieutenants Tom Grayson (Lee Powell) and Frank Corby (Herman Brix) spend the movie fighting the villainous, masked man, whose lightning-based arsenal makes him a worthy opponent.

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1944: Captain America

- Director: Elmer Clifton, John English- Stacker Score: 60- Runtime: 244 min

The "Captain America" serial film brought one extremely significant thing to cinema: Marvel superheroes, who wouldn't be seen again in theaters for another four decades. "Captain America" follows District Attorney Grant Gardner as he tries to thwart the insidious plotting of The Scarab (Lionel Atwill). Fans, be warned—"Captain America" differs from the original comic book strip in a number of ways.

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1945: Manhunt of Mystery Island

- Directors: Spencer Gordon Bennet, Yakima Canutt, Wallace Grissell- Stacker Score: 72- Runtime: 219 min

Another serial produced by Republic (who also did "Captain America" and "The Fighting Devil Dogs"), the "Manhunt of Mystery Island" centers around Claire Forrest (Linda Starling) in her quest to find and rescue her father (Forrest Taylor), trapped on a mysterious island, alongside private detective Lance Reardon (Richard Bailey).

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1946: L'ennemi sans Visage

- Directors : Robert-Paul Dagan, Maurice Cammage- Stacker Score: 49- Runtime: 105 min

A French science fiction film, "L'Ennemi sans visage" ("Eyes without a Face") stars Louise Carletti, Frank Villard, and Roger Karl. The film follows a scientist determined to build an android whose intelligence could surpass that of humans.

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1947: Brick Bradford

- Directors: Spencer Gordon Bennet, Thomas Carr- Stacker Score: 61- Runtime: 257 min

A classic tale of the right technology getting into the wrong hands, "Brick Bradford" is a serial about a scientist (John Merton) whose invention, made to intercept and destroy incoming rockets, is thought by some to be more useful as a death ray. The titular character, played by Kane Richmond, works with sidekick Sandy Sanderson (Rick Vallin) to stop the weapon from being misused.

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1948: Superman

- Directors: Spencer Gordon Bennet, Thomas Carr- Stacker Score: 72- Runtime: 244 min

It's a bird! It's a plane! It's...the first live-action appearance of Superman! A 15-chapter serial film, "Superman" is the well-known story of a baby sent from his planet Krypton to Earth minutes before Krypton is destroyed. It isn't long before the child's adoptive parents realize he has great powers—and one key weakness. In this serial, Kirk Alyn stars as Superman, and Noel Neill as his love interest, Lois Lane.

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1949: It Happens Every Spring

- Director: Lloyd Bacon- Stacker Score: 85- Runtime: 87 min

If you don't feel like watching a science fiction movie that takes place in space, "It Happens Every Spring" is the one for you. A college professor (Ray Milland) accidentally creates a formula that makes a baseball repellent to wood, and the antics commence.

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1950: Atom Man vs. Superman

- Director: Spencer Gordon Bennet- Stacker Score: 71- Runtime: 252 min

Kirk Alyn reprises his role as Superman in "Atom Man vs. Superman," joined by Lyle Talbot who plays Lex Luthor. Luthor tries to destroy the city, creating intricate plans that Superman has to foil.

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1951: The Man in the White Suit

- Director: Alexander Mackendrick- Stacker Score: 87- Runtime: 85 min

Perhaps the only satirical science fiction movie to make this list, "The Man in the White Suit" stars Alec Guinness as young chemist Sidney Stratton, who creates a fabric that repels dirt and can't be worn down. A battle ensues between Stratton and the corporations trying to shut down his research.

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1952: The Beautiful Dreamer

- Director: Gilberto Martínez Solares- Stacker Score: 71- Runtime: 75 min

A Mexican comedy film directed by Gilberto Martínez Solares, "The Beautiful Dreamer" ("El bello durmiente") is about a caveman (Germán Valdés) who has somehow managed to sleep for a thousand years.

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1953: The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms

- Director: Eugène Lourié- Stacker Score: 80.5- Runtime: 80 min

"The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms" is about a dinosaur unexpectedly released from its state of hibernation when an atomic bomb test is conducted in the Arctic Circle. Paul Christian stars as Professor Tom Nesbitt, a physicist who sees the dinosaur awaken and spends the rest of the movie trying to stop its path of destruction. The film was a hit, grossing $2.5 million at the box office.

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1954: Them!

- Director: Gordon Douglas- Stacker Score: 86.5- Runtime: 94 min

Hate ants? Try ants the size of cars. "Them!" is about giant ants in New Mexico that reveal themselves when a few leave to colonize new nests, stomping their way across the state and into neighboring areas. The movie stars James Whitmore and Edmund Gwenn.

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1955: The Quatermass Xperiment

- Director: Val Guest- Stacker Score: 80- Runtime: 78 min

If you send a man into space in a science fiction horror film, chances are he'll come back infected with an alien parasite. "The Quatermass Xperiment" is about a failed rocket experiment, where only one of three astronauts sent into space returns to Earth—but with something terribly, terribly wrong. Richard Wordsworth stars as the homecomer, and Brian Donlevy as the doctor who tries to treat him.

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1956: Invasion of the Body Snatchers

- Director: Don Siegel- Stacker Score: 88- Runtime: 80 min

Based on Jack Finney's novel "The Body Snatchers," "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" makes sci-fi creepy with its most basic premise: alien life that looks just like us. Pods are dropped around the Earth, capable of making the aliens inside evolve to look and act just like the humans sleeping closest to the pod. Kevin McCarthy stars as the local doctor who attempts to stop the invasion.

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1957: The Incredible Shrinking Man

- Director: Jack Arnold- Stacker Score: 84- Runtime: 81 min

The winner of the first Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation, "The Incredible Shrinking Man" stars Grant Williams as Scott Carey, a businessman who begins inexplicably shrinking after a vacation off the coast of California.

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1958: The Fly

- Director: Kurt Neumann- Stacker Score: 83- Runtime: 94 min

The only inspiration you'll ever need for putting screens over your windows can be found in this movie. "The Fly" tells the story of a scientist who is in the middle of working on a molecular transporter when, unbeknownst to him, a fly wanders in. David Hedison stars as the unfortunate half-man, half-fly result.

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1959: On the Beach

- Director: Stanley Kramer- Stacker Score: 74- Runtime: 134 min

Directed by Stanley Kramer, "On the Beach" is a post-apocalyptic film that takes place after World War III, in the aftermath of nuclear war. With impending radioactive threats, the last pockets of humanity struggle to figure out a path for survival. The film stars Gregory Peck, Ava Gardner, and Fred Astaire.

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1960: Village of the Damned

- Director: Wolf Rilla- Stacker Score: 84.5- Runtime: 77 min

"Village of the Damned" is a British science fiction horror film that opens with the residents of a village called Midwich suddenly falling unconscious. They regain consciousness just hours later, but two months later, all women of childbearing age suddenly discover they're pregnant. The rest of the film unfolds as the children are born, and grow to reveal unnatural powers.

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1961: The Day the Earth Caught Fire

- Director: Val Guest- Stacker Score: 79- Runtime: 99 min

Another British contribution, "The Day the Earth Caught Fire" is about the orbit of the Earth being dramatically affected by the United States and Russia conducting nuclear bomb tests at the same time. Peter Stenning (Edward Judd) and his girlfriend Jeannie Craig (Janet Munro) work to discover exactly what the tests did, and if it's too late to reverse the consequences.

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1962: Amphibian Man

- Directors: Vladimir Chebotaryov, Gennadi Kazansky- Stacker Score: 72- Runtime: 96 min

Before Disney made "The Little Mermaid," the Soviet Union made "Amphibian Man." A fisherman's daughter falls in love with a man who has gills, and together they fight to protect their relationship.

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1963: The Nutty Professor

- Director: Jerry Lewis- Stacker Score: 77.5- Runtime: 107 min

A parody of "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde," "The Nutty Professor" is about a scientist (Jerry Lewis) who hopes to shrug off his socially awkward ways by drinking a concoction that brings out his charming, womanizing alter-ego.

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1964: Robinson Crusoe on Mars

- Director: Byron Haskin- Stacker Score: 80- Runtime: 110 min

Stranded on Mars, Kit (Paul Mantee) must find water, food...and a way to help the escaped alien slave (Victor Lundin) he runs into. Although not a box office success, "Robinson Crusoe on Mars" has a 94% rating on Rotten Tomatoes.

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1965: Alphaville

- Director: Jean-Luc Godard- Stacker Score: 81- Runtime: 99 min

Combining elements of both science fiction and film noir, "Alphaville" takes place in the future under a ruthless dictatorship that forbids love, poetry, or any sort of outward display of emotion. Eddie Constantine stars as a secret agent from outside the city looking to destroy the computer system in charge of Alphaville.

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1966: The Face of Another

- Director: Hiroshi Teshigahara- Stacker Score: 90- Runtime: 124 min

When his face is damaged in a work-related accident, Okuyama (Tatsuya Nakadai) is given a mask to cover up his disfigurement. Slowly, the mask begins to take over his personality, changing the way he acts and views the world.

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1967: The Sorcerers

- Director: Michael Reeves- Stacker Score: 82- Runtime: 86 min

Whatever you do, don't look them in the eyes. "The Sorcerers" is about an elderly couple (Boris Karloff, Catherine Lacey) whose penchant for hypnosis leads them to develop a mind-controlling machine they test out on young Mike Roscoe (Ian Ogilvy).

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1968: 2001: A Space Odyssey

- Director: Stanley Kubrick- Stacker Score: 88.5- Runtime: 149 min

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Stanley Kubrick's "2001: A Space Odyssey" is regarded as one of the most influential films ever made. The movie follows a voyage to Jupiter with a crew composed of scientists, pilots, and a sentient computer, HAL (Douglas Rain). If you haven't already seen this film, be sure to watch it with someone who's willing to explore questions of existentialism and other philosophical quandaries.

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1969: Marooned

- Director: John Sturges- Stacker Score: 79- Runtime: 134 min

Released four months after the Apollo 11 landing, "Marooned" is about three astronauts (Richard Crenna, Gene Hackman, and James Franciscus) who are on their way back to Earth when an engine fails, leaving them in orbit. A frantic rescue mission is launched as the crew's oxygen begins to run out.

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1970: Colossus: The Forbin Project

- Director: Joseph Sargent- Stacker Score: 80- Runtime: 100 min

If nukes could talk, they'd probably be just as terrifying as we imagine. In "Colossus: The Forbin Project," America's advanced defense system begins to develop a mind of its own after being allowed to communicate with the Soviets' intelligent counterpart. Eric Braeden stars as the designer of the computer, forced to deal with the impossible consequences of a machine dedicated to preventing war.

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1971: A Clockwork Orange

- Director: Stanley Kubrick- Stacker Score: 87- Runtime: 136 min

Based on Anthony Burgess' novel, "A Clockwork Orange" was directed and produced by Stanley Kubrick, and is one of his best-known works. Malcolm McDowell plays Alex, a thuggish, insidious delinquent who leads a small gang of equally unsavory characters. He is imprisoned and given psychological conditioning that dramatically affects his ability to react to violence.

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1972: Solaris

- Director: Andrei Tarkovsky- Stacker Score: 88.5- Runtime: 167 min

When a mission aboard a space station that orbits fictional planet Solaris is stalled because the crew members independently suffer mental breaks, psychologist Kris Kelvin (Donatas Banionis) is sent to figure out what is plaguing each of them.

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1973: Sleeper

- Director: Woody Allen- Stacker Score: 86.5- Runtime: 89 min

Woody Allen directs this science fiction comedy, which begins with the owner of a food store, Miles Monroe (played by Allen), being brought out of cryostasis after 200 years. In stark contrast to the 1970s, the 22nd century shows America being operated as some sort of police state, and Monroe joins a rebellion to try and fight the restricted way of life. The film currently holds 100% on Rotten Tomatoes.

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1974: Dark Star

- Director: John Carpenter- Stacker Score: 72- Runtime: 83 min

Another comedy, John Carpenter's "Dark Star" garnered a devoted cult following that helped it achieve some success following a tepid release. The movie is about a crew whose 20-year mission to destroy unstable planets starts to go terribly wrong.

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1975: Shivers

- Director: David Cronenberg- Stacker Score: 76.5- Runtime: 87 min

Originally titled "Orgy of the Blood Parasites," "Shivers" is about a high-rise building whose residents are suddenly infected by a strain of parasites that turn their hosts into sex-crazed fiends.

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1976: The Man Who Fell to Earth

- Director: Nicolas Roeg- Stacker Score: 74.5- Runtime: 139 min

David Bowie's first starring film role came in 1976 when he played Thomas Jerome Newton—an alien who crash-lands on Earth and begins trying to find a way to transport water to his home planet.

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1977: Close Encounters of the Third Kind

- Director: Steven Spielberg- Stacker Score: 86.5- Runtime: 137 min

"Close Encounters of the Third Kind" is written and directed bySteven Spielberg; it was his second major project after "Jaws," and the film enjoyed almost as much success. The movie follows UFO sightings, beginning with Roy Neary (played by Richard Dreyfuss) in Indiana. "Close Encounters of the Third Kind" was widely praised, receiving eight Oscar nominations and winning for Cinematography.

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1978: Invasion of the Body Snatchers

- Director: Don Siegel- Stacker Score: 84- Runtime: 115 min

A remake of the 1956 movie of the same name, "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" is considered an extremely successful remake—made evident by its 93% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. The starring cast includes Donald Sutherland, Brooke Adams, Leonard Nimoy, and Jeff Goldblum, and the movie takes place in San Francisco (where it's all too easy to believe there are emotionless clones wandering around the city).

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1979: Alien

- Director: Ridley Scott- Stacker Score: 91- Runtime: 117 min

The first of a large, prolific franchise, Ridley Scott's "Alien" follows a space crew haunted by a predatory extraterrestrial being. "Alien" won an Oscar for its visual effects, and was nominated for many more awards. Sigourney Weaver found her first leading role in the film, joined on screen by Tom Skerritt, Veronica Cartwright, and Harry Dean Stanton to name a few.

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1980: Altered States

- Director: Ken Russell- Stacker Score: 77.5- Runtime: 102 min

The road to consciousness is dark and long. In "Altered States," a research scientist (William Hurt) decides to combine sensory deprivation with hallucinogenic drugs. As he gets deeper and deeper into his research, both his mind and body begin losing touch with reality.

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1981: The Road Warrior

- Director: George Miller- Stacker Score: 87- Runtime: 94 min

The second installment in the Mad Max franchise, "The Road Warrior" sees Mel Gibson reprising his role as "Mad" Max. Set in post-apocalyptic Australia, "The Road Warrior" features Max attempting to help a small group of settlers escape from the bandits that rule the roads. A movie more famous for its dramatic shots than its chit-chat,Gibson supposedly only has 16 lines of dialogue in the entire film.

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1982: E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial

- Director: Steven Spielberg- Stacker Score: 88.5- Runtime: 115 min

It's a fact: E.T. is everyone's favorite alien, and possibly everyone's favorite film. It was the highest-grossing film of the 1980s, weighing in at almost $400 million in total gross (over $1 billion by today's values). If you haven't heard of "E.T.," it is a story about a timeless friendship. A lonely 10 year old (played by Henry Thomas) finds and befriends an alien stranded on Earth, and subsequently tries to get the creature back to its home planet.

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1983: The Day After

- Director: Nicholas Meyer- Stacker Score: 85.5- Runtime: 127 min

A television film that aired on ABC originally, "The Day After" focuses on families located near missile silos as tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union rise around them, escalating into a nuclear exchange. Over 100 million people tuned in to watch "The Day After" during its initial broadcast.

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1984: The Terminator

- Director: James Cameron- Stacker Score: 90- Runtime: 107 min

It's important to remember that before Arnold Schwarzenegger's stint as the governor of California, he was a robot sent from the future to destroy humanity. "The Terminator" enjoyed massive success and helped launch the career of director James Cameron.

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1985: Back to the Future

- Director: Robert Zemeckis- Stacker Score: 90.5- Runtime: 116 min

Another time-traveling film, "Back to the Future" features Michael J. Fox as Marty McFly, a young man who accidentally travels back in time to when his parents were in high school. Christopher Lloyd plays the outlandish scientist who tries to help Marty get back to the future and prevent too much interference.

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1986: Aliens

- Director: James Cameron- Stacker Score: 91- Runtime: 137 min

Sequel to "Alien," "Aliens" begins as Ellen Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) wakes up from 57 years of hypersleep. She leads a team back to where her crew encountered the alien, in the hopes that they can destroy it for good. "Aliens" was lauded by critics and audiences alike, and was a box-office hit.

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1987: RoboCop

- Director: Paul Verhoeven- Stacker Score: 81.5- Runtime: 102 min

The basic premise of "RoboCop" is one that may be fast-approaching in the modern day: cyborg law enforcement. In the film, a detective (Peter Weller) murdered by a gang in Detroit is revived and turned into a robot cop to tackle crime in the city.

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1988: They Live

- Director: John Carpenter- Stacker Score: 78- Runtime: 94 min

In perhaps the most terrifying concept yet, "They Live" centers around a man (played by Roddy Piper) who one day finds out that the ruling class is actually aliens propagating their own agenda. Critics have lauded it as a B-move classic.

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1989: The Abyss

- Director: James Cameron- Stacker Score: 82.5- Runtime: 145 min

James Cameron moves his vision underwater in "The Abyss," a movie about a sunk American submarine that a SEAL team is sent in to recover. During their recovery, the team finds extraterrestrial beings that add pressure to an already tense situation. The movie was received well, but stars Ed Harris and Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonioboth described the filming conditions as severe.

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1990: Total Recall

- Director: Paul Verhoeven- Stacker Score: 78.5- Runtime: 113 min

In "Total Recall," Douglas Quaid (Arnold Schwarzenegger) begins having strange dreams about Mars and a woman who lives there. After certain events unfold, Quaid begins to realize that these visions may be more than just dreams. Extremely pleasing visually, the movie is nevertheless considered by some to be overly violent.

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1991: Terminator 2

- Director: James Cameron- Stacker Score: 89- Runtime: 137 min

Schwarzenegger returns in the sequel to "The Terminator" as a good robot, sent back to protect John Connor (Edward Furlong) and his mother, Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton). The movie was met with considerable success, as many felt the first film left plenty of room for a follow-up story.

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1992: Dragon Ball Z: Super Android 13

- Director: Kazuhito Kikuchi- Stacker Score: 73- Runtime: 46 min

"Dragon Ball Z" is a Japanese anime TV show that follows the adventures of Goku, an extraterrestrial being who uses his superhuman strength to defend the Earth against an array of villains. In "Dragon Ball Z: Super Android 13," Goku (Masako Nozawa) must defend himself from murderous androids.

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1993: Jurassic Park

- Director: Steven Spielberg- Stacker Score: 86.5- Runtime: 127 min

Building a theme park and filling it with dinosaurs is, in theory, a good idea...until everything goes disastrously wrong. Sam Neill, Laura Dern and Jeff Goldblum star in this science fiction thriller, which received three Academy Awards for its technical achievements.

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1994: Without Warning

- Director: Robert Iscove- Stacker Score: 70- Runtime: 100 min

A TV movie that originally aired on CBS, "Without Warning" shows anchor Sander Vanocur and reporter Bree Walker covering a breaking news story about meteorite fragments crashing into the Earth's hemisphere. During commercial breaks, CBS made sure to inform watchers that the film was entirely fictional.

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1995: Richard III

- Director: Richard Loncraine- Stacker Score: 84.5- Runtime: 110 min

Based on the Shakespearean tragedy, the dystopian undertones present in "Richard III" breathe new, eerie life into the 16th-century play. Ian McKellen stars as Richard, a power-hungry Duke intent on usurping King Edward IV (John Wood). The film holds a 94% score on Rotten Tomatoes and was praised for its visually striking shots.

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1996: Mystery Science Theater 3000: The Movie

- Director: Jim Mallon- Stacker Score: 77- Runtime: 73 min

Adapted fromthe TV series, "Mystery Science Theater 3000: The Movie" features a plot-within-a-plot, as mad scientist Dr. Clayton Forrester (Trace Beaulieu) attempts to drive his subjects mad by making them watch terrible movies.

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1997: Face/Off

- Director: John Woo- Stacker Score: 82.5- Runtime: 138 min

FBI agent Sean Archer (John Travolta)undergoes extensive facial surgery to impersonate domestic terrorist Castor Troy (Nicolas Cage), and in doing so opens up the possibility that Troy will, in turn, impersonate Archer. The battle then becomes one of mixed identity, with each man deploying violent resources to achieve his own means.

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1998: The Truman Show

- Director: Peter Weir- Stacker Score: 87.5- Runtime: 103 min

Jim Carrey stars in this film about a man who one day realizes that his entire life is a TV show. "The Truman Show" was the highest-grossing film at the time of its release, and the film is considered to be one of Carrey's finest, most enjoyable performances.

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1999: The Matrix

- Directors: Lana Wachowski, Lilly Wachowski- Stacker Score: 87- Runtime: 136 min

Speaking of simulated realities, "The Matrix" is about a computer programmer (Keanu Reeves) who figures out that everyone is living inside of a simulation. He joins a rebellion to try and fight the sentient machines harvesting human energy. As well as being a box office success, "The Matrix" received multiple awards, including four Academy Awards for its technical achievements.

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2000: Battle Royale

- Director: Kinji Fukasaku- Stacker Score: 82- Runtime: 114 min

Before "The Hunger Games," there was "Battle Royale." A disturbing plot, the film features a dystopian world in which the Japanese government forces junior high students to fight to the death. The violence featured in the film was such that several countries banned its original release, but it gained widespread critical acclaim regardless.

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2001: Donnie Darko

- Director: Richard Kelly- Stacker Score: 83.5- Runtime: 113 min

Jake Gyllenhaal plays a young man, Donnie, who is tormented by visions of a giant bunny that tells him the world is going to end in 28 days. The movie also stars Jena Malone and Katharine Ross, and premiered at the Sundance Film Festival before being released to lukewarm box office success.

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2002: Minority Report

- Director: Steven Spielberg- Stacker Score: 84- Runtime: 145 min

In Steven Spielberg's "Minority Report," an officer from a futuristic police unit that employs three psychics is accused of a murder before it happens. On the run for his life, John Anderton (Tom Cruise) forces the audience to consider whether free will can exist when the future is defined in advance. The film received positive reviews, and is praised for the continued discussion and analysis it prompts in viewers.

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2003: The Matrix Reloaded

- Directors: Lana Wachowski, Lilly Wachowski- Stacker Score: 72.5- Runtime: 138 min

The second film in the Matrix installment, "The Matrix Reloaded" returns to rebels Neo (Keanu Reeves), Trinity (Carrie-Anne Moss) and Morpheus (Laurence Fishburne) in their continued battle against the evil sentient machines that have taken over the world. Although not nearly as appreciated as the first movie, "The Matrix Reloaded" is considered a fun follow-up film.

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2004: Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind

- Director: Michel Gondry- Stacker Score: 88- Runtime: 108 min

Joel Barish (Jim Carrey) and Clementine Kruczynski (Kate Winslet) feel immediately drawn to each other when they meet on a train. It later emerges that the two actually dated before, but chose to wipe their memories once the relationship ended. The film won the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay.

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2005: Serenity

- Director: Steven Knight- Stacker Score: 81- Runtime: 119 min

In 2002, Fox put out a TV show called "Firefly" that was abruptly canceled after one season: Cue the cult following. "Serenity" is the film adaptation, starring the same cast and following the crew of a spaceship known as Serenity. When a psychic messenger (Summer Glau) joins the ship, she brings danger along.

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2006: Children of Men

- Director: Alfonso Cuarón- Stacker Score: 85.5- Runtime: 109 min

When women become infertile, society falls apart. The last functioning government is in the United Kingdom, and refugees flood its borders seeking sanctuary. When Theo Faron (Clive Owen) is tasked with taking a pregnant woman (Clare-Hope Ashitey) to safety, it becomes an increasingly dangerous journey.

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2007: The Man from Earth

- Director: Richard Schenkman- Stacker Score: 80- Runtime: 87 min

"The Man from Earth" didn't get a traditional start: Writer Jerome Bixby completed the screenplay on his deathbed in 1997, but it wasn't touched for years. It eventually premiered at the San Diego Comic-Con, and is in part famous for being widely distributed across the internet. In the film, David Lee Smith plays an intellectual professor who, at his farewell party, tells his peers that he's a 14,000-year-old caveman.

-

2008: Iron Man

- Director: Jon Favreau- Stacker Score: 86.5- Runtime: 126 min

Robert Downey Jr. plays a philandering, billionaire superhero in "Iron Man," a Marvel film. Tony Stark (Downey) builds the famous iron suit as a hostage in Afghanistan, and then improves upon it when he ultimately escapes imprisonment. The film was successful, grossing over $500 million dollars.

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2009: Star Trek

- Director: J.J. Abrams- Stacker Score: 87- Runtime: 127 min

J.J. Abrams directs "Star Trek," the 11th installment in the franchise. It reboots the old characters, bringing Spock (Zachary Quinto) and James T. Kirk (Chris Pine) back to the screen. In this film, Kirk navigates through training before winding up on the USS Enterprise where he helps fight Nero (Eric Bana), a Romulan from the future. "Star Trek" won the Academy Award for Best Makeup, making it the first "Star Trek" film to win an Oscar.

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2010: Inception

- Director: Christopher Nolan- Stacker Score: 87- Runtime: 148 min

Christopher Nolan plays with dreams and time in "Inception." Leonardo DiCaprio stars as a professional thief who accesses information by traveling through levels of the subconscious. "Inception" grossed over $800 million worldwide, and it swept the technical Academy Awards.

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2011: Source Code

- Director: Duncan Jones- Stacker Score: 83- Runtime: 93 min

Jake Gyllenhaal plays a soldier who wakes up in someone else's body. He soon realizes that he's part of an experimental government program to find the bomber on a commuter train, in just eight minutes.

-

2012: The Avengers

- Director: Joss Whedon- Stacker Score: 86.5- Runtime: 143 min

"The Avengers" features all your favorite superheroes in one place. Iron Man (Robert Downey Jr.), Captain America (Chris Evans), the Hulk (Mark Ruffalo), Thor (Chris Hemsworth), the Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson), and Hawkeye (Jeremy Renner) all team up in Marvel's Cinematic Universe to take down Loki (Tom Hiddleston), Thor's pesky younger brother. It was a vast success, grossing a whopping $1.5 billion worldwide.

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2013: Gravity

- Director: Alfonso Cuarón- Stacker Score: 87- Runtime: 91 min

Sandra Bullock and George Clooney star in this thriller about a space mission that goes wrong when debris from a defunct satellite crashes into their space shuttle. With 96% on Rotten Tomatoes, "Gravity" garnered near universal acclaim.

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2014: Guardians of the Galaxy

- Director: James Gunn- Stacker Score: 86- Runtime: 121 min

Another Marvel film, "Guardians of the Galaxy" follows a dysfunctional group that consists of a human (Chris Pratt), an alien, a humanoid alien, and a raccoon as they begrudgingly try to save the world. Visually pleasing with a tight script, "Guardians of the Galaxy" was an instant success.

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2015: Mad Max: Fury Road

- Director: George Miller- Stacker Score: 89- Runtime: 120 min

A reboot of the "Mad Max" franchise, Mad Max is played by Tom Hardy as he teams up with Imperator Furiosa (Charlize Theron) to escape bandits in post-apocalyptic Australia. The film won six Academy Awards for its technical achievements.

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2016: Arrival

- Director: Denis Villeneuve- Stacker Score: 87- Runtime: 116 min

When monoliths descend on Earth, a linguist (Amy Adams) is recruited by the Army to try to develop a means of communication with the extraterrestrial beings that are found. The result is a surprisingly emotional film, whose introspection forces the viewer to challenge their thoughts and beliefs.

-

2017: Logan

- Director: James Mangold- Stacker Score: 87- Runtime: 137 min

"Logan" is the 10th installment in the "X-Men" franchise and the last movie to feature gruff, self-healing, retractable claw-man Wolverine.Hugh Jackman has saidthe last movie came after a conversation with Jerry Seinfeld, in which Seinfeld explained why he left his titular show and Jackman realized it was better to leave before either he or the audience became sick of Wolverine. "Logan" finds the famous mutant taking care of a sick Professor X (Patrick Stewart) and struggling to regenerate himself.

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2018: Spider-man: Into the Spider-Verse

- Directors: Bob Persichetti, Peter Ramsey, Rodney Rothman- Stacker Score: 90.5- Runtime: 100 min

Shameik Moore voices Spider-Man/Miles Morales in this fresh take, in which music, humor, and top-notch animation make for a unique, thrilling animated Marvel feature. Miles, an African American/Puerto Rican Brooklyn teenager, trades his spray-painting hobby for saving the city's destruction along with help from Peter Parker, Spider-Woman/Gwen Stacy, Peter Porker, and others.

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2019: Avengers: Endgame

- Directors: Joe Russo, Anthony Russo- Stacker Score: 89- Runtime: 181 min

The follow-up to "Avengers: Infinity War" and the 22nd MCU film, "Endgame" delivers three exhilarating and, at times, emotional hours of action as the beloved ensemble superhero squad tries to reverse Thanos' finger-snapping annihilation. While its $350-plus million price tag appears hefty, it broke box-office records when it grossed $2.8 billion.

The best sci-fi movie from the year you were born, according to data

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Kevin McGonigle can't find Tigers' parking lot – but phenom has Detroit dreaming title

PHOENIX — He still has trouble believing he's here, but then again,Detroit TigersrookieKevin McGoniglealways knew this is where he belonged.

USA TODAY Sports

He was born and bred a baseball rat, convinced that one day he'd be a major league ballplayer.

And now that he's arrived as theyoungest Tiger to make his debutsince George Burns in 1914, it already feels as if he's been around for 20 years.

The dude may be 21, but he's going on 41 in maturity.

"I think he's a lot more polished and more mature as a ballplayer than when I came up," said Tigers infielder Colt Keith, who made his major-league debut at 22. "I mean, he's handling it really well. I don't see any panic in his eyes. I mean, he's out there just playing loose, having fun, just trying to help us win.

"It's really awesome to see. He's going to be a great player for us."

McGonigle was the 37th overall pick in the 2023 MLB draft.

McGonigle, who never played above Class AA Erie, has spent one week in the major leagues and already is establishing himself as one of the finest young players in the game and certainly a future face of the Tigers. The Tigers would love to keep him around as long as possible and have engaged in talks with him and his agent about a long-term deal of at least eight years.

"We don't need him to be the savior," Scott Harris, Tigers president of baseball operations, said after announcing McGonigle's promotion, with McGonigle producing an .888 OPS with two homers and six RBIs, drawing as many walks as hits this spring. "We don't need him to carry us. We just need him to help us.

"This roster is pretty darn good with or without Kevin. We just think it's better with him on it. That's why he's here."

McGonigle, the second-ranked prospect entering the year, has been nothing short of dazzling in his first week in The Show. He produced four hits in his major-league debut – the sixth to achieve the feat on opening day since 1900 – and was rewarded with the lineup card along with baseballs from his debut.

He spent the first seven games hitting .346 with a .952 OPS, and perhaps even more surprisingly, playing dazzling defense at third base. He's a natural shortstop, and his best defensive position may be second base, but he's been smooth at third, making the throws that need to be made while showing strong range.

"He never quits on the play, which is a great characteristic to have," Tigers manager A.J. Hinch says. "He can get on the ground. He comes up and throws accurate. When the speed of the game is speeding up, he stays with the same rhythm and cadence to complete the play."

<p style=Cleveland Guardians players warm up as the launch of NASA's Artemis II is shown on the center-field video board at Dodger Stadium on April 1, 2026.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Miami Marlins shortstop Otto Lopez (6) and center fielder Jakob Marsee celebrate a victory against the Chicago White Sox at loanDepot Park on April 1, 2026. The Toronto Blue Jays' Kazuma Okamoto gets doused with ice water by teammates after a win over the Athletics at Rogers Centre on March 29, 2026. The Cincinnati Reds' Eugenio Suárez blows a bubble as he waits to bat against the Boston Red Sox at Great American Ball Park on March 28, 2026. The St. Louis Cardinals' JJ Wetherholt is doused with water by teammates after hitting a walk-off two-run single against the Tampa Bay Rays during the 10th inning at Busch Stadium on March 28, 2026. Two F-35C planes from Air Test and Evaluation Squadron NINE Detachment Edwards Air Force Base perform a flyover before the Opening Day game between the Arizona Diamondbacks and Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium on March 26, 2026.

Ballpark vibes and wild celebrations a during 2026 MLB season

Cleveland Guardians players warm up asthe launch of NASA's Artemis IIis shown on the center-field video board at Dodger Stadium on April 1, 2026.

He's the reason why the Tigers didn't bother pursuing free-agent third baseman Alex Bregman this winter.

He received a thunderous ovation from the sellout crowd at Comerica Park at the Tigers' home opener Friday, which included about 15 members of his family.

"Are you surprised?" Hinch said after the game. "This city is going to fall in love with this kid because of how he plays and how he represents himself. We just got to let him play, got to let him learn, and we got to let him fail a little bit."

It still seems all surreal for the kid from Aldan, Pennsylvania, just outside Philadelphia, who started swinging a bat with his dad at the age of 2, grew up a huge Chase Utley fan, and studied hitting tapes from eight-time batting champion Tony Gwynn.

"I just love the way [Utley] played," McGonigle, the 5-foot-10 left-handed hitter, tells USA TODAY Sports. "He played the game hard. And I feel like he played it the right way, as well. That's the way I want to play."

And, yes, he would love to hit like Gwynn, the 15-time All-Star who not only had a career .338 batting average, but who never struck out more than 40 times in a single season, and never more than 30 times in his last 13 seasons. He was thrilled just to meet and speak to Gwynn's son in San Diego, Tony Gwynn Jr., the Padres' radio analyst.

"Growing up, my dad would show me film on him and Chase Utley," McGonigle says. "They're two guys that he would show their swings and says to kind of try to copy the way they swung, especially Tony, it's unbelievable how few times he struck out."

Rookie Kevin McGonigle is introduced prior to playing the St. Louis Cardinals in the Detroit Tigers home opener at Comerica Park on Friday, April 3, 2026 in Detroit.

These days, at least in the infancy of his career, McGonigle reminds Hinch and starters Justin Verlander and Tarik Skubal of Bregman, now with the Chicago Cubs, who eats, sleeps and dreams baseball.

"That's an ultimate compliment," McGonigle says. "I'm a big fan of Bregman as well. He plays the game really, really hard. And obviously, he's super, super good."

Then again, as Skubal, the Tigers' two-time Cy Young winner says, there will come a time when McGonigle is the one everyone wants to be compared to.

"They're both obsessed with the game of baseball," says Skubal, who got to know Bregman during the winter working out in Phoenix and were teammates in the WBC. "I don't really like comparing though. I want Kevin to be Kevin. In five or six years, they should be comparing someone else to Kevin. That's kind of how I want it to be.

"But they're both obsessed about the game, and they both grind in the box. They both grind in the weight room, the training room, everything. And they take this game pretty seriously and want to win really badly.

"Those are all really positive things, but as Kev gets more comfortable here, and just more time on his side, he's going to blossom into an even better baseball player. That's what I'm excited about. He's doing to experience all of the growing pains this year, success, failure, all of that stuff, but he's going to be a really good baseball player."

Really, McGonigle's toughest task in his first week was simply finding the players' parking lot at Comerica Park, circling the stadium several times before finding it.

"I did laps around the park because I didn't know where to go," McGonigle told reporters Friday morning. "But I ended up finding the parking lot. This place is unreal."

If he has the career everyone in the Tigers' organization anticipates, he'll have a nameplate reserved for the closest spot near the ballpark entrance of his choice.

"There's just something different about him," Tigers outfielder Riley Greene says. "The best way to describe him is that he's a ball of fire. He's finding barrels all of the time. He's making plays. His energy is up. He's doing stuff like guys with five or six years in the big leagues.

"It's pretty impressive to watch."

And once McGonigle learned he made the team, well, that fiery emotion became even more intense.

"I feel like he was even more motivated," Greene says. "He was like, 'We're here to work. We got a long year. Let's win some baseball games. Let's go.'"

That's McGonigle. He doesn't care where he plays in the field. Where he hits in the lineup. Just give him a uniform, and even without playing a day at Triple-A, he wants to do everything possible to lead the Tigers to where they haven't gone since 1984: A World Series championship.

"We're trying to win the World Series," Hinch says, "and Kevin McGonigle helps us get there."

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Says McGonigle: "I'm just taking it all in, trying to get prepared, and doing everything possible to help this team win. I've always been good telling myself it's the same game, no matter what level I'm at.

"I feel like I've handled that well so far, and I'm looking forward to keep doing it."

Welcome to the big leagues, kid.

Now find the parking lot.

Around the basepaths

– MLB and the players union have yet to engage in preliminary negotiations on the next collective bargaining agreement, but their first meeting is expected to be in the next few weeks.

The owners have a $2 billion war chest while the players union has about $520 million stashed away in case of a lockout after Dec. 1.

– The Miami Marlins, off to a surprising 5-2 start, could have one of the most difficult dilemmas at the trade deadline if they are still hanging around.

They must decide whether to trade ace Sandy Alcantara, who is showing signs of his 2022 Cy Young form by starting the season with a 2-0 record and 0.00 ERA, striking out 16 in 12 ⅔ innings, including a three-hit, complete-game shutout in his last start against the Marlins.

Alcantara's five-year, $56 million contract expires after this season, but he has a $21 million club option or a $2 million buyout in 2027. Rival executives still fully expect the Marlins to trade Alcantara, knowing they should have perhaps baseball's most lucrative trade chip at the July 31 deadline.

<p style=(Salaries in present-day value calculated by MLB Labor Relations Department, impacted by deferrals and signing bonuses)

1. Juan Soto, Mets - $61,875,000

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=2. Cody Bellinger, Yankees - $42,500,000

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=3. Bo Bichette, Mets - $42 million

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=3. Zack Wheeler, Phillies – $42 million

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=5. Vladimir Guerrero Jr., Blue Jays - $40,214,286

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=6. Aaron Judge, Yankees – $40 million

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=7. Anthony Rendon, Angels - $38,571,429

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=8. Jacob deGrom, Rangers - $38 million

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=9. Mike Trout, Angels – $37,116,667

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=10. Gerrit Cole, Yankees – $36,000,000

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=11. Jose Altuve, Astros – $33 million

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=11. Kyle Tucker, Dodgers - $33 million

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=13. Tyler Glasnow, Dodgers - $32,500,000

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=14. Francisco Lindor, Mets - $32,477,277

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=15. Tarik Skubal, Tigers – $32 million

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=16. Carlos Correa, Astros – $31,500,000

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=16. Corey Seager, Rangers - $31,500,000

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=18. Sonny Gray, Red Sox – $31 million

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=19. Corbin Burnes, Diamondbacks – $30,790,069

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=20. Giancarlo Stanton, Yankees - $29 million

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=21. Nathan Eovaldi, Rangers – $28,536,643

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=22. Shohei Ohtani, Dodgers – $28,206,684

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=23. Dansby Swanson, Cubs – $28 million

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=24. Carlos Rodon, Yankees – $27,833,333

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=25. Stephen Strasburg, Nationals (*retired) – $27,814,045

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=26. Bryce Harper, Phillies - $27,538,462

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=27. Trea Turner, Phillies – $27,272,727

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=28. Blake Snell, Dodgers - $27,152,056

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=29. Kris Bryant, Rockies - $27 million

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=30. Yordan Alvarez, Astros - $26,833,333

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" />

See the top 30 highest paid players in MLB baseball

(Salaries in present-day value calculated by MLB Labor Relations Department, impacted by deferrals and signing bonuses)1. Juan Soto, Mets- $61,875,000

– Arizona Diamondbacks All-Star second baseman Ketel Marte became a 10-and-5 player on Friday, meaning that even if the Diamondbacks change their mind and want to trade him, it's too late. Marte can't be traded without his permission.

– The Dodgers certainly have a competitive advantage with their massive revenue streams, the latest a five-year, $125 million deal with Uniqlo, with Dodgers president Stan Kasten saying: "I recognize that we have advantages that other teams don't get to benefit from. I acknowledge that. I'm not going to apologize for capitalizing.''

Yet, Kasten cautions, they don't have a monetary advantage ineverything.Taxes for California residents can be a deterrent for free agents. There's also one revenue stream their competitors enjoy that simply doesn't exist for the Dodgers.

"I do have a business disadvantage," Kasten said, trying to keep a straight face. "In Washington, I got decent money for selling an ad on the tarp. Morton Salt .I can't get a [expletive] penny for a tarp ad here, because we never roll it out all year. So no one talks about that."

Kasten, knowing there has been only one rainout at Dodger Stadium since 2000, couldn't help but laugh when it began raining Tuesday night at Dodger Stadium, forcing the tarp to come out.

Alas, there was no advertisement on the tarp.

– While there have been a run of teams locking up their young players with no big-league experience to long-term contracts, from Seattle's Colt Emerson (eight-year, $95 million) to Milwaukee's Cooper Pratt (eight-year, $50.75 million) and soon Pittsburgh's Konnor Griffin (nine years, $140 million), Detroit Tigers infielder Colt Keith can only sit back and smile.

Keith signed a six-year, $28.64 million contract in January 2024, becoming the first Tigers player to receive a long-term deal before his first major-league game.

"It's really cool to see guys get their money early and locking down long-term," Keith tells USA TODAY Sports. "We'll see what the effect is on other other end."

Will it relax them?

"I think it depends on the personality," he said. "For some guys, the long-term commitment knowing they're going to be in the big leagues and having that money helps them relax. I think I was more on the other side of that, where the money wasn't as big a factor. I just wanted to be in the big leagues and perform well.

"I had only spent two months in Triple-A, and I guess I would have been optioned out of camp if I didn't sign it. A lot of times signing that money commitment with the team guarantees you a spot on the roster, whether you're struggling or not, which is good for the player.

"That's the biggest factor I did it, getting on that [26-man] roster and getting more of a leash than other players. It's definitely an advantage, a positive for a lot of guys."

<p style=Here are some of the more interesting foods and beverages available this season at major-league stadiums: The "Take Me Out to the Ballgame Milkshake" at Diamondbacks home games is a salted caramel shake with whipped cream, peanut butter sandwich cookies, Kit Kat bars and Cracker Jack.

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See new food bites at the ballpark this season

Here are some of the more interesting foods and beverages available this season atmajor-leaguestadiums: The "Take Me Out to the Ballgame Milkshake" at Diamondbacks home games is a salted caramel shake with whipped cream, peanut butter sandwich cookies, Kit Kat bars and Cracker Jack.

– The ABS challenge system has been in effect for only a week, with players, managers and umpires all weighing in.

There's not a consensus opinion on whether it's good or bad for the game, but there's a sense that within five years, there will be a fully automated system in which the strikezone is completely governed by "robo umpires."

Tigers manager A.J. Hinch's quick takeaways?

"The benches are a lot quieter during the game,'' Tigers manager A.J. Hinch said. "You don't hear the razzing with players and umpires.''

Hinch on whether the game will eventually go to a full ABS system: "I hope not. I think the human element is super important. I don't want to lose the catcher catching a close pitch and being frustrated, but not willing to challenge. That element of the game I think is important.''

– How is it possible that Atlanta opens the season playing 13 consecutive games without a day off and the Yankees have four days off before playing their 10thgame on Tuesday?

– The Yankees don't need days off the way they're pitching. They yielded just eight runs in their first seven games, tying an MLB record, while their starting pitching has given up just four runs, also tying an MLB record.

– So, just how much did Venezuela's WBC championship mean for Arizona Diamondbacks starter Eduardo Rodriguez, who started that game: "It was the greatest moment of my career. No matter what I do the rest of my career, nothing will ever top that.''

– Who is that one surprise team scouts are raving about this year?

The Texas Rangers.

"It wouldn't surprise me one bit to see those guys in the World Series, especially with that pitching,'' one veteran scout said. "They are that good."

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Tigers' Kevin McGonigle stats have Detroit dreaming World Series

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