Must See 2009 Rolex 24 Here
From the classic, low-budget Flash Gordon Saturday matinee serials of the 1930s and '40s to mammoth blockbusters like Star Trek and 2001: A Space Odyssey, filmdom's most imaginative contributions to science fiction are vividly recaptured in this compelling book. With intriguing perceptivities from film critics and a wealth of factual details from historians and academics, general editor Stephen Jay Schneider has brought together the data, the drama, and the passions that have inspired movies in regards to time travel, close encounters, distant planets, extraterrestrial monsters, alien invasions, and the a great deal of other story ingredients that enliven science fiction films. Plot summaries, cast and credit listings, and 200 dramatic illustrations recapture unforgettable moments from sci-fi hits that include Alien, The Andromeda Strain, The Empire Strikes Back, The Fly, The Incredible Shrinking Man, Planet of the Apes, Silent Running, The Thing, and many, a lot of others. Illustrations include dramatic still shots from the films and unforgettable movie posters. Here is a reference volume that belongs on the bookshelf of each film buff and science fiction fan.
From the Inside Flap(back cover) Le Voyage dans la Lune • Metropolis • Back to the Future • Things to Come • The Day the Earth Stood Still • Forbidden Planet • Invasion of the Body Snatchers • The Incredible Shrinking Man • La Jetée • Children of Men • Aelita • Gojira Alphaville • Planet of the Apes • 2001: A Space Odyssey • It Came From Outer Space • A Clockwork Orange • Solaris • Sleeper • La Planète Sauvage • The Man Who Fell to Earth • Star Wars • Clse Encounters of the Third Kind • Stalker • Alien • The Empire Strikes Back • E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial • The Thing • Blade Runner • Videodrome • Return of the Jedi • The Terminator • Brazil • The Quiet Earth • The Fly • Aliens • Akira • Total Recall • Terminator 2: Judgment • Day • Jurassic Park • Independence Day • Tetsuo • The Matrix • The Fifth Element • Gattaca • Logan's Run • THX 1138 • Abre Los Ojos • Dune • Total Recall • TRON (front flap) Can you tell your Dagobah from you Delos, and your Ming from your Morlock? Do you need help understanding 2001: A Space Odyssey? From the classic low-budget Flash Gordon tales to the slick CGI-realized world of The Matrix, science-fiction films have long pushed at the boundaries of the visually and dramatically fantastic. 101 Sci-Fi Movies You Must See Before You Die is your perfective one-stop guide to them all. Science fiction allows each other movie genre to leap--quite literally--into another dimension. Take a classic cop chase and set it on Mars. Create a haunted house story, then add the robots. Take the classic boy-meets-girl story, then make them mutants. Great sci-fi movies turn the known world on it is head, play with the laws of physics, and all the while hold the viewer spellbound with a gripping resourcefulness of future worlds. With clear or deep perception from critics, film historians, and academics, 101 Sci-Fi Movies You Must See Before You Die . offers knowledge, insight, and passion to a century of close encounters, distant planets, time travel, black holes, totally unlikely quests, strange outfits, futuristic technology, inexplicable forces, fantastic spaceships, extraordinary monsters, fluorescent drinks, and subterranean societies. Strap yourself in: you're set for a rocket ride to sci-fi heaven. (back flap) Steven Jay Schneider .is a film critic, scholar, and producer with M.A. degrees in Philosophy and Cinema Studies from Harvard University and New York University respectively. He is editor of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die and 101 Horror Movies You Must See Before You Die, both published by Barron's, as well as the author and editor of a good deal of other books on film. About the AuthorSteven Jay Schneider is a film critic, scholar, and an author and editor of assorted books on films and filmmaking, including Barron's 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die. He is presently in Hollywood, where he plans to construct movies of his own. |
Most helpful client reviews 4 of 4 humans found the following review helpful.
Delivers incisively what it promises By James Kunz I gather books which assert to comprise The Best 100/1000 of film, so believe me when I tell you that this is a good one. Created by the humans who did 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die (which I own and have reviewed), this version fends off some of the difficultnesses that assert the larger version:
Unlike 1001 Movies, this one does not only appeal to cineastes. Instead of seemingly including each alien film that was ever made no matter of quality, it strikes a balanced chord amidst American and international pictures. It likewise has an suitable proportionality of edgier artistic films (2001: A Space Odyssey, La Jetee, Alphaville, etc.) and mainstream successes (Star Wars IV-VI, Independence Day, Them!) without condescending to the latter.
Artistically and aesthetically the book is likewise a success. Each film gets the same amount of space (one of the troubles with 1001 movies was that galore films got 2 pages worth and others a paragraph or two) as well as a finelooking color poster and screenshot, making it not only informative but genuinely rather pleasant to look at. The dissimilar writers use radically dissimilar tones (from intellectual discussion of reactionary vs. progressive to less scholarly examination of riveting chase scenes) which may be jarring at times, but it always makes for interesting reading, whether you agree or not.
The persons who wrote this book distinctly love movies (something that strangely can not be said for all such works) and principally refrain from the lazy errors that ofttimes plague the genre. My only real complaint is I wish they had listed the running length of each film, but that's scarcely a major concern. Basically, for 10 dollars you get a beautiful, full color illustrated (I in truth washed my hands before reading it to stay clear from smudges, and I'm not a fastidious person) well-written treatise on 100 great Sci-fi movies from Voyage to the Moon to Children of Men, and that's genuinely rather a good deal. You won't agree with or have seen all 100, but then again it would be rather a boring book if you had. 4 of 5 persons found the following review helpful.
A Great Sci-Fi Primer By tvtv3 I am a major film buff and received 101 SCI-FI MOVIES YOU MUST SEE BEFORE YOU DIE as a gift from a friend. The 101 movies covered in the book are listed in the order of their basi theatrical release: the introductory movie discussed, VOYAGE TO THE MOON came out in 1902, and the last movie talked about, CHILDREN OF MEN came out in 2006. The introductory page for entry holds the movie poster for the film. That's followed by a two-page discussion of the movie with the discussion containing at least a brief a synopsis. The last portion of each entry is a screen shot from the film. The movies chosen come from just in regards to each sci-fi branch: there's a nice remainder among American and alien films, amidst huge budget Hollywood blockbusters and low budget indies, amongst old and new. There are at least a couple sci-fi animated pictures, galore of sci-fi comedies, a few sci-fi horror films, a large total of sci-fi dramas, and all kinds of sci-fi action films. The book strikes a nice remainder amongst movies everyone's heard of (e.g. STAR WARS) and pictures that even a longtime film buff like myself never knew existed (e.g. TETSUO). There are some movies that will make you scratch your head and wonder why they were included but it may make for a good discussion. For instance personally I thought THE FIFTH ELEMENT was a disaster of a film and even though I enjoyed STARSHIP TROOPERS and I, ROBOT, I wouldn't list them as being one of the 101 Sci-fi films you will have to watch before you die.
The movies listed in the book are: VOYAGE TO THE MOON*A TRIP TO MARS*AELITA*PARIS ASLEEP*METROPOLIS*THE INVISIBLE MAN*THINGS TO COME*THE THING FROM ANOTHER WORLD*WHEN WORLDS COLLIDE*THE DAY THE EARTH STOOD STILL*INVADERS FROM MARS*IT CAME FROM OUTER SPACE*THE WAR OF THE WORLDS*THEM!*GOJIRA*20,000 LEAGUES UNDER THE SEA*INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS*FORBIDDEN PLANET*THE INCREDIBLE SHRINKING MAN* JOURNEY TO THE CENTER OF THE EARTH*THE TIME MACHINE*THE AMPIBIAN MAN*LA JETÉE*ROBINSON CRUSOE ON MARS*ALPHAVILLE*THE TENTH VICTIM* FAHRENHEIT 451*SECONDS*FANTASTIC VOYAGE*WHO KILLED JESSIE?* QUATERMASS AND THE PIT*PLANET OF THE APES*2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY* A CLOCKWORK ORANGE*THX 1138*SILENT RUNNING*SLAUGHTERHOUSE-FIVE* SOLARIS*FANTASTIC PLANET*SLEEPER*SOYLENT GREEN*WESTWORLD* DARK STAR*THE MAN WHO FELL TO EARTH*LOGAN'S RUN* CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND*STAR WARS*STALKER* TIME AFTER TIME*ALIEN*THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK*FLASH GORDON* SCANNERS*ESCAPE FROM NEW YORK*THE ROAD WARRIOR*E.T.* STAR TREK II: THE WRATH OF KHAN*BLADE RUNNER*THE THING*TRON* VIDEODROME*THE FINAL COMBAT*RETURN OF THE JEDI*REPO MAN* THE BROTHER FROM ANOTHER PLANET*1984*THE TERMINATOR*DUNE* STARMAN*BRAZIL*BACK TO THE FUTURE*THE QUIET EARTH*ALIENS* STAR TREK IV: THE VOYAGE HOME*PREDATOR*ROBOCOP*AKIRA* THE NAVIGATOR*TETSEO*THE ABYSS*TOTAL RECALL* TERMINATOR 2: JUDGEMENT DAY*JURASSIC PARK*GHOST IN THE SHELL* 12 MONKEYS*INDEPENDCE DAY*THE FIFTH ELEMENT*MEN IN BLACK* GATTACA*STARSHIP TROOPERS*OPEN YOUR EYES*'*THE MATRIX* GALAXY QUEST*SIGNS*CODE 46*PRIMER*ETERNAL SUNSHINE OF THE SPOTLESS MIND*I, ROBOT*THE HOST*CHILDREN OF MEN*
Overall, 101 SCI-FI MOVIES YOU MUST SEE BEFORE YOU DIE is a great movie book that film buffs and those who like sci-fi movies will get enjoyment from reading. 0 of 0 persons found the following review helpful.
It is what it is By R. C Sheehy Well I can't say that there aren't 101 films listed here. This is a quick and easy read. I am disappointed that it picked so few films from the 80's and seems to have a hazy line amidst horror and sci-fi. Village of the Damned is a huge misfire! See all 5 client reviews... |
|