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Back to the Future: July 3, 1985: October 25, 1985 Back to the Future Part II: 1989: 2015 Barb Wire: 1996: 2017 Barbarella: 1968: 4000 The Batman: March 1, 2022: October 31 - November 5, 2022 Batman Beyond: Return of the Joker: 2000: 2040 Battle for the Planet of the Apes: 1973: 2001–2670 Battle for Terra: 2009: unspec. Battle in Outer Space ...
While many futuristic movies from the 1980s depicted scenarios that have not come to pass 40 years later, many offered surprisingly accurate glimpses into the future. Here’s our list of movies ...
Stated to take place in the future (for example, Gattaca is specified to take place in "the not too distant future") Stated to take place on a date that was in the future at the time of the film's release (for example, 2001: A Space Odyssey is mainly set in 2001, but was released in 1968)
Max Headroom (1987), [164] American television series based on the UK TV movie; Wild Palms (1993) [165] TekWar (1994) [166] RoboCop: The Series (1994) VR.5 (1996) [citation needed] Welcome to Paradox (1998) [167] The X-Files, two episodes of the series were written by William Gibson and contain cyberpunk themes: Kill Switch (1998) [168]
Psycho-pass: The Movie: Japan Sibyl System: 2016 Captain America: Civil War: USA F.R.I.D.A.Y., Vision: Max Steel: USA Steel Morgan: USA Morgan, Lee Weathers Resident Evil: The Final Chapter: UK / Germany / France / USA / Canada / Australia Red Queen: Rogue One: A Star Wars Story: USA K-2SO: Infinity Chamber: USA Howard Passengers (2016 film ...
Spielberg has characterized the movie's story as "fifty percent character and fifty percent very complicated storytelling with layers and layers of murder mystery and plot." [2] The film's central theme is the question of free will vs. determinism. It examines whether free will can exist if the future is set and known in advance.
Only editing and working with of the directors of the genre could reflect the real picture of life on board the ship sent into space. This applies, including the landing on other planets. There is an unverifiable claim that "Vyacheslav Lisnevsky" wrote the script in collaboration with Dmitry Zhigalov on the original production idea.
Media outlets described the systems manufactured by a Manhattan company named Global Rainmakers Incorporated (GRI) (2010) as similar to that in the movie. GRI disputed the notion that its technology could be the threat to privacy it is in the film. "Minority Report is one possible outcome," a corporate official told Fast Company. "I don't think ...