If you liked this list, here's a new one of my favorite Indian films that most of you have probably never heard of! th-cam.com/video/P5XFpS2m1Kg/w-d-xo.html
@@MrMetalWarlock You kidding? Why are you paying for a service you are not happy with? Learn how to use torrents like the rest of the world until they make a better product/service worth our money.
Hey guys! Writer/Director of The Artifice Girl here. This was a huge and wonderful surprise! Thank you Brandon & Kenny for sharing our humble little film with such a beautiful and eloquent review! I can't wait to share this with the cast and crew. Also, I greatly appreciate you keeping the third act a secret. It goes to show how much you care about the films you discuss and the respect you have for your audience. Truly, excellent video. *** Shoutout to Things Will Be Different! Brilliant film. Michael Felker has an insane career ahead of him!
Thanks to this channel (which right now is the first time I've come across them) I'm going to watch your movie which already seems very interesting to me but wouldn't have known it existed at all if it weren't for these gem spotlights. I'm so glad that creatives get a chance to shine cause of channels like these.
Congratulations to everyone involved. I liked it a lot! PS just can't help but to mention that with mature/realistic styled sci-fi movies I always crave for some dive into at least a bit of technical stuff, like educationally esp. in this one with AI
Just finished watching The Artifice Girl and it was a treat! One of the best Indie scifi films I ever watched. Coherence is an all time favorite but this may be a close second for me.
Hey hey! Michael Felker here, writer/director of Things Will Be Different. Just wanted to say thank you so much for highlighting our film and your wonderful analysis. We only just came out a little over a month ago, and its really affirming to see our film still being discovered. Very honored to be placed amongst some really amazing sci-fi gems. Thank you also for keeping the rest of our movie vague, but still underlining the unique sci-fi elements and our specific film influences (all very on point). Also special shout out to The Artifice Girl, one of the great thought-provoking sci-fi films of our time (genuinely can't wait to see what Franklin Ritch tackles next), and the wonderfully touching time-travel film Aporia, lovingly made by Jared Moshe.
I can't wait to see what your next endeavor will be. I really enjoy the movies you have worked on. From The Endless to Something in the Dirt and now Things Will Be Different. Those movies are thought provoking with characters you can connect with. I'm a mathematician who believes I can solve any problem, but time is undefeated. Sir, good skill to you in the future.
Damn. About to watch this after artifice girl. Super stoked. Been bummed out looking for new movies/shows instead of just rewatching Dark...now I have a two I can explore. "Things will be different" and "Artifice Girl"
I always keep a eye on Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead's imdb so I did actually watch this movie a few weeks ago, when I saw your name I was like awesome, resolution is one of my all time favorite films. I was wondering one thing, I'm not gonna ask anything direct about the story but I was curious, is this considered part of the shared universe that's been created from resolution up to something in the dirt? I like to call it the "shitty carl" universe
Hi Brandon & Kenny, Sinda (actor) from Artifice Girl here. I loved watching your video and thoughtful comments! So honored to be part of this amazing group of films. Really appreciate your spreading the word about AG, and I'm looking forward to watching the other films on your list. Keep up the awesome work.
Holy shit. I'm a lifelong scifi fan and i thought i had watched everything. I have seen none of these, and im at a loss for how i missed em. Thanks for this list, you've given me 5 brand new stories to chew over!
@@trakkaton "Instead of this shit list" Usually, If you want to recommend a movie/movies to someone, I would refrain from using/having such a horrible attitude when you do so. Who would take movie advice from someone who speaks like that?
Just for those who would like it. Thanks for the movie suggestions The Back Focus #5 0:55 Aporia #4 3:40 Things will be different #3 6:37 Vesper #2 10:15 Aniara #1 14:10 The artifice girl
My favourite indie scifi film is Coherence. I think it's achieved some cult notoriety now, but it was relatively unknown when it came out. It was so effective at creating an Other-based sense of creepiness, all simply based on glowstick colours, and a shoeatring budget. That's pure story writing magic.
I always pair it with "Triangle" when I show it to someone. And then, there is "+one" a shameless copy of "Coherence", and if it isn't a copy, it's a shameless film.
Even though it’s animated, I’d add “Scavengers Reign” (HBO and Netflix). It’s amazing both with the visuals and story - a modern sci-fi masterpiece imo.
I like a reviewer who can report their feelings of both not liking/feeling uncomfortable but also liking that it made them feel something. People are complex, and our reactions to movies can be as well.
@@KonstantinZilberburgI got recommended Aniara after binging Avenue 5 and totally could see it being like a spoof of the doomsday off course concept. Great flick. Got in my head and ended up picking up the original poem in English translation
Fun fact. To honour Harry there is a place in his native municipality, Sollentuna, that is called Aniaraplatsen (Aniara square). And parts of the movie was filmed right next to it in Sollentuna centrum (shopping mall). Look at 13.03 in this youtube clip and you will see that. I was there yesterday. Everytime i am there i am thinking about the movie that really is fascinatingly uncomfortable to watch.
If you liked this, you have to watch more of Moorhead & Benson's work. "Resolution (2012)" & "Synchronic (2019)" in particular, are said to be set in the same universe.
i was always a fan of 'coherence', as an obscure scifi flick ... it starts off in one direction, the scifi elements come and take us in a different direction, and then the finale takes us on a completely unexpected journey
Wow. What a wonderful refreshingly intelligent, informative, eloquent and low-key video.😊🙏 Thank you for not being shouty (why does everyone shout lol) I clicked thinking I would have seen them all and it was the opposite. I have Vesper on my list as the cast is excellent. I had not seen anything about the others and am grateful. It is very frustrating and infuriating that these movies are out there and we (I) can never seem to find them or access them. I used to find stuff. The importance of independent cinema and film-making cannot be overstated. That is why we have so many festivals (here in Australia ) celebrating them. Especially in a current climate of over-blown shallow thoughtlessness and bully-boy studios, unique and diverse points of view are desperately needed. I grew up on lots of low-to-no budget TV and this is where people shine and can do their thing. Innovation and imagination can flourish. Writers and actors can let go and express themselves fully. Good writing always blows my mind. Concepts are fucking cool. How I have enough trouble here! There have been so many brilliant indie movies that I think are better than their studio blockbuster counterparts eg., The Europa Report 2013, The Machine 2013, Kill Command 2016. So glad I clicked on this video. It was a joy. Thank you :)
Late to the party here, but a hidden gem for me that I never see anyone bring up is an Australian flick called These Final Hours (2014). I've never seen another movie quite like it. I don't recommend watching the trailer as it's one of those "show the movie in the trailer" ones, but the opening premise of the movie is that a planet-killing asteroid has impacted the north Atlantic and a wall of fire is spreading around the globe. It will reach the other side of the globe in 12 hours and there is no bunker deep enough to save you. The movie follows a man's journey during those 12 hours.
I agree. The trailer hooked me and I added it to my watchlist, but then, it took me months before I felt like actually watching it. When I did I felt stupid to have postponed it. A splendid film
Vesper is a sensational film, and I am so pleased that it made your list...and that you were as blown away by the film, as I was, when I watched it. I watch a lot of Indy cinema, and love sci-fi as a genre., As a fiction writer myself I love to see how the works of other Indy authors and screenwriters are brought to life. Indy cinema seems to always be filled with those people who are truly dedicated in producing something that is well written, acted and captivating, that stands head and shoulders above much of the slop that is sadly released by the mainstream.
What really surprises me is that this channel doesn't have millions of subs. It should. You have a very pleasant voice, tone and intonation. And your commentary and content is great.
Europe Report is worth a watch if you like hard sci-fi. The low budget worked in its favor to give quite an authentic look. And excellent job on this list. Each movie definitely appears to be worth the watch. Especially if you're tired of typical Hollywood fare. Much thanks for the list.
@@peabee4758 One thing I would change would be to edit a new trailer for the movie. Magnet made it seem like a run-of-the-mill "horror movie set in space".
IMHO it is a run-of-the-mill horror movie set in space... Like many such movies it uses the pseudoscience and space stuff as unexplainable plot devices. Granted, the making has some nice aspects to it, but I appreciate the fact that the movies in this video were selected mostly due to their writing.
I really appreciate how you summarize each film in the description so I don't have to watch to verify that I do or do not actually know these films (four out of five were new to me!). The paradox is that by being anti-clickbait like that you actually made me watch the whole thing from start to finish instead of frantically scrolling through the video to see if it's clickbait.
For me, the scariest part isn't the morality of using AI. It's the implication that if someone with good intentions could create that project to get the FBI's attention, then someone with bad intentions could create one to indulge predators instead. I just saw a news report about a guy who got arrested for deepfaking CP, and his clients were usually relatives or family friends of the girls he was deepfaking. The problem is, I'm not sure if those people broke any actual laws because there isn't enough regulation for AI yet. But they should definitely be put on a watchlist and the families should be alerted.
apropos "THE ARTIFICE GIRL", robin wright & al pacino take on this subject from a different angle in "THE CONGRESS". it's actually a bit mind boggling.
Yes, same! I really appreciate to get no spoilers. Many reviews don't give a fuck and just tell the whole story, which doesn't make a lot of sense if you want to get people to watch the movies.
I’ve watched Primer like 10 times, and I always have fun digging into the different timelines. What’s amazing is that the film seems designed to confuse the viewer and put them on the same playing field as the idiots messing with the timelines, but underneath it all, it’s actually thought out to every meticulous detail.
My two absolute favorites in this genre are Time Trap,2017 and In the Shadow of the Moon,2019. These 2 are very low budget but still amazing!. Not sure The Thirteenth Floor,1999 qualifies due to bigger budget but it's not often discussed and it is fantastic!
Scavengers Reign is an animation series that closely ressembles Vesper. The world is heavily inspired by Moebius' art, while the individual plotlines each address human nature, faults and all. It's mostly about adaptation to a non-logical biological environment, the acceptance - or not - of the way it functions. Plus it's pretty, with space for whimsy. Mature.
That was wokeism infested crap.... Every white guy was either a evil or just stupid, evey women was empowered and gay. It was painful to watch. And the world was uninteresting too. Would not recommend to anyone.
"The Quiet Earth". 1985, New Zealand, Post Apocalyptic 3 character slow burn. Brilliant film... EDIT: Neil DeGrasse Tyson calls it one of his favorite Sci-Fi films.
Quiet Earth is really great. It’s one of those classic post-apocalyptic films which depicts the world not so much as a battlefield but a graveyard, with all the freedom and urgency that entails. And it’s still surprisingly lighthearted at moments. A great film for a Saturday afternoon imo. Really really good.
A recommendation from me for a suuuuper low budget sci-fi would be The Vast of Night (2019) - some of the shots they pulled off (with like, remote controlled cars, iirc) are incredible.
"The Vast of Night" is, for me, one of those indie movies that's both clearly low budget but also so creatively made, it genuinely wouldn't be improved with another $100 million. (and like e.g. "Evil Dead", I can see it inspiring indie filmmakers for years to come)
@@anonymes2884Seriously, no offense intended, but how is this clearly a low budget movie? Agreed, it was made with a budget under $1 million, but the acting, cinematography, special effects, and production are all first-rate. My favorite movie of the last 10 years.
My own recommendation: Monsters (2010). It was Gareth Edwards' first film, well before Godzilla or Rouge One. It never seems to get mentioned, so I gather it remains below the radar. A lot of the elements of Vesper remind me of it, such as the rural environments full of otherworldly hazards. It has a simple enough premise that I'd describe it more as a character piece than a story-driven film, but it's also about a changing world. There's a bit of the "iceberg" approach to the story-telling here as well, where we're following characters with no special knowledge and make no major discoveries; we're just seeing this new world through the eyes of regular folks. Great score by Jon Hopkins (Look up the main theme; it's on here). The behind-the-scenes stuff is worth checking out afterward if you have the physical disc, if only to see how comfortable Edwards has always been with effects and how seamlessly he incorporated them. It's a masterclass in how to film actors without the CGI becoming intrusive (i.e., He doesn't rely on green screen environments).
This is the first time I've seen an episode of "The Back Focus", thank you for such awell though- through analysis and human perspective.! For whatever it's worth, I'm recommending this to a lot of folks - (especially ones involved in sci-fi writing, design and producing).
Very cool list. Here's a few indie sci-fi picks I would recommend in no particular order. *Another Earth *Monsters *Upstream Color *High Life *Predestination *Never Let Me Go
I am a fully grown, emotionally stable, 57 year old man. Never Let Me Go had me shedding real tears by the end. This is NOT typical behavior for me. Such a powerful story.
Thanks so much for these recommendations! I had _The Artifice Girl_ and _Vesper_ on my to-watch list, but I hadn't yet heard of the rest. Some sci-fi films I've really enjoyed in the past that I never hear other people talk about are _Nothing_ (2003), _The Man from Earth_ (2007), _The Subjects_ (2015), _Circle_ (2015), _ARQ_ (2016) and _Radius_ (2017).
Excellent delivery. You gave me enough information about the movies without ruining them, but also gave me enough to have a very good understanding about the stories.
1. Aporia 2. Things will be different 3. Vesper 4. Aniara 5. The Artifice Girl Thanks. Only saw the Artifice Girl, which was very good and well written.
A good list well reviewed. Here are some recommendations: Black Hollow Cage. 2017. This for me is up there with Soviet era and older European Sci Fi. It is the world it is pretending to be. It is simple and beautiful and jus a lil odd. It's not a perfect film but for me, does exactly what it sets out to do. It's a rainy long winters night movie....Just give yourself to it. Think of it as a long Twilight Zone episode. Cargo. Not the 2017 Martin Freeman film....The Swiss/German 2008 slab of Sci Fi is a much slept on gem that seems to have slipped under most fans radar. The English dub leaves a lot to be desired so i highly suggest the original German language and subs. Earth is fucked and people are buying their way to the planet Rhea. This is a spaceship based...thriller? The sets and FX are excellent and put bigger budget Hollywood to shame. Terminus. 2015. This is a low budget, filmed in Australia but supposed to be America film that is actually far better than it should be. It seems at times to be a SyFy movie but keeps skirting away to be a solid B movie due to the actors being that bit better and the story being intriguing. Ex soldiers and family make a discovery during hard times that hints towards something miraculous and mysterious that, if they can understand it, may just save them from a very bleak future. Prodigy. 2017. One of the best child actor roles i've ever seen outside of Hollywood/mainstream. Savannah Halliday as Ellie, the Prodigy of the title, gives a palpable, chilling and very real performance of a very... troubled...child under investigation by a small team of experts. A very tight film, well cast over all and shot in a few rooms/lab. Ellie puts Eleven/Stranger Things to shame. An excellent, grounded outing into "Powers" territory. The Blackout. 2019. Russian alien invasion Sci Fi that at times feels like a Japanese film. It has that ...flare and self belief of Asian cinema that borders on schlock...but doesn't quite go over the top. Jus a great Army Vs Aliens film not half as serious as the films above in this list. Save Yourselves ! 2020. One of my favorite alien invasion films. I frickin love this quirky black comedy. Two geeky Brooklynites drive out to the countryside and a nice cabin house to try get away from tech overload and reconnect with each other....and things start to get a bit weird. This low budget film has great heart and excellent pace/beats. It's silly in all the right places and manages a great level of "Huh?" right up until the biggest WTF? at the end. Branded. 2012. This film is not easy to find any more....but worth it for fans of the weirder Twilight Zone/Outer Limits kinda sci fi. It's a strange film about products and branding and the power of marketing...with a very weird twist. A very strong cast with some big names that just seemed to...disappear from shelves. Was it too close to The Truth? I hope not! >Looks worriedly above my head< Worth sailing the high seas to find....if you can even find it there !- Seven different sci fi slices of cinema to seek out and see. I hope you enjoy which ever ones you track down.
As a fan of indie films and science fiction, I ended up watching "The Artifice Girl". And I have to say thanks for not spoiling act 3. Best recommendation I have got in a long time.
Ainara remains one of my absolute favourites from the past decade. The translation of the original poem is so haunting. I think the transition to film was done in such a beautiful manner. Brutal and challenging, a very emotional journey Loved Vesper as well. Reminded me ao much of Terry G's work. I'm going to see all the other recommendations. This was a wonderful upload.
I can’t wait to see all of these recommendations. Your reviews of each make them so compelling. Thank you for sharing this list with fellow sci-fi fans.
I loved “Oxygen” the French wake up in a pod movie and the Circle where a group of people wake up in a circle and vote as one dies every sixty seconds that plays out in real time. Both excellent.
Oxygène is a Netflix product, made by Alexandre Aja, the former director of Mirrors (Kieder Sutherland, Paula Patton) and Piranha 3D (Elisabeth Sue, Christopher Lloyd, Jerry O Connell, Richard Dreyfuss... Gianna Michaels, Ashlynn Brooke... ) Not an indie film.
As a Swede, I don't think I can watch it because the acting is atrocious or tha way they say their lines. No one in Sweden talks like that. And that is a problem with many if not most Swedish films. The actors don't sound like real people but like actors saying lines from a script. It's filmed theatre and film and theatre is different. Or should be.
@Maegnys interesting perspective, this could be turned into a Broadway play probably, as I understand what you mean when it comes to the suspension of disbelief when it comes to the two mediums
Thanks Brandon. I was a fan in the No Small Parts days, but haven't seen any content for a while. This made me watch The Artifice Girl and I'm really glad I did. Top notch indie film making.
There was an episode of 'Out of the Unknown' series from 1966 called 'Tunnel under the world', that had the same storyline as Vivarium. Based on the Frederik Pohl novel from the 50s.
You definitely should check my top 5 list of indie sci-fi gems: 1. Primer (best time travel ever put to the screen; Nolan was so jealous he copied the concept in Tenet); 2. Coherence (Unscripted masterpiece, one of a kind); 3. Beyond the Infinite Two Minutes (I still haven't figured out how they pull that off; you should try it); 4. The Man From Earth (my fav flick ever, three incredible plot twists); 5. Timecrimes (Cronocrimenes) (Neat, effective, fun) Cheers!!!
Seen all these (Primer I watch like once a year lol) except for Beyond the Infinite Two Minutes. You’re not the first to recommend that one, I should check it out
@@TheBackFocus same here, lol... About the seventh time watching Primer, I thought I nailed it...(still I missed a couple things). Nice, your brain will go like...wait a minute! Cheers !
Hopefully you've also seen Predestination? It and Primer are my top 2 time travel movies. Not really indie, but small enough no one I suggest it to has ever heard of it. Timecrimes is also way up there.
Not a film but a show recommendation, although I don't even know if it's on Max anymore, is Raised by Wolves. The one caveat being that season 2 ends on a cliffhanger, and then unholy devourer of shows Zazslav cancelled it like he did with every other good sci-fi show on HBO Max. So if you're okay with that, it's an incredible, bizarre and unique sci-fi story that is just batshit insane in the best way sometimes
@@C-man553This was one of the few shows I’ve seen where the crazier it got, the more I liked it. The last few episodes were especially insane. Apple TV should pick it up!
What a refreshing change to have well researched, informative and well presented review. Excellent work. I particularly enjoyed the way you spoke to us as if we were having an actual conversation.
Great list. Really well produced and written. I've seen several of these, but most I haven't, and these are exactly the types of films I seek out when wanted to nerd out on a sci fi film. Thank you.
this is one of the best film videos i have seen in like ever - i love that i'm actually being introduced to new films, not the same 'most popular' films out there. i've subbed. i can't wait to see your other videos. these films look absolutely fantastic. i feel so lucky to have stumbled onto your channel. what an absolute gem of a channel you are! thank you for this!! you've saved me hours and probably days of digging for unique, intelligent and interesting films to watch.
It's a more occult but "He Never Died" is the number one under-appreciated film in my catalogue. Very great to go in blind. Funny, demented, surly violent and a refreshing take on old lore.
I really appreciate your commentary on these 5 SciFi flicks. Your insightful, well-written/spoken and very personally expressed thoughts really drew me in. I'm looking forward to watching the 2 that I had not seen before (Things Will be Different, The Artifice Girl). Thanks very much. Be Well,
NOTE ABOUT SPOILERS: I thought I was being careful, but the consensus from the comment section seems to be that there are some MINOR spoilers. I certainly didn't reveal everything in these films, but I clearly went a little too far for some people's comfort. Consider that as you watch, and I'll be more careful in the future! - Brandon
I completely agree with your take on The Artifice Girl. It's fairly simple and bare-bones in its execution, effectively a "stage play" shot at some nondescript locations. Yet, its writing and acting punch far higher than its budget would imply. I haven't heard of Vesper or Things Will Be Different, I'll definitely check them out. The time travel plot reminds me a bit of Enter Nowhere (2011). Another bare-bones indie film based on a small cast, basic locations, and a simple premise that becomes much deeper you'd first assume. The acting was decent and the plot has some nice twists to keep you guessing for awhile. Another is Triangle (2009), though it plays with time in a very different way. Triangle has a much larger scale, an abandoned ocean liner adrift at sea--not sure how they pulled that one off. It's honestly a bit rough around the edges. The acting is...good enough, and the plot takes awhile to piece together, though for reasons that will become apparent towards the end. The payout is really worth it though. Well, until the third act anyway. It feels needlessly tacked on, but it's sort of wraps things up. It's still worth checking out nonetheless. The other from your list I'd seen was Aniara. I think your first take was the right one. It looks fairly polished on the surface, but overall the plot is too thin for the runtime. With better editing to trim some of the pointless repetition and tighten up the tension, it could be a decent film. As it stands...I'd pass.
Welp, the only one I've seen is The Artifice Girl, and I loved it. That and two of my favourite words are "indie" and "sci-fi", so I'll check the rest, and you've earned yourself a sub!
If you like Time Travel ones, most are pretty rough but... "Mega Time Squad" is fun, "Predestination" is awesome, and "The History of Time Travel" is essential, try to keep up when it starts but you'll love it when you realise what's going on. There's also "Coherence" that starts a little boring but by the ending it goes full in on the premise. "Cosmos" (2019) - 3 amateur astronomers detect unusual signals, the entire film is just them 3 getting excited at the idea it might be space aliens. Well acted. For others, I saw a real indie called "Cargo" (2009) that was the crew's first film. It was decent. I'd also recommend "Salyut-7" (2017) as just brilliant.
Spot on for mentioning COSMOS (2019), for its science-based, suspense-building approach to a slow-burn discovery of immense proportions. Low budget SF movies generally don't look (or act) nearly as good as this one does from start-to-finish.
@@TheBackFocus Ever since "The OA" - I've watched several of Marling's/Batmanglij's collaborations. Even sat about 5 feet away from them at a public screening of 2 (we were only supposed to see 1) episodes of "The OA" on a theater-sized screen but, sadly - could not meet them as they had to run off somewhere. "The OA", "Another Earth", "Sound Of My Voice", "I Origins", "The East" and the recent "A Murder At The End Of The World". And her role in the UK police dramedy "Babylon".
I haven't yet watched I Origins. Mostly because I am unsure of its connection to a trilogy of novels that start with "Soul Identity" by Dennis Batchelder. The science in both is eerily very very similar. So much of a similarity that I sense that Marling and Cahill may have "ripped" off the plot from Batchelder at a distilled level. The movie is still on my watchlist, just have to find the right mood for me, not sure if I can convince my wife to watch with me though lol.
Another banger list! Your channel is becoming a favorite of mine I find your videos put me at ease. Anyways… I have 2 recs off the top of my head: Mars Express & Automata. Mars Express is a really punchy French animated cyber punk noir. The plot is generic but the detail of the world and the animation are top tier. Automata is super super under the radar. It came out around the same time as Chappie, and while that saw some buzz Automata slipped under the cracks. Its also got a generic story about the laws of robotics and treatment of sentient robots as an allegory for oppression (sort of like Mars Express) but again the world feels very lived in and its a fun watch for a sci fi fan. I’ll throw in Z for Zachariah as an honorable mention.
'AUTOMATA' did indeed get short shrift & antonio banderas is in excellent form. i wouls add 2023's "THE MACHINE" which was unfortunately overshadowed by "EX MACHINA" but which i personally actually enjoyed more. british production.
MOS DEF not a comedy; swedish bleakness, think INGMAR BERGMAN on a death run in deep space. DO NOT watch it if you have been having suicidal ideations though; i'm serious as cancer.
Loved the Artifice Girl. Thanks to the channel for highlighting it. Really like the investigation of AI and human crossover combined with sentience, feelings and created programming reminiscent of Objectives and priorities like Asimov's laws. Will be watching again.
Predestination is constantly ignored on various top 10 or, videos like yours, sci-fi movies that you may have missed. Probably because it is an Australian film (with mainly US actors) but Australian actress Sarah Snook provides a killer performance. This film really deserves more appreciation.
It's a fun film that I recommend constantly. Just because it's not on this list doesn't make it "ignored". I have 100 films I would recommend to an SF fan. So if I mentioned only five I'd be "ignoring" 95% of them.
After Yang is a great movie by the video essay writer Kogonada. It has AI and neat scifi stuff but it focuses entirely on an exploration of family and loss in a way that is unique in a way that could only really be pulled off in a scifi movie.
"Never Let Me Go" from 2010 for me is the best Science Fiction movie that no one has seen. Stars Carey Mulligan, Andrew Garfield, and Keira Knightley. A group of children at a boarding school discover the dark secret of why they are there and what that means for their future. Saying anything more really will give away too much, I wouldn't recommend watching the trailer either, as it artfully ruins the climax. Early film festival reviews said how it was bringing crowds to tears, and I thought yeah, yeah, sure, sure, cut to me inconsolable in a sold out showing at TIFF.
The original Novel by Kazuo Ishiguro is really good as well.. although I would say the 'dark secret' is revealed surprisingly early on, and concentrates more on the effects on ethics involved. But yeah, with that cast, the direction by Romanek and a great script adaptation by ALex Garland, I don't understand why it isn't better known
@@stephenpalmer9375 I dunno, I think it's fairly well known (the book won plenty of awards for instance, including, y'know, a Nobel prize for literature :), was well reviewed at the time etc. Not mainstream maybe but here in the UK at least, I bet most film/book/sci-fi fans know of it. "Spares" by Michael Marshall Smith is, IMO, a good take on the same idea BTW (I remember feeling that slight resentment of the long-time sci-fi fan when the novel of "Never Let Me Go" was released to quite a lot of acclaim, partly because it was by a "literary" author and thinking "Yeah, I really enjoyed this one _about 10 years ago_ when it was called 'Spares'" :).
@@anonymes2884 i wonder if it is because of the very British Cast that it's maybe more well known on our side of the pond. I'll have to check out "Spares", so thanks :)
jeebus, I watched Never Let Me Go once and thought it was absolutely amazing but it is one of those films I could never watch again (I got the DVD though, just to have a copy). It is *brutal*, but so well done!
@@evildrganymede It's brutal but in a beautiful way. I'd read the book, so perhaps the film didn't hit quite as hard for me, but it was still super-emotional and resonant. Those three lead performances are actors at their absolute best. Really stunning.
A pretty obscure but really amazing sci fi film is “A New Hope” (1977). It’s actually the fourth episode in an (imo rather uneven) series, but it can be watched entirely on its own. And it’s got it all: richly developed characters, thorny moral quandaries, and a plot which is both complex and sublime. It can get pretty lofty at points, but it’s good hard sci-fi with an incredibly prescient vision of the future.
Really surprising and incredible. Many thanks for bringing these to our attention. Great pity they didn't get wider distribution. The Artifice girl might also make a great stage play.
I really enjoyed watching The Artifice Girl. I was really surprised how much I enjoyed it. The young actress was amazing. The back story was so fascinating, it kept me invested in the story. I highly recommend this one.
Great video. You've provided me with 3 solid films that I am going to watch for sure. I'm so tired of the run of the mill mainstream streaming garbage films. Thank you a million.
Looking for suggestions: You probably covered "The Quiet Earth" a long time ago. It's a "last man on Earth" scenario. I have to watch this movie each year like it first showed up on "cable" back in the 90s or so. I was able to buy a VCR tape and eventually a DVD to keep up the habit. You likely don't cover movies your fans can't access, but I know there's a poor bootleg copy online. The little bit of music at the beginning also makes it extra special somehow, amplifying the ambiguity and bringing it all home at the very end. Another hard-to-find-but-spectacularly-worth-it suggestion, albeit somewhat off topic, is "MINDWALK", a talky film set on St. Michel (Island) in France. Liv Ullmann, Sam Waterson and JC Heard are a physicist, a politician, and a poet "colliding" all three in a clever trialogue. Again, a poor copy is available online somewhere. I'd like it for my collection, but...
Wasn't expecting 2b surprised by any of these titles. Of the 4 I've seen, No 1 has the most sudden detail changes - 1 in particular that caught me way off guard. Thank you for this cerebral, enjoyable and thought provoking list!
Thanks. All of these are interesting but you said NO SPOILERS. When you started giving a lot of info on APORIA, I stopped it and just scanned thru all the titles. Again, thanks for introducing these but you gave too much info for me to stop watching your vid.
If you liked this list, here's a new one of my favorite Indian films that most of you have probably never heard of! th-cam.com/video/P5XFpS2m1Kg/w-d-xo.html
Yo. how can I watch all of these movies?? I only have Netflix. And it 5uck5. Thank you before
Thanks for the list. They all look quite good. I've found several on Blu-ray that I am going to purchase.
@@MrMetalWarlock You kidding? Why are you paying for a service you are not happy with? Learn how to use torrents like the rest of the world until they make a better product/service worth our money.
TY for Vesper recommendation 🥹
Hey guys! Writer/Director of The Artifice Girl here. This was a huge and wonderful surprise! Thank you Brandon & Kenny for sharing our humble little film with such a beautiful and eloquent review! I can't wait to share this with the cast and crew. Also, I greatly appreciate you keeping the third act a secret. It goes to show how much you care about the films you discuss and the respect you have for your audience. Truly, excellent video. *** Shoutout to Things Will Be Different! Brilliant film. Michael Felker has an insane career ahead of him!
Thanks to this channel (which right now is the first time I've come across them) I'm going to watch your movie which already seems very interesting to me but wouldn't have known it existed at all if it weren't for these gem spotlights. I'm so glad that creatives get a chance to shine cause of channels like these.
Wow! Thank you so much for the comment! I absolutely loved the film, and I hope more people give it some love. ❤️
Congratulations to everyone involved. I liked it a lot!
PS just can't help but to mention that with mature/realistic styled sci-fi movies I always crave for some dive into at least a bit of technical stuff, like educationally esp. in this one with AI
Just finished watching The Artifice Girl and it was a treat! One of the best Indie scifi films I ever watched. Coherence is an all time favorite but this may be a close second for me.
I loved The Artifice Girl. Will watch again. Good work!
Hey hey! Michael Felker here, writer/director of Things Will Be Different. Just wanted to say thank you so much for highlighting our film and your wonderful analysis. We only just came out a little over a month ago, and its really affirming to see our film still being discovered. Very honored to be placed amongst some really amazing sci-fi gems. Thank you also for keeping the rest of our movie vague, but still underlining the unique sci-fi elements and our specific film influences (all very on point). Also special shout out to The Artifice Girl, one of the great thought-provoking sci-fi films of our time (genuinely can't wait to see what Franklin Ritch tackles next), and the wonderfully touching time-travel film Aporia, lovingly made by Jared Moshe.
Wow! Great to hear from you Michael, and thanks for the kind words. Loved your film, and it was a privilege to watch and talk about it.
I can't wait to see what your next endeavor will be. I really enjoy the movies you have worked on. From The Endless to Something in the Dirt and now Things Will Be Different. Those movies are thought provoking with characters you can connect with. I'm a mathematician who believes I can solve any problem, but time is undefeated. Sir, good skill to you in the future.
Hey Michael, I loved your movie! I especially loved the photography. That 360° turn with the changing landscape was so great!
Damn. About to watch this after artifice girl. Super stoked. Been bummed out looking for new movies/shows instead of just rewatching Dark...now I have a two I can explore. "Things will be different" and "Artifice Girl"
I always keep a eye on Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead's imdb so I did actually watch this movie a few weeks ago, when I saw your name I was like awesome, resolution is one of my all time favorite films. I was wondering one thing, I'm not gonna ask anything direct about the story but I was curious, is this considered part of the shared universe that's been created from resolution up to something in the dirt? I like to call it the "shitty carl" universe
Hi Brandon & Kenny, Sinda (actor) from Artifice Girl here. I loved watching your video and thoughtful comments! So honored to be part of this amazing group of films. Really appreciate your spreading the word about AG, and I'm looking forward to watching the other films on your list. Keep up the awesome work.
Thank you so much for the kind words :). You and the rest of the cast were fantastic in the film. All the best.
Sinda's performance was commanding. Such a good cast.
🕷️👑❤
Ha! Obviously a response written by an AI ... seriously, tho, you and the team added something amazing to the World. Thank you.
I think it's fantastic that you took the time to respond here, Sinda. Good luck to you! Although you probably won't need it. 😀
Thank you for highlighting our film "The Artifice Girl"
It was easy to highlight a movie I truly loved.
( @BrittMcTammany was our incredible DP and Colorist for this film. 🙌 )
It's so good! I really loved it!
I loved this movie. Very engaging.
Loved it
Holy shit. I'm a lifelong scifi fan and i thought i had watched everything. I have seen none of these, and im at a loss for how i missed em. Thanks for this list, you've given me 5 brand new stories to chew over!
Maybe try Accion mutante, Cargo, Strange Days, Abre los Ojos, Stay, Dark City, instead of this shitlist?
@@trakkaton "Instead of this shit list"
Usually, If you want to recommend a movie/movies to someone, I would refrain from using/having such a horrible attitude when you do so.
Who would take movie advice from someone who speaks like that?
I was going to say the same thing! What a treat to have 5 new bangers to check out!
Vesper and Aporia are excellent. I am going to check the others!
@dagrimmreepa top 3 sci-fi films? :D Always like to ask a seasoned pro..
As a lithuanian, I’m so happy that you liked Vesper 🇱🇹
As a gay, transgender, robotic person of color, thank you for telling us all that you are Lituanian.
The movie was great and the soundtrack also!
It was an incredible movie. I just happened upon it. I was enthralled!
@@hdiponzio Was Vesper the name of the movie? I've watched it a few times and loved it!
@jlholmes8 Yes! Fabulous movie.
Just for those who would like it. Thanks for the movie suggestions The Back Focus
#5 0:55 Aporia
#4 3:40 Things will be different
#3 6:37 Vesper
#2 10:15 Aniara
#1 14:10 The artifice girl
Thanks, we put those in the description to make the chapters in the video, but for some reason, they’re not showing up. Working to fix it.
@@TheBackFocus Add 'Pandorum'. If not here then in another list
@@TheBackFocus Maybe you could pin the list to the top? It's just a thought
@@yw1971I always get the titles Pandorum and Factotum mixed up
My favourite indie scifi film is Coherence. I think it's achieved some cult notoriety now, but it was relatively unknown when it came out. It was so effective at creating an Other-based sense of creepiness, all simply based on glowstick colours, and a shoeatring budget. That's pure story writing magic.
Coherence was amazing!
It is far better than the films here (those I've seen). I would also recommend "Another Earth".
I second that! Coherence is awesome!
I always pair it with "Triangle" when I show it to someone. And then, there is "+one" a shameless copy of "Coherence", and if it isn't a copy, it's a shameless film.
🙂 *I watched Coherence after hearing Patton Oswalt sing its praises. Looking fwd to a few of these, too!* 🙂
Even though it’s animated, I’d add “Scavengers Reign” (HBO and Netflix). It’s amazing both with the visuals and story - a modern sci-fi masterpiece imo.
I second this. It's stories are awesome.
thirded
forthed
Don't watch if depressed. It gets under your skin.
I'm critical. 8.5/10 easy. So good.
hopefully we get that second season. the trailer the creators made was so good.
I like a reviewer who can report their feelings of both not liking/feeling uncomfortable but also liking that it made them feel something. People are complex, and our reactions to movies can be as well.
Aniara is written by Harry Martinson and gave him the nobelprice in 1974. The orignal is written as poems.
I saw a stage play of it once. It originally being poems makes sense. I remember it being somewhat dreamlike.
i wonder if that gave inspiration for the Avenue 5
@@KonstantinZilberburgI got recommended Aniara after binging Avenue 5 and totally could see it being like a spoof of the doomsday off course concept. Great flick. Got in my head and ended up picking up the original poem in English translation
Aniara is also a Buger Blomdahl opera, premiered in 1959. I have the suite somewhere in my L.P. collection.
Fun fact. To honour Harry there is a place in his native municipality, Sollentuna, that is called Aniaraplatsen (Aniara square). And parts of the movie was filmed right next to it in Sollentuna centrum (shopping mall). Look at 13.03 in this youtube clip and you will see that. I was there yesterday. Everytime i am there i am thinking about the movie that really is fascinatingly uncomfortable to watch.
Quick mention for The Endless (2017) - low budget, acting is variable quality, but it has a great high-concept setup and plays it out beautifully.
If you liked this, you have to watch more of Moorhead & Benson's work.
"Resolution (2012)" & "Synchronic (2019)" in particular, are said to be set in the same universe.
Spent an afternoon once watching for the first time Resolution followed by The Endless... What an amazing day!
That'a a brilliant piece of work by Moorhead and Benson.
Wonderful film. Also recommend "Synchronic"... fantastic. Both easily reward a second viewing.
Great film. I also think Resolution is genius.
i was always a fan of 'coherence', as an obscure scifi flick ... it starts off in one direction, the scifi elements come and take us in a different direction, and then the finale takes us on a completely unexpected journey
Wow. What a wonderful refreshingly intelligent, informative, eloquent and low-key video.😊🙏 Thank you for not being shouty (why does everyone shout lol) I clicked thinking I would have seen them all and it was the opposite. I have Vesper on my list as the cast is excellent. I had not seen anything about the others and am grateful. It is very frustrating and infuriating that these movies are out there and we (I) can never seem to find them or access them. I used to find stuff. The importance of independent cinema and film-making cannot be overstated. That is why we have so many festivals (here in Australia ) celebrating them. Especially in a current climate of over-blown shallow thoughtlessness and bully-boy studios, unique and diverse points of view are desperately needed. I grew up on lots of low-to-no budget TV and this is where people shine and can do their thing. Innovation and imagination can flourish. Writers and actors can let go and express themselves fully. Good writing always blows my mind. Concepts are fucking cool. How I have enough trouble here! There have been so many brilliant indie movies that I think are better than their studio blockbuster counterparts eg., The Europa Report 2013, The Machine 2013, Kill Command 2016.
So glad I clicked on this video. It was a joy. Thank you :)
Prospect (2018) was an amazing indie science fiction movie. Check it out, I was pleasantly surprised.
I caught this in theaters
Prospect was great... Very unexpected scenes and plot twists... and the future famous Pedro Pascal is in it.
Came to recommend Prospect too, I loved it :D
@@VanBurenPhilips Hell yeah!
Best Star Wars movie in years!
Late to the party here, but a hidden gem for me that I never see anyone bring up is an Australian flick called These Final Hours (2014). I've never seen another movie quite like it. I don't recommend watching the trailer as it's one of those "show the movie in the trailer" ones, but the opening premise of the movie is that a planet-killing asteroid has impacted the north Atlantic and a wall of fire is spreading around the globe. It will reach the other side of the globe in 12 hours and there is no bunker deep enough to save you. The movie follows a man's journey during those 12 hours.
Rover is another great aussie flick
I really liked "I Am Mother", an Australian sci-fi movie from 2019. It was on Netflix.
Another gem. 💎 I loved that one.
I agree. The trailer hooked me and I added it to my watchlist, but then, it took me months before I felt like actually watching it. When I did I felt stupid to have postponed it. A splendid film
Didn't know it was from Oz. Raised by wolves, mined a similar vein.
So good!
Myself too…
Not having Time Crimes is the biggest crime of all time ! But I forgive you and thank you for the wonderful new additions to my list
Vesper is a sensational film, and I am so pleased that it made your list...and that you were as blown away by the film, as I was, when I watched it. I watch a lot of Indy cinema, and love sci-fi as a genre., As a fiction writer myself I love to see how the works of other Indy authors and screenwriters are brought to life. Indy cinema seems to always be filled with those people who are truly dedicated in producing something that is well written, acted and captivating, that stands head and shoulders above much of the slop that is sadly released by the mainstream.
What really surprises me is that this channel doesn't have millions of subs. It should. You have a very pleasant voice, tone and intonation. And your commentary and content is great.
Hah thanks :). We’re workin on it!
Europe Report is worth a watch if you like hard sci-fi.
The low budget worked in its favor to give quite an authentic look.
And excellent job on this list. Each movie definitely appears to be worth the watch. Especially if you're tired of typical Hollywood fare.
Much thanks for the list.
Excellent.
I saw it ("Europa Report") at the distributor's screening as a guest of Bear McCreary (his first film OST).
Agreed! Europa Report is first class!!
@@peabee4758 One thing I would change would be to edit a new trailer for the movie. Magnet made it seem like a run-of-the-mill "horror movie set in space".
IMHO it is a run-of-the-mill horror movie set in space...
Like many such movies it uses the pseudoscience and space stuff as unexplainable plot devices.
Granted, the making has some nice aspects to it, but I appreciate the fact that the movies in this video were selected mostly due to their writing.
I really appreciate how you summarize each film in the description so I don't have to watch to verify that I do or do not actually know these films (four out of five were new to me!). The paradox is that by being anti-clickbait like that you actually made me watch the whole thing from start to finish instead of frantically scrolling through the video to see if it's clickbait.
The Artiface Girl deserves way more attention. I thought about that movie for weeks afterward, I still think about it.
For me, the scariest part isn't the morality of using AI. It's the implication that if someone with good intentions could create that project to get the FBI's attention, then someone with bad intentions could create one to indulge predators instead. I just saw a news report about a guy who got arrested for deepfaking CP, and his clients were usually relatives or family friends of the girls he was deepfaking. The problem is, I'm not sure if those people broke any actual laws because there isn't enough regulation for AI yet. But they should definitely be put on a watchlist and the families should be alerted.
apropos "THE ARTIFICE GIRL", robin wright & al pacino take on this subject from a different angle in "THE CONGRESS". it's actually a bit mind boggling.
@@babagalacticus is The Congress a sci fi movie as well?
@@babagalacticus "The Congress" has Harvey Keitel not Al Pacino. I think you might mean "Simone/S1m0ne" with Al Pacino and Catherine Keener.
Thankyou SO much for no spoilers, it means I’m genuinely interested in seeing ALL of these movies now!
Yes, same! I really appreciate to get no spoilers. Many reviews don't give a fuck and just tell the whole story, which doesn't make a lot of sense if you want to get people to watch the movies.
Two indie favourites that come to mind are “Primer” (2004) and “Pi” (1998).
Both are standout genius works with low budgets.
I’ve watched Primer like 10 times, and I always have fun digging into the different timelines. What’s amazing is that the film seems designed to confuse the viewer and put them on the same playing field as the idiots messing with the timelines, but underneath it all, it’s actually thought out to every meticulous detail.
@@TheBackFocus can you recommend any video or resource that explains all the timelines?
@@AlbertBalbastreMorte Just google "Primer Timeline" in google. There are some very good illustrations.
Check Nacho Vigalondo's "Timecrimes".
Thumbs up for "Pi"! 👍🏻
My two absolute favorites in this genre are Time Trap,2017 and In the Shadow of the Moon,2019. These 2 are very low budget but still amazing!. Not sure The Thirteenth Floor,1999 qualifies due to bigger budget but it's not often discussed and it is fantastic!
Agreed... Timetrap is superb! Lots of great suggestions here.
Totally hit the comments to recommend Time Trap. Really fun movie.
+1 for Timetrap.
very good indeed
Agree Thirteenth Floor is hugely underappreciated. It was unlucky to release at the same time as The Matrix - so completely overshadowed.
Scavengers Reign is an animation series that closely ressembles Vesper. The world is heavily inspired by Moebius' art, while the individual plotlines each address human nature, faults and all. It's mostly about adaptation to a non-logical biological environment, the acceptance - or not - of the way it functions.
Plus it's pretty, with space for whimsy. Mature.
Scavengers Reign is a stunning animation series. One of the best/fresh sci-fi series I've seen in many years.
That was wokeism infested crap.... Every white guy was either a evil or just stupid, evey women was empowered and gay. It was painful to watch. And the world was uninteresting too. Would not recommend to anyone.
The algorithm brought me here. This earned a sub! Thank you, have to find where I can watch Vesper!
"The Quiet Earth".
1985, New Zealand, Post Apocalyptic 3 character slow burn.
Brilliant film...
EDIT: Neil DeGrasse Tyson calls it one of his favorite Sci-Fi films.
I concur. A frequently overlooked classic.
Very good choice
Quiet Earth is really great. It’s one of those classic post-apocalyptic films which depicts the world not so much as a battlefield but a graveyard, with all the freedom and urgency that entails. And it’s still surprisingly lighthearted at moments. A great film for a Saturday afternoon imo. Really really good.
This film affected me deeply.
A recommendation from me for a suuuuper low budget sci-fi would be The Vast of Night (2019) - some of the shots they pulled off (with like, remote controlled cars, iirc) are incredible.
Dude, The Vast of Night is INCREDIBLE. I didn’t include it on the list because I actually assumed more people knew about it.
"The Vast of Night" is, for me, one of those indie movies that's both clearly low budget but also so creatively made, it genuinely wouldn't be improved with another $100 million.
(and like e.g. "Evil Dead", I can see it inspiring indie filmmakers for years to come)
Great film. Doesn't feel low budget at all.
It's a really good movie.
@@anonymes2884Seriously, no offense intended, but how is this clearly a low budget movie? Agreed, it was made with a budget under $1 million, but the acting, cinematography, special effects, and production are all first-rate. My favorite movie of the last 10 years.
Well, for one thing, you are a phenomenal movie critic. I can't imagine being able to explain movies and what I think about them at this level.
Agreed!
My own recommendation: Monsters (2010). It was Gareth Edwards' first film, well before Godzilla or Rouge One. It never seems to get mentioned, so I gather it remains below the radar. A lot of the elements of Vesper remind me of it, such as the rural environments full of otherworldly hazards. It has a simple enough premise that I'd describe it more as a character piece than a story-driven film, but it's also about a changing world. There's a bit of the "iceberg" approach to the story-telling here as well, where we're following characters with no special knowledge and make no major discoveries; we're just seeing this new world through the eyes of regular folks. Great score by Jon Hopkins (Look up the main theme; it's on here). The behind-the-scenes stuff is worth checking out afterward if you have the physical disc, if only to see how comfortable Edwards has always been with effects and how seamlessly he incorporated them. It's a masterclass in how to film actors without the CGI becoming intrusive (i.e., He doesn't rely on green screen environments).
Agree. His best film. Godzilla could have been good before the studio decided to killed off the best characters. From then it's been pop trash.
Is rouge one that film where an evil empire is destroyed by nanobots embedded in an alien lipstick?
I have to give rare thanks to the algorithm, this was excellent. I love indie sci-fi and I'm adding all of these to my to-do list.
wow, what an amazing bunch of new movies and directors to see. The comments section recs are gold.too.
This is the first time I've seen an episode of "The Back Focus", thank you for such awell though- through analysis and human perspective.! For whatever it's worth, I'm recommending this to a lot of folks - (especially ones involved in sci-fi writing, design and producing).
"no spoilers", immediately gives spoilers
RIGHT?!
Very cool list. Here's a few indie sci-fi picks I would recommend in no particular order.
*Another Earth
*Monsters
*Upstream Color
*High Life
*Predestination
*Never Let Me Go
I am a fully grown, emotionally stable, 57 year old man. Never Let Me Go had me shedding real tears by the end. This is NOT typical behavior for me. Such a powerful story.
I love Upstream Color, and I hated Never Let Me Go. I want them to fight back in Never Let Me Go, and they don't.
@Norp-i7m
Hi,
Maybe this might change your mind. The young people in this movie were also genetically engineered not to fight back and be violent.
Yes, "Upstream Color" is a work of genius.
An excellent list! I found "High Life" tedious and ridiculous, but can get behind all the others you mention.
Thanks so much for these recommendations! I had _The Artifice Girl_ and _Vesper_ on my to-watch list, but I hadn't yet heard of the rest. Some sci-fi films I've really enjoyed in the past that I never hear other people talk about are _Nothing_ (2003), _The Man from Earth_ (2007), _The Subjects_ (2015), _Circle_ (2015), _ARQ_ (2016) and _Radius_ (2017).
Radius is awesome movie.
Excellent delivery. You gave me enough information about the movies without ruining them, but also gave me enough to have a very good understanding about the stories.
Good one. I clicked thinking that surely I'd seen all five, but you've dived for some pearls here.
same
Wow, I have not heard of ONE of these! They all sound excellent. I blame critics and the industry for not pushing for these.
"you've never heard of" actually true for once
1. Aporia
2. Things will be different
3. Vesper
4. Aniara
5. The Artifice Girl
Thanks. Only saw the Artifice Girl, which was very good and well written.
Thank you
A good list well reviewed.
Here are some recommendations:
Black Hollow Cage. 2017. This for me is up there with Soviet era and older European Sci Fi. It is the world it is pretending to be. It is simple and beautiful and jus a lil odd. It's not a perfect film but for me, does exactly what it sets out to do. It's a rainy long winters night movie....Just give yourself to it. Think of it as a long Twilight Zone episode.
Cargo. Not the 2017 Martin Freeman film....The Swiss/German 2008 slab of Sci Fi is a much slept on gem that seems to have slipped under most fans radar. The English dub leaves a lot to be desired so i highly suggest the original German language and subs. Earth is fucked and people are buying their way to the planet Rhea. This is a spaceship based...thriller? The sets and FX are excellent and put bigger budget Hollywood to shame.
Terminus. 2015. This is a low budget, filmed in Australia but supposed to be America film that is actually far better than it should be. It seems at times to be a SyFy movie but keeps skirting away to be a solid B movie due to the actors being that bit better and the story being intriguing. Ex soldiers and family make a discovery during hard times that hints towards something miraculous and mysterious that, if they can understand it, may just save them from a very bleak future.
Prodigy. 2017. One of the best child actor roles i've ever seen outside of Hollywood/mainstream. Savannah Halliday as Ellie, the Prodigy of the title, gives a palpable, chilling and very real performance of a very... troubled...child under investigation by a small team of experts. A very tight film, well cast over all and shot in a few rooms/lab. Ellie puts Eleven/Stranger Things to shame. An excellent, grounded outing into "Powers" territory.
The Blackout. 2019. Russian alien invasion Sci Fi that at times feels like a Japanese film. It has that ...flare and self belief of Asian cinema that borders on schlock...but doesn't quite go over the top. Jus a great Army Vs Aliens film not half as serious as the films above in this list.
Save Yourselves ! 2020. One of my favorite alien invasion films. I frickin love this quirky black comedy. Two geeky Brooklynites drive out to the countryside and a nice cabin house to try get away from tech overload and reconnect with each other....and things start to get a bit weird. This low budget film has great heart and excellent pace/beats. It's silly in all the right places and manages a great level of "Huh?" right up until the biggest WTF? at the end.
Branded. 2012. This film is not easy to find any more....but worth it for fans of the weirder Twilight Zone/Outer Limits kinda sci fi. It's a strange film about products and branding and the power of marketing...with a very weird twist. A very strong cast with some big names that just seemed to...disappear from shelves.
Was it too close to The Truth?
I hope not!
>Looks worriedly above my head<
Worth sailing the high seas to find....if you can even find it there !-
Seven different sci fi slices of cinema to seek out and see.
I hope you enjoy which ever ones you track down.
Dude, thank you for this list. I don’t recognize any of the titles, so I’ve got a fresh supply!
Dude! I love you!
well.... who's running this joint?! hhahahaha
Branded (2012) is available on the high seas courtesy of YIFY.
My company - Legion M - funded a portion of "Save Yourselves".
I was blown away by Artifice Girl - a brilliant script, well-executed! I'd try to work 2018 Freaks & 2017 Radius into this list.
As a fan of indie films and science fiction, I ended up watching "The Artifice Girl". And I have to say thanks for not spoiling act 3. Best recommendation I have got in a long time.
Ainara remains one of my absolute favourites from the past decade.
The translation of the original poem is so haunting. I think the transition to film was done in such a beautiful manner. Brutal and challenging, a very emotional journey
Loved Vesper as well. Reminded me ao much of Terry G's work.
I'm going to see all the other recommendations. This was a wonderful upload.
Sci-fi movie recommendations: The Quiet Earth. Filmed in 1985 in New Zealand. Also highly recommend The Lathe of Heaven from 1980.
You beat me to it. I've never met anyone else that knows of that film.
I can’t wait to see all of these recommendations. Your reviews of each make them so compelling. Thank you for sharing this list with fellow sci-fi fans.
I loved “Oxygen” the French wake up in a pod movie and the Circle where a group of people wake up in a circle and vote as one dies every sixty seconds that plays out in real time. Both excellent.
Can’t agree with you more! What an under-rated film.
What year did "The Circle" come out? I can't find anything that looks like a sci-fi movie.
@@lonnynettnay8889 been meaning to watch it myself, 2015 according to the interwebs
yes!
Oxygène is a Netflix product, made by Alexandre Aja, the former director of Mirrors (Kieder Sutherland, Paula Patton) and Piranha 3D (Elisabeth Sue, Christopher Lloyd, Jerry O Connell, Richard Dreyfuss... Gianna Michaels, Ashlynn Brooke... )
Not an indie film.
Great list, I would add:
1] Perfect Sense
2] Safety Not Guaranteed
3] Linoleum
Loved all three of these
Spot on about Aporia. Just finished it. I loved it. Thank you so much. Looking forward to more videos.
Wow, impressed you watched Aniara TWICE, I'm happy to have seen it, but there's no way i could watch it a second time.
That hopelessness was intense.
Uhhh yeah, watching it twice is crazy (I definitely haven't seen it roughly 20 times and absolutely love it)
I've watched it like six times. I love that movie for its hopelessness.
As a Swede, I don't think I can watch it because the acting is atrocious or tha way they say their lines. No one in Sweden talks like that. And that is a problem with many if not most Swedish films. The actors don't sound like real people but like actors saying lines from a script. It's filmed theatre and film and theatre is different. Or should be.
@Maegnys interesting perspective, this could be turned into a Broadway play probably, as I understand what you mean when it comes to the suspension of disbelief when it comes to the two mediums
Yeah just a sek... "hopelessness" but different and what kind of animal humanity is, can also be found in Blindness [2008]
Well done. Without doubt one of the finest Sci-Fi film review sites I have ever seen, and I had to subscribe.
Thanks Brandon. I was a fan in the No Small Parts days, but haven't seen any content for a while. This made me watch The Artifice Girl and I'm really glad I did. Top notch indie film making.
I only knew "Vesper" before, so interesting collection. I add "Vivarium" from 2019 into the mix.
Same here. I liked vespa but haven't seen the others
There was an episode of 'Out of the Unknown' series from 1966 called 'Tunnel under the world', that had the same storyline as Vivarium. Based on the Frederik Pohl novel from the 50s.
I felt the “imprisonment” feeling in Vivarium but I needed to see how it would end.
Vivarium is very creepy and unsettling.
@ascendingrules Yes, some uncanny valley
You definitely should check my top 5 list of indie sci-fi gems:
1. Primer (best time travel ever put to the screen; Nolan was so jealous he copied the concept in Tenet);
2. Coherence (Unscripted masterpiece, one of a kind);
3. Beyond the Infinite Two Minutes (I still haven't figured out how they pull that off; you should try it);
4. The Man From Earth (my fav flick ever, three incredible plot twists);
5. Timecrimes (Cronocrimenes) (Neat, effective, fun)
Cheers!!!
Seen all these (Primer I watch like once a year lol) except for Beyond the Infinite Two Minutes. You’re not the first to recommend that one, I should check it out
@@TheBackFocus same here, lol... About the seventh time watching Primer, I thought I nailed it...(still I missed a couple things). Nice, your brain will go like...wait a minute! Cheers !
Loved Timecrimes
Hopefully you've also seen Predestination? It and Primer are my top 2 time travel movies. Not really indie, but small enough no one I suggest it to has ever heard of it. Timecrimes is also way up there.
I liked Timecrimes, but I'm not a fan of Primer.
That Disney spent more on a failed hotel than the creators did on these 5 movies should infuriate everyone who cares about movies...
Just dropping in to say thank you, thank you so much for including Aniara. One of the most affecting and soul crushing films I've seen in a long while
Not a film but a show recommendation, although I don't even know if it's on Max anymore, is Raised by Wolves. The one caveat being that season 2 ends on a cliffhanger, and then unholy devourer of shows Zazslav cancelled it like he did with every other good sci-fi show on HBO Max. So if you're okay with that, it's an incredible, bizarre and unique sci-fi story that is just batshit insane in the best way sometimes
Yes!
@@C-man553This was one of the few shows I’ve seen where the crazier it got, the more I liked it. The last few episodes were especially insane. Apple TV should pick it up!
Season 1 was awesome. Season 2 was somewhat of a letdown for me. Disappointed that it was canceled, though.
I got the DVD from my local library. (Always a good source of obscura..please return items).
@@Orangesjesus yes, and everyone please be careful with the materials. About a third of the items I borrow have scratches and they ruin the movie 😕
What a refreshing change to have well researched, informative and well presented review. Excellent work. I particularly enjoyed the way you spoke to us as if we were having an actual conversation.
Great list. Really well produced and written. I've seen several of these, but most I haven't, and these are exactly the types of films I seek out when wanted to nerd out on a sci fi film. Thank you.
this is one of the best film videos i have seen in like ever - i love that i'm actually being introduced to new films, not the same 'most popular' films out there. i've subbed. i can't wait to see your other videos. these films look absolutely fantastic. i feel so lucky to have stumbled onto your channel. what an absolute gem of a channel you are! thank you for this!! you've saved me hours and probably days of digging for unique, intelligent and interesting films to watch.
Nice job mate, you delivered! Vesper and The Artifice Girl are now on my to watch list.
Me too.
Wow. Such thoughtful takes on 5 movies... none of which I had heard of. You have a new fan.
Radius (2017) is free on YT. Nice simple concept that is well acted and has a pretty satisfying conclusion. Look forward to watching all 5 of these!
Vesper was a film I came across and I was absolutely blown away. Such a surprise and a start to finish treat.
It's a more occult but "He Never Died" is the number one under-appreciated film in my catalogue. Very great to go in blind. Funny, demented, surly violent and a refreshing take on old lore.
Henry rollins was great
Great movie, but I wouldn't call it "occult".
Rollins plays a "Nephilim" or half human, half angel.
Much of it is lore from the Jewish Bible.
I really appreciate your commentary on these 5 SciFi flicks.
Your insightful, well-written/spoken and very personally expressed thoughts really drew me in.
I'm looking forward to watching the 2 that I had not seen before (Things Will be Different, The Artifice Girl).
Thanks very much.
Be Well,
NOTE ABOUT SPOILERS: I thought I was being careful, but the consensus from the comment section seems to be that there are some MINOR spoilers. I certainly didn't reveal everything in these films, but I clearly went a little too far for some people's comfort. Consider that as you watch, and I'll be more careful in the future!
- Brandon
One other thing you might want to add to the sticky is what streaming services these films are on; at least in the US.
high man.. thnx for the pointer, i just watched VESPER, really enjoyed it, if a lil sad and miserable lol... but it has a dark beauty for sure!!
In the future or in the past???
INFINITY CHAMBER is labeled sci-fi, but it is more a psychological thriller imo. I have watched it at least 100x
Aniara is one of my all-time favorites.
Ariana is my favorite sci-fI film since The Matrix. It’s an affecting allegory that tells the truth about what space REALLY means. Gut punch!
I completely agree with your take on The Artifice Girl. It's fairly simple and bare-bones in its execution, effectively a "stage play" shot at some nondescript locations. Yet, its writing and acting punch far higher than its budget would imply.
I haven't heard of Vesper or Things Will Be Different, I'll definitely check them out.
The time travel plot reminds me a bit of Enter Nowhere (2011). Another bare-bones indie film based on a small cast, basic locations, and a simple premise that becomes much deeper you'd first assume. The acting was decent and the plot has some nice twists to keep you guessing for awhile.
Another is Triangle (2009), though it plays with time in a very different way. Triangle has a much larger scale, an abandoned ocean liner adrift at sea--not sure how they pulled that one off. It's honestly a bit rough around the edges. The acting is...good enough, and the plot takes awhile to piece together, though for reasons that will become apparent towards the end. The payout is really worth it though. Well, until the third act anyway. It feels needlessly tacked on, but it's sort of wraps things up. It's still worth checking out nonetheless.
The other from your list I'd seen was Aniara. I think your first take was the right one. It looks fairly polished on the surface, but overall the plot is too thin for the runtime. With better editing to trim some of the pointless repetition and tighten up the tension, it could be a decent film. As it stands...I'd pass.
Welp, the only one I've seen is The Artifice Girl, and I loved it. That and two of my favourite words are "indie" and "sci-fi", so I'll check the rest, and you've earned yourself a sub!
If you like Time Travel ones, most are pretty rough but... "Mega Time Squad" is fun, "Predestination" is awesome, and "The History of Time Travel" is essential, try to keep up when it starts but you'll love it when you realise what's going on. There's also "Coherence" that starts a little boring but by the ending it goes full in on the premise. "Cosmos" (2019) - 3 amateur astronomers detect unusual signals, the entire film is just them 3 getting excited at the idea it might be space aliens. Well acted.
For others, I saw a real indie called "Cargo" (2009) that was the crew's first film. It was decent. I'd also recommend "Salyut-7" (2017) as just brilliant.
Spot on for mentioning COSMOS (2019), for its science-based, suspense-building approach to a slow-burn discovery of immense proportions. Low budget SF movies generally don't look (or act) nearly as good as this one does from start-to-finish.
Great list, some more to watch/add: Never let me go, Another Earth, Prospect.
I Origins by Brit Marling and Mike Cahill was so amazing. ❤
And "Another Earth".
@@guyjackson132 LOVE Another Earth.
@@TheBackFocus Ever since "The OA" - I've watched several of Marling's/Batmanglij's collaborations. Even sat about 5 feet away from them at a public screening of 2 (we were only supposed to see 1) episodes of "The OA" on a theater-sized screen but, sadly - could not meet them as they had to run off somewhere.
"The OA", "Another Earth", "Sound Of My Voice", "I Origins", "The East" and the recent "A Murder At The End Of The World". And her role in the UK police dramedy "Babylon".
Everything Brit !!
I haven't yet watched I Origins. Mostly because I am unsure of its connection to a trilogy of novels that start with "Soul Identity" by Dennis Batchelder. The science in both is eerily very very similar. So much of a similarity that I sense that Marling and Cahill may have "ripped" off the plot from Batchelder at a distilled level. The movie is still on my watchlist, just have to find the right mood for me, not sure if I can convince my wife to watch with me though lol.
This is JUST the list I needed for a long extended weekend, also thank you for minimizing spoilers.
Another banger list! Your channel is becoming a favorite of mine I find your videos put me at ease. Anyways…
I have 2 recs off the top of my head: Mars Express & Automata. Mars Express is a really punchy French animated cyber punk noir. The plot is generic but the detail of the world and the animation are top tier. Automata is super super under the radar. It came out around the same time as Chappie, and while that saw some buzz Automata slipped under the cracks. Its also got a generic story about the laws of robotics and treatment of sentient robots as an allegory for oppression (sort of like Mars Express) but again the world feels very lived in and its a fun watch for a sci fi fan. I’ll throw in Z for Zachariah as an honorable mention.
I really liked Mars Express. The biomechanical robot design is fantastic and it has some great world-building.
@@onyinyechiejiofor1376 I second the recommendation for Automata, it surprised me.
'AUTOMATA' did indeed get short shrift & antonio banderas is in excellent form. i wouls add 2023's "THE MACHINE" which was unfortunately overshadowed by "EX MACHINA" but which i personally actually enjoyed more. british production.
I really liked Automata, I agree it is underrated.
I am thrilled to see these. Thanks so much for the titles. My move well is about to dry up.
The Platform & The Platform 2. Perfect SciFi
I liked "The Platform" concept a lot. Didn't know there was a second.
I had low expectations because of the typical click bait title, but glad I watched...terrific vid.
So Aniara is basically the same plot as Avenue 5, except its not a comedy?
Never seen Avenue 5!
@@TheBackFocus Its a must watch! Highly recommend it! Thanks for the video!
MOS DEF not a comedy; swedish bleakness, think INGMAR BERGMAN on a death run in deep space.
DO NOT watch it if you have been having suicidal ideations though; i'm serious as cancer.
They're both cruise liner type space ships that get lost in space, yeah, though Aniara's story gets deeper and darker than Avenue 5
It's based on the poems of Harry Martinson, who got a nobel prize in literature 1974 much because of them.
Loved the Artifice Girl. Thanks to the channel for highlighting it. Really like the investigation of AI and human crossover combined with sentience, feelings and created programming reminiscent of Objectives and priorities like Asimov's laws. Will be watching again.
Predestination is constantly ignored on various top 10 or, videos like yours, sci-fi movies that you may have missed. Probably because it is an Australian film (with mainly US actors) but Australian actress Sarah Snook provides a killer performance. This film really deserves more appreciation.
Predestination brings new meaning to the term "Go fuck yourself".
Predestination is a very very good movie, but I don´t know if it is an indie movie...
Amazing movie, probably the best time travel related mindF* ever! 👍🏻
It's a fun film that I recommend constantly. Just because it's not on this list doesn't make it "ignored". I have 100 films I would recommend to an SF fan. So if I mentioned only five I'd be "ignoring" 95% of them.
Vesper! I came across it by accident and couldn't stop watching. I absolutely love this movie. Thank you for including it.
After Yang is a great movie by the video essay writer Kogonada. It has AI and neat scifi stuff but it focuses entirely on an exploration of family and loss in a way that is unique in a way that could only really be pulled off in a scifi movie.
And stars Colin Farrell.
Vesper is a gem indeed, others I haven't seen yet, great video!
"Never Let Me Go" from 2010 for me is the best Science Fiction movie that no one has seen. Stars Carey Mulligan, Andrew Garfield, and Keira Knightley. A group of children at a boarding school discover the dark secret of why they are there and what that means for their future. Saying anything more really will give away too much, I wouldn't recommend watching the trailer either, as it artfully ruins the climax. Early film festival reviews said how it was bringing crowds to tears, and I thought yeah, yeah, sure, sure, cut to me inconsolable in a sold out showing at TIFF.
The original Novel by Kazuo Ishiguro is really good as well.. although I would say the 'dark secret' is revealed surprisingly early on, and concentrates more on the effects on ethics involved. But yeah, with that cast, the direction by Romanek and a great script adaptation by ALex Garland, I don't understand why it isn't better known
@@stephenpalmer9375 I dunno, I think it's fairly well known (the book won plenty of awards for instance, including, y'know, a Nobel prize for literature :), was well reviewed at the time etc. Not mainstream maybe but here in the UK at least, I bet most film/book/sci-fi fans know of it.
"Spares" by Michael Marshall Smith is, IMO, a good take on the same idea BTW (I remember feeling that slight resentment of the long-time sci-fi fan when the novel of "Never Let Me Go" was released to quite a lot of acclaim, partly because it was by a "literary" author and thinking "Yeah, I really enjoyed this one _about 10 years ago_ when it was called 'Spares'" :).
@@anonymes2884 i wonder if it is because of the very British Cast that it's maybe more well known on our side of the pond. I'll have to check out "Spares", so thanks :)
jeebus, I watched Never Let Me Go once and thought it was absolutely amazing but it is one of those films I could never watch again (I got the DVD though, just to have a copy). It is *brutal*, but so well done!
@@evildrganymede It's brutal but in a beautiful way. I'd read the book, so perhaps the film didn't hit quite as hard for me, but it was still super-emotional and resonant. Those three lead performances are actors at their absolute best. Really stunning.
Thank you!!!!
5 potential gems that flew under my radar. Looking forward to the next few weekends on my cozy couch
A pretty obscure but really amazing sci fi film is “A New Hope” (1977). It’s actually the fourth episode in an (imo rather uneven) series, but it can be watched entirely on its own. And it’s got it all: richly developed characters, thorny moral quandaries, and a plot which is both complex and sublime. It can get pretty lofty at points, but it’s good hard sci-fi with an incredibly prescient vision of the future.
Really surprising and incredible. Many thanks for bringing these to our attention. Great pity they didn't get wider distribution.
The Artifice girl might also make a great stage play.
Prospect (2018). Tense low budget thriller. Pedro Pascal.
Yes! Solid movie.
I really enjoyed watching The Artifice Girl. I was really surprised how much I enjoyed it. The young actress was amazing. The back story was so fascinating, it kept me invested in the story. I highly recommend this one.
The Vast of Night was a great surprise. Well worth checking out.
Great video. You've provided me with 3 solid films that I am going to watch for sure. I'm so tired of the run of the mill mainstream streaming garbage films. Thank you a million.
Beyond the Infinite Two Minutes
Second that!
Never heard of it. Added!
that one is peak
Looking for suggestions: You probably covered "The Quiet Earth" a long time ago. It's a "last man on Earth" scenario. I have to watch this movie each year like it first showed up on "cable" back in the 90s or so. I was able to buy a VCR tape and eventually a DVD to keep up the habit. You likely don't cover movies your fans can't access, but I know there's a poor bootleg copy online. The little bit of music at the beginning also makes it extra special somehow, amplifying the ambiguity and bringing it all home at the very end.
Another hard-to-find-but-spectacularly-worth-it suggestion, albeit somewhat off topic, is "MINDWALK", a talky film set on St. Michel (Island) in France. Liv Ullmann, Sam Waterson and JC Heard are a physicist, a politician, and a poet "colliding" all three in a clever trialogue. Again, a poor copy is available online somewhere. I'd like it for my collection, but...
Wasn't expecting 2b surprised by any of these titles. Of the 4 I've seen, No 1 has the most sudden detail changes - 1 in particular that caught me way off guard. Thank you for this cerebral, enjoyable and thought provoking list!
Thanks. All of these are interesting but you said NO SPOILERS. When you started giving a lot of info on APORIA, I stopped it and just scanned thru all the titles. Again, thanks for introducing these but you gave too much info for me to stop watching your vid.
Understood. I’ll err more on the side of caution in future vids.
When he said he decided to watch Aniara *after* reading the storyline, I was like "ok, so my spoiler tolerance is MUCH lower than his."
This is a great recommendation video. I love the sound of all of these, and I will be watching them. Thanks ❤