The 1960's Science Fiction Movie Poll

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Definitely seconds. La jetee is overrated. Vast majority of this list is pretty bad tho.

joe schmoladoo from 7-11 (Shakey Mo Collier), Wednesday, 31 July 2013 04:17 (ten years ago) link

and the winner is 2001

playwright Greg Marlowe, secretly in love with Mary (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 31 July 2013 04:41 (ten years ago) link

by a margin so wide it's inclusion was pointless, though this list does remind one what a disgraced genre it had become by the time of its release.

sorry i left off 'the nutty professor' and 'visit to a lonely planet' morbs.

Milton Parker, Wednesday, 31 July 2013 06:02 (ten years ago) link

Fahrenheit 451 is way underrated.

The Butthurt Locker (cryptosicko), Wednesday, 31 July 2013 22:12 (ten years ago) link

Voted Barbarella but i'm probably not qualified/informed enough to make a fair decision. Barbarella is fun though.

Treeship, Wednesday, 31 July 2013 23:07 (ten years ago) link

It will be difficult for me to vote for anything other than Quatermass and the Pit

http://www.denofgeek.us/movies/18152/celebrating-quatermass-and-the-pit
http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xet3jh_quatermass-and-the-pit-movie-versio_shortfilms

Milton Parker, Wednesday, 31 July 2013 23:28 (ten years ago) link

Gladiators is pretty great, definitely along the same lines as Punishment Park, though the latter stuck with me longer than the former.

Panic in Year Zero is a feel bad classic, iirc

Gregory Bateson is always appropriate (sarahell), Thursday, 1 August 2013 00:44 (ten years ago) link

one month passes...

Ok I watched Year Of The Sex Olympics on amazon instant last night

And I wish I had held off on voting, because I wasn't prepared for just how incredible it was going to be. It's as dystopian & ahead of its time as the best of the 70's films. Anyone who hasn't seen it yet, can't recommend it highly enough.

For those few people perusing this thread, I'm thinking of another poll collecting the classic fiction films that anticipate reality tv / news entertainment - Sex Olympics, Medium Cool, Coming Apart, The Gladiators / Punishment Park, Death Watch, Network (peripherally), Hu-Man (even though no one's seen it for years), even Running Man I guess. If anyone can remind me of other films I may have forgotten, chime in, but Sex Olympics just rocketed to the top of the list - a tv show where people are sent to the island, and we watch them try to survive

Milton Parker, Monday, 2 September 2013 00:20 (ten years ago) link

nobodies voting for Alphaville?

PRISON WARDEN CONSCIOUSNESS (4th Dimension) (Viceroy), Monday, 2 September 2013 00:46 (ten years ago) link

four weeks pass...

Automatic thread bump. This poll is closing tomorrow.

System, Monday, 30 September 2013 00:01 (ten years ago) link

No slot for Robinson Crusoe on Mars?

I Am the Cosimo Code (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 30 September 2013 01:41 (ten years ago) link

Automatic thread bump. This poll's results are now in.

System, Tuesday, 1 October 2013 00:01 (ten years ago) link

no idea how I missed this poll, bat signal must be on the fritz

a hard dom is good to find (Edward III), Tuesday, 1 October 2013 00:11 (ten years ago) link

la jetee the obv answer tho I would posit that as a short film it doesn't belong here (and yet maybe that makes its win even more deserving and just)

would've agitated for POTA, F451, and prolly pulled the lever for the sorely underrated x: the man w/ the x-ray eyes

loved quatermass & the pit as a young'un but in adulthood have found its ideas far more stimulating than its actuality as a cinematic experience (i.e. yawn)

charly is perhaps better known as flowers for algernon, my bio storage banks seem to recall a childhood viewing but are vague on the quality of this adaptation

loath to confess I still have not seen seconds, this poll surely would've goaded me into it

a hard dom is good to find (Edward III), Tuesday, 1 October 2013 00:27 (ten years ago) link

and as both a godard AND scifi fan, the charms of alphaville are inexplicably lost on me

a hard dom is good to find (Edward III), Tuesday, 1 October 2013 00:30 (ten years ago) link

Voted for La jetée like everybody else but wonder why Village of the Damned didn't get on the ballot.

I Am the Cosimo Code (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 1 October 2013 00:37 (ten years ago) link

cliff roberston apparently won best actor oscar for charly, also lol @ 60s innocence

At the 41st Academy Awards, Robertson won the Academy Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role, under some controversy: less than two weeks after the ceremony, Time magazine mentioned the Academy's generalized concerns over "excessive and vulgar solicitation of votes" and said "many members agreed that Robertson's award was based more on promotion than on performance."

a hard dom is good to find (Edward III), Tuesday, 1 October 2013 00:38 (ten years ago) link

the story's far more well-known than the movie afaik

was in one of my high school english textbooks in fact

a hard dom is good to find (Edward III), Tuesday, 1 October 2013 01:34 (ten years ago) link

fun results

shoutout to the agent who voted for Creation of the Humanoids

Milton Parker, Tuesday, 1 October 2013 20:48 (ten years ago) link

three years pass...

who knows their Finnish techno dystopias? A Time of Roses

https://www.moma.org/calendar/events/3319?locale=en

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 9 August 2017 16:16 (six years ago) link

Probably would have voted for The Day the Earth Caught Fire. SEE THIS MOVIE!

Hideous Lump, Thursday, 10 August 2017 02:47 (six years ago) link

two months pass...

this one's next up for me:

http://teleport-city.com/2013/02/26/ikarie-xb-1/

Ikarie XB-1 is based on the writings of Polish science fiction author Stanislaw Lem, in this case his 1955 novel The Magellanic Cloud. The movie tells the story of the Ikaria’s two-and-a-half year expedition to look for life on the planets of Alpha Centauri.

I’ve read some reviews of Ikarie XB-1 that allude, with varying degrees of certainty, to the possibility that Stanley Kubrick was influenced by the film in his making of 2001: A Space Odyssey, though none that I can find provide any kind of facts that would back that up... At the same time, there are similarities that are hard to ignore; especially in terms of Zazvorka’s set designs, and especially when considering the interior of Ikarie‘s spaceship versus that of the Jupiter probe featured in 2001‘s second half.

entire film with subtitles is on youtube

― Milton Parker, Tuesday, July 30, 2013 7:23 PM

screening in NYC tonight, opening a Lem On Film series

https://criticafterdark.blogspot.com/2015/07/ikarie-xb-1-jindrich-polak-1963.html

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Friday, 3 November 2017 17:05 (six years ago) link

nine months pass...

Rewatched The Day the Earth Caught Fire last night. Only sci fi/doomsday film to center on a newsroom?

a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 15 August 2018 11:44 (five years ago) link

eleven months pass...

I could've sworn Carpenter's The Thing won both a sci-fi poll and a horror poll (or was it the Shining that won the Horror poll? argh)

Οὖτις, Friday, 9 August 2019 21:13 (four years ago) link

huh actually I guess I am thinking of the action poll, where it also placed really high

we should def do a sci fi poll, how come this hasn't happened yet

Οὖτις, Friday, 9 August 2019 21:21 (four years ago) link

83. Dead Man’s Letters (Konstantin Lopushansky, 1989)
Even in a subgenre as noted for its gloom and severity as the post-apocalyptic film, Konstantin Lopushansky’s Dead Man’s Letters stands out for its complete and utter grimness.

Want to see!
Sci-fi poll sounds like a fine idea, other than the endless, inevitable bickering over what constitutes the boundaries of the genre.

crumhorn invasion (Matt #2), Friday, 9 August 2019 22:02 (four years ago) link

well, I don't want to run it...

Οὖτις, Friday, 9 August 2019 22:07 (four years ago) link

Thanks for that link, Morbs. Solid list, comprised mostly of stuff I've seen (for a change) and stuff I've never heard of. Glad to see Incredible Shrinking Man place so high; Day the Earth Stood Still is (challops) overrated.

I've been thinking for a while of filling the '50s gaps in the year-by-year horror polls with sci-fi/horror hybrids (given that horror kinda took an extended smoke break that decade). It's an era I'm mildly obsessed with but I don't know if anyone else really GAF.

Come and Rock Me, Hot Potatoes (Old Lunch), Saturday, 10 August 2019 00:08 (four years ago) link

the ILX poll would replicate 80-90% of the Slant list, hence let's not bother

a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 10 August 2019 02:20 (four years ago) link

As much as I usually like polls, I agree.

Manfred Hemming-Hawing (WmC), Saturday, 10 August 2019 02:28 (four years ago) link

http://worldscinema.org/2018/07/risto-jarva-ruusujen-aika-aka-a-time-of-roses-1969/

thanks for recommending, Morbs! some good parts, especially the opening's official government 1962-2012 historyfilm.

Slant list downplays 70's dystopias and there's way too much blockbuster fluff in it, but enough surprises / unknown placements to shut me up. Happy On The Silver Globe placed high.

Milton Parker, Saturday, 10 August 2019 21:01 (four years ago) link


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