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Movies can sometimes be ahead of their time in intriguing ways. Occasionally, these groundbreaking films face criticism from audiences and reviewers unprepared for their innovative ideas. Alternatively, some movies achieve overwhelming success, reshaping entire genres as they hit the mainstream at precisely the right time. During the 1980s, many sci-fi films initially faced negative receptions, as audiences and critics seemed to prefer more straightforward entertainment.
We have curated a list of ten sci-fi films from the 1980s that were not immediately embraced by audiences, who later came to appreciate them. We’ll explore why these films, initially out of step with contemporary trends, eventually became beloved classics. Each of these movies exemplifies the concept of being ahead of its time, and fortunately, they all received the recognition they deserved in subsequent years.
It’s not uncommon for creative tensions to arise between screenwriters and directors. This was the case when playwright Paddy Chayefsky, fresh from his Oscar win for “Network,” teamed up with the idiosyncratic British director Ken Russell, known for “The Devils” and “Tommy.” This partnership led Chayefsky to disown the film entirely. Despite this, “Altered States” was one of the few titles on this list that received acclaim upon release, emerging as a surreal body horror masterpiece driven by the dynamic clash between its creators.
Russell’s exaggerated, melodramatic style infused the film with an energy that elevated Chayefsky’s complex script, which delved into scientific and existential themes. While Chayefsky may have sought to distance himself from the project, “Altered States” benefited from a director who recognized the inherent absurdity of its premise. Without this approach, the film could have easily leaned into comedy if it had taken itself too seriously.
Altered States
Despite its hefty production costs, largely due to pioneering special effects, “Altered States” managed to recoup its budget at the box office. This was a remarkable feat given the film’s peculiar and frenetic editing style. It seamlessly transitioned between various states of consciousness, echoing the spirit of art-house sci-fi classics like “2001: A Space Odyssey” and “Solaris,” while maintaining its complexity for mainstream audiences. Even today, it offers a mental thrill ride unlike any other sci-fi film that tackles profound existential questions.
Russell’s campy, melodramatic approach to storytelling helps elevate a screenplay grappling with heady scientific and existential concepts by not taking it as seriously as its author intended. Chayefsky may have wanted his name removed from the credits, but “Altered States” is far better in the hands of a filmmaker aware of how ridiculous its conceit is. It would have been a comedy if it treated its concept with undue reverence.
Due to outsized production costs, courtesy of its cutting edge special effects, “Altered States” barely made its budget back at the box office. This is a miracle, considering how strange and frenetically edited the movie was. It jumps between different states of consciousness with ease, taking an experiential concept closer in spirit to the arthouse science fiction of “2001: A Space Odyssey” or “Solaris” and pushing it into the multiplex without dumbing itself down. Even today, it’s a trip that’s far more of a mental rollercoaster ride than any other sci-fi attempting to answer big existential questions.
Videodrome
David Cronenberg’s “Videodrome” arrived at a time when its original premise was ripe for cultural analysis. The moral panics of the 1980s, from the Satanic panic to the “video nasties” outrage in Britain, were reflected in this sensationalist media satire about a sleazy UHF boss (James Woods) who thinks an uninterrupted livestream of torture and murder could be the next big thing for his network.
Coming from a filmmaker with a background in exploring the extremities of human nature, and who has been long outspoken against censorship, the mind warping broadcasts of “Videodrome” weren’t just intended as a send-up of the right’s worst media fears come to life. It’s also about the relationship between art and reality. Can what we see on screen really influence our behavior for the worse?
One of the darkest science fiction movies ever made, “Videodrome” remains provocative for the ways it pushes its moral question to its extreme when dissecting the reasons content like this gets made. In an age where social media algorithms are intent on pumping the most questionable posts into our personalized feeds under the belief that controversy drives engagement, the ideology behind “Videodrome” — and its handling of philosopher Marshall McLuhan’s “the medium is the message” theory — is even more prescient now than when it was first released to a largely baffled response.
Blade Runner
Ridley Scott’s original cut of “Blade Runner” was so ahead of its time at first that the studio forced it to be more accessible to audiences. For nearly a decade after release, the only cut you could see was burdened with a bored, noir-style narration by Harrison Ford. It wouldn’t be until the 1990s that audiences finally got a chance to see Scott’s adaptation of Philip K. Dick’s novel “Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?” in the way it was originally intended. Although it had been a cult favorite since its original release, “Blade Runner” began to grow in esteem to the point that it became widely accepted as a genre-defining masterpiece.
Aside from the studio-mandated cut, another reason cited for the ambivalence towards “Blade Runner” was that it arrived just a couple of weeks after “E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial” became a smash hit. That film offered audiences a warm and approachable science fiction tale that stood in contrast to Scott’s techno-pessimism. The harsher reviews from the time of release were quick to label it too slowly paced, prioritizing atmosphere and visuals over anything human; the world-building on display was rightfully acclaimed, but there were few who connected on a deeper level.
Subsequent alternate cuts, from the early ’90s director’s cut to the late 2000s “Final Cut,” have helped push this consensus in the other direction, but those only became available after the cyberpunk subgenre’s influence became inescapable. The same qualities that helped “Blade Runner” define a genre are exactly what made it cold and alienating on immediate arrival.
Akira
The term “cyberpunk” was coined in the early 1980s by author Bruce Bethke and immediately became a way to describe a Philip K. Dick-inspired wave of dystopian sci-fi, where visions of societal collapse co-existed with the high-tech possibilities of the future. By the time “Akira” released in Japan in 1988 — before continuing an enormously successful international rollout a year later — the lingering cult appeal of movies like the adaptation of Dick’s “Blade Runner” meant this genre was no longer an alien concept. However, director Katsuhiro Otomo’s adaptation of his own manga still felt like nothing that had come before.
The starting point of a ruined Japan is a familiar trope of the country’s post-war science fiction, going back to the nuclear allegory of the original “Godzilla.” However, the intricate plot of “Akira,” which details both government agencies and biker gangs trying to control a young man with potentially apocalyptic psychic abilities, broke new ground for animated storytelling. This isn’t just due to it being one of the earliest blockbusters to prove there was an audience for adult animation, but the staggering 2D animation process itself, which used bold techniques to bring its detailed dystopia to life. It’s still considered to be one of the pinnacles of the form, with new Easter eggs still being discovered to this day.
Even outside the world of anime, everything from the works of Hideo Kojima to “The Matrix” and “Stranger Things” have been inspired by its unashamedly dense approach to world building and storytelling. The ’90s cyberpunk wave, which has maintained a dominant influence on the genre across various mediums, can be directly traced back to the boundary pushing success of “Akira.”
Tetsuo: The Iron Man
If you read any account of the extremely low budget production of “Tetsuo: The Iron Man,” it becomes clear that nobody involved had a grasp on the kind of movie director Shinya Tsukamoto was making. Tsukamoto has said the cast and crew all assumed he was making a parody of monster movies.Â
Like several titles on this list, “Tetsuo” was lumped in with the burgeoning cyberpunk genre upon its release. However, this is an industrial nightmare that evades easy description. It’s far closer in spirit to the dreamlike horrors of “Eraserhead” or the nihilistic transformation of “Videodrome” than the dystopias of “Akira” or “Blade Runner.”
“Videodrome” was one of the key influences on Tsukamoto, but he pushes David Cronenberg’s body horror influence to its furthest extremes, sacrificing coherent narrative and spoken dialogue to instead create the most hallucinatory, disturbing, man-to-metal transformations he could possibly think up.Â
“Tetsuo” is a radically experimental film, where the body horror is made even more intense when depicted in extreme closeups, coupled with a score designed to sound like beating iron. Two sequels followed, but, even with bigger budgets, they couldn’t replicate the alien quality of the original. “Tetsuo” remains one of the most impressive achievements in low-budget filmmaking, with gruesome practical effects that still feel cutting-edge when placed next to larger scale horror.
The Thing
Released in theaters on the same day as “Blade Runner,” John Carpenter’s grim reimagining of “The Thing From Another World” suffered the same fate as Ridley Scott’s dystopia: failing to connect because of how sharply it contrasted “E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial.”
At a time when audiences wanted escapism from their sci-fi and their aliens to be cuddly and adorable, here was a claustrophobic and paranoid tale about a group of men in the Antarctic who would be whittled down by a shape-shifting creature from space. Critics detested it, too, with the New York Times even dubbing it the “quintessential moron movie of the ’80s.” That was one of several bad reviews that provoked Universal into buying John Carpenter out of his contract.
The film’s downbeat nature is largely why it’s managed to endure and grow in reputation, eventually becoming one of the decade’s most beloved horror and science fiction movies. Take the bleakly ambiguous ending, in which Kurt Russell’s MacReady and Keith David’s Childs are reunited, opting to freeze to death together rather than struggle against their paranoias. It’s a haunting final note that stays with you now, when we’re all very tired and nobody trusts each other anymore. Back then, it felt like a middle finger to the audience. Today, it’s the evening news.
Repo Man
A critical favorite but only a minor commercial success upon release in 1984, Alex Cox’s directorial debut “Repo Man” was a punchy introduction to an independent filmmaker who would go on to shun Hollywood altogether. The satirical sci-fi was a send-up of the cultural anxieties of the Reagan era as seen from the perspective of Otto Maddox (Emilio Estevez), a punk burnout who takes a job repossessing cars. He’s tasked with finding an elusive Chevrolet Malibu with proof of alien life in the trunk.
Although hardly a safe recipe for mainstream success, Universal Pictures quickly proved skeptical of the movie and were undeterred by positive reviews; on its initial release, the studio dumped it in a couple of theaters in Chicago and Los Angeles, and only gave it a New York push after it had been released on home video.
In addition to a narrative with a mysterious, glowing suitcase — an influence on the central MacGuffin of “Pulp Fiction” — “Repo Man” was ahead of its time in the way it satirized the consumerist 1980s. It features a protagonist who turns his back on the punk lifestyle, gradually transforming into a generic working stiff as the story develops. Beneath the madness, Cox was writing about the yuppie era only a year after the term first gained widespread popularity, and long before titles like “Wall Street” and “American Psycho” would depict them as cultural punching bags, the embodiment of pure evil, or both. It was a few years ahead of the curve in its commentary but now stands as a defining satire of its era.
Born in Flames
A landmark of queer and feminist cinema which would go onto be listed in Sight & Sound’s Greatest Films of All Time poll in 2022, Lizzie Borden’s underground movie “Born in Flames” was naturally confounding in the Reagan era. Even the New York Times critic Janet Maslin wrote, “Only those who already share Miss Borden’s ideas are apt to find her film persuasive,” all but shrugging off the idea that this could have any wider appeal beyond the already converted few. What makes Borden’s film still feel so revolutionary — when many of its political ideals are no longer niche — is the approach she took to building out a distinct alternate future on a paltry budget of $40,000.
Many science fiction movies are allegorical critiques of the moment, but Borden took it one step further by adopting a pseudo-documentary approach to her post-revolutionary utopia on the brink of falling apart.
Not only were non-professional actors — including future Oscar-winning filmmaker Kathryn Bigelow as a journalist — used to voice their anxieties and pessimism about life in this alternate New York, but the director used real footage of protests and police violence captured on the streets of New York to further flesh out a utopia in ruins. And while being on the same page as Borden’s politics will certainly improve your view of the movie, even the most skeptical viewers should be bowled over by the way she utilizes guerrilla filmmaking to help shape her story.
On the Silver Globe
After leaving Poland due to government censorship in the early 1970s, director Andrzej Å»uÅ‚awski was given a blank check by its cultural ministry to return and make a passion project of his choice. He opted to adapt his granduncle’s heady sci-fi “Lunar Trilogy” into a movie, and a year after work started on the ambitious film, the same censors shut down production and ordered any film reels to be destroyed. Thankfully, that didn’t happen.
It took over a decade for “On the Silver Globe” to materialize, and this dark, existential drama that follows astronauts on a distant planet never got to shoot many of the planned sequences in the script. The finished film will often interrupt to have Å»uÅ‚awski wandering around mundane Polish city streets, narrating the missing gaps in the story. This is already a bold decision in a story about the complete breakdown of a new society, but the director goes one step further with large chunks of the story told in flashback. That’s via an uncovered video diary from a deceased astronaut, making for one of the most ambitious found footage movies several years before the genre would achieve mainstream popularity.
Of the films on this list, “On the Silver Globe” might be the only one which still feels ahead of its time, with its formal experimentations and especially bleak portrayal of a fledgling community in the cosmos. It remains unlike anything we’ve seen in the genre since.
They Live
Critics were rarely kind to John Carpenter in the 1980s, even when he was directly speaking to the moment. Upon release, “They Live” was torn apart for its satirical social commentary, which imagined that a race of aliens were controlling the minds of America via subliminal messaging and capitalist lures. The running theme in those negative reviews was that this was too shallow an idea to sustain a whole movie, and that Carpenter was always at his weakest when he attempted to incorporate political symbolism into his b-movie throwbacks.
Since then, “They Live” has grown from a cult favorite into being seen as one of Carpenter’s defining efforts. It’s also one of the best satirical sci-fi movies of the late Reagan era, an honor that included the likes of “RoboCop” and “The Running Man.” Although other movies in this wave had achieved commercial and critical success, they were the ones that hid their allegories behind futuristic dystopias, which Carpenter pointedly didn’t.Â
As “They Live” released the weekend before a third consecutive landslide Republican presidential win, Carpenter’s takedown of the relationship between politics and consumerism proved to be one few were willing to hear out at the time. Since then, we’ve all put our glasses on to see this is a masterpiece waiting for us in plain sight.