Check out a new international poster for "The Day the Earth Stood Still," a contemporary reinvention of the 1951 science fiction classic.
The end of the world could come from an alien invasion or a natural disaster, but it could also come from the companies we interact with every day. Could we be funding our future apocalypse? We list the science fiction companies that have taken down planets or decimated humanity, all for a quick buck.
It wasn't until a few years later, after 007 became an iconic figure, that the popularity of The Avengers exploded and John Steed made his transformation from rough-and-tumble cop to dashing international man of mystery. Even then, it took the addition of science-fiction elements—and a rotating cast of ass-kicking lovelies—to fully...
Guys, let's be frank. We love science fiction for all the usual reasons, but we especially LOVE us the massive handguns.
From the crazy dancing in The Matrix: Reloaded to the crazy dancing in Spider-Man 3, few genres have created as many horrific sequels as science fiction. But which SF movie sequel is the absolute worst? Only you can decide.
If Ben Stein really wants to convince us all that evolution is a crock, he doesn't need to make a documentary. Science fiction provides a ton of evolution theories that make intelligent design seem downright sensible.
The cosmos is safe for our red-blooded spacemen to venture to worlds where there are no men, or where men are subjugated and the women wear funny headgear. But what about the subset of gynarchic cultures where everyone's a lesbian? It turns out science fiction is full of those, too, and it's time they got the appreciation they deserve.
Science Fiction and Romance two genres one great marriage.
It seems that every decade brings us a new slew of science fiction dystopian films. True fans of the style will generally have seen most of the well known films (1984, Clockwork Orange), so I thought that we could look at some lesser known ones rather than simply rehash the ones you already know about
It seems like wherever you go in scifi, you have to step over a cute chirpy little bot, who whistles, or tweets out a little catchphrase, including R2D2 from Star Wars, Twiki from Buck Rogers and K-9 from Doctor Who. The cute-robot trend really began with 1972's Silent Running. Bruce Dern's little robot friends changed science fiction forever