By Katie Rosseinsky

Published: Saturday, 23 July 2022 at 12:00 am


Greedy corporations, scarily convincing artificial intelligence, a devastating pandemic, a surveillance culture that’s straight out of George Orwell and the impending threat of catastrophic climate change — it’s safe to say that the imagined worlds of dystopian movies now feel scarily close to home. In fact, it’s striking to see how unnervingly prescient many of these stories have turned out to be. 

The word dystopia was created as an opposite concept to utopia, a perfect society, and translates directly from Ancient Greek as “not-good place”, which is a pretty appropriate catch-all description for the majority of the societies shown in these films, where technology has often gone too far, superseding human morality, or where authoritarian regimes have cracked down on the public, leaving them with no freedom. It’s often the similarities with our own world that are most frightening, rather than the differences. 

Still, it’s not all doom and gloom (OK, it’s probably at least 95 per cent doom) as these stories often offer us a glimmer of hope in the form of a protagonist that’s unafraid to challenge the status quo, overcoming the odds to upturn oppressive systems. Perhaps that’s why, even as science fact seems in danger of catching up with science fiction, these films remain enduringly popular. From cult classics like Blade Runner and A Clockwork Orange to more recent hits like Mad Max: Fury Road, these are some of the best.

1. Blade Runner (1982)

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Based on the enigmatically titled Philip K. Dick novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, Ridley Scott’s film set the standard for all dystopian movies to come. Set in a neon-drenched Los Angeles beset by pollution and over-population, Harrison Ford stars as LAPD officer Rick Deckard, who’s keen to retire from his role as a blade runner who tracks down replicants. These humanoid robots were developed by mega-corporations to work in space colonies, but have been banned from Earth after a rebellion. 

When Deckard’s boss tells him that a handful of replicants have managed to escape and are living illegally as humans, he is drawn back for one last job, one which will force him to question his ideas about what makes us human. Scott’s vision and storytelling is so ambitious, it’s hard to believe that audiences and critics weren’t immediately dazzled by Blade Runner, which received a somewhat lukewarm reception on its debut in 1982 (Scott himself famously wasn’t happy with the theatrical version released by the studios, and released his director’s cut 10 years later) but the movie went on to become a cult classic and has inspired countless filmmakers.

Watch Blade Runner on Amazon Prime Video

2. Children of Men (2006)

Humanity is on the verge of extinction in Alfonso Cuarón’s striking adaptation of P.D. James’ novel, which takes place in the year 2027 (yikes). For reasons that no one has been able to work out, a worldwide infertility crisis has ensured that no children have been born for 18 years, while decades of war and economic depression has prompted swathes of refugees to flee to the United Kingdom, one of the last remaining stable societies. The UK government’s response? To form a police state, where refugees are imprisoned and even executed by the army. 

Clive Owen plays Theo, an activist who meets Kee (Clare-Hope Ashitey), a young refugee woman who also happens to be pregnant, and attempts to transport her to a group of scientists working on the global infertility crisis. With Cuarón’s atmospheric direction — including some staggering one-shot sequences — and the eerie prescience of some of its subject matter, Children of Men remains as relevant as it did upon its release more than 15 years ago, if not more so. 

Watch Children of Men on Amazon Prime Video

3. A Clockwork Orange (1971)

Set in a near-future Britain where gangs of youngsters roam the streets, social division is rife and the government is riddled with corruption, Stanley Kubrick’s adaptation of Anthony Burgess’s novel remains one of the most controversial films of all time: after claims that it had inspired copycat violence, Kubrick asked for it to be withdrawn from release in the UK in 1973, with the filmmaker effectively banning his own film in his home country until his death in 1999. 

A Clockwork Orange has lost none of its power to shock today. It follows Alex (Malcolm McDowell), a gang ringleader whose acts of ‘ultra-violence’ terrorise London. When he is eventually arrested and imprisoned for his crimes, he becomes a test subject for the Ludovico Technique, a form of aversion therapy that promises to rehabilitate even the most hardened criminals in just two weeks. But can someone like Alex ever really change, and do the powers that be even want him to do so?

Watch A Clockwork Orange on Amazon Prime Video

4. A.I. Artificial Intelligence (2001)

Twenty years on from its release, there are many aspects of the post-apocalyptic world of A.I. Artificial Intelligence that are no longer the stuff of science fiction. Global warming has wiped out the world’s coastal cities, leading to a population decrease, with the shortfall met by the rise of humanoid robots, who have complex functions but cannot yet recreate human emotions. Until, that is, a child robot capable of love is developed. David (Haley Joel Osment), a prototype, is given to a family whose son is suffering from a rare disease.

Kubrick started work on an adaptation of Super-Toys Last All Summer Long, the short story by British sci-fi writer Brian Aldiss which would eventually become A.I. Artificial Intelligence, back in the ‘70s, hiring Steven Spielberg as the director and asking Aldiss to write. The project languished in development hell for years, however, partly because the CGI available simply didn’t match up to Kubrick’s vision. Filming didn’t start until 2000, but the end product is thought to be pretty close to Kubrick’s plans.

Watch A.I. Artificial Intelligence on Amazon Prime Video

5. Never Let Me Go (2010)