| 10 Most Fascinating 'End of the World' Movies - Page 2 |
| List of 10 | ||||||||||
| Written by Jed Medina | ||||||||||
| Sunday, 08 November 2009 12:59 | ||||||||||
Page 2 of 2
- - - # 6 - I am Legend (2007) -While this is not the first time for Matheson's classic 1964 book to be adapted into a film, it's one of Will Smith's most authentic, fascinating and ultimately most enduring character portrayals in his acclaimed movie career. He plays a dedicated Scientist out to find a cure to save mankind.
How the World would end: Due to a vicious man-made virus originally created to cure cancer. The Buzz: Warner Bros. began developing I Am Legend in 1994, and various actors and directors were attached to the project, though production was delayed due to budgetary concerns related to the script. Production began in 2006 in New York City, filming mainly on location in the city, including a $5 million scene at the Brooklyn Bridge, the most expensive scene ever filmed in the city at the time. I Am Legend was released on December 14, 2007 in the United States. It opened to the largest ever box office (not counting for inflation) for a non-Christmas film released in the U.S. in December. The film was the seventh highest grossing film of 2007, earning $256 million domestically and $329 million internationally, for a total of $585 million. In 2008, the film was ranked as the forty-seventh highest grossing film of all time. I Am Legend also received positive reviews, with much praise to Will Smith's performance. Featured Review from Peter Travers (Rolling Stone): It is totally cool to see Manhattan devoid of people as Will Smith and his dog roam the ruins after a virus wipes out the population. Or did it? Strange things come out at night. I'll say no more and won't need to if you've read Richard Matheson's classic 1954 novel or seen the two previous screen versions, 1964's The Last Man on Earth, with Vincent Price, and 1971's The Omega Man, with Charlton Heston. What you need to know is that Big Willie has no problem holding the screen. [ read more ] - - - # 5 - Sunshine (2007): Eerie, even annoying to a certain degree and quite predictable but it was visually stunning. You either love it or hate it, but Danny Boyle delivered a sci-fi futuristic film which took inspiration from some of cinema's greats, incorporating these themes seamlessly.
How the World would end: As a result of the death of our Sun. The Buzz: Brought back the screen collaboration between Danny Boyle and Cillian Murphy, who both made waves in 28 Days Later, another Boyle film on this list. Featured Review: Peter Bradshaw (The Guardian): Garland and Boyle's story reaches out, or reaches back, to the lost 1970s tradition of darkness, scepticism and subversion in science fiction, a period that combined the technological optimism of the Sputnik/Apollo era with the succeeding decade's political discontent. Sunshine alludes, empathically and even unsubtly, to Kubrick's 2001 and Carpenter's Dark Star with their weightlessly calm personnel procedures, vertiginous perspective planes of hyperdrive and enigmatically mutinous computers. We also feel the austere mysticism of Tarkovsky's Solaris - a movie that shows what space travel would be like if they'd managed it in the reign of Henry II - and the paranoid contaminations of Ridley Scott's Alien. The crew eat lunch and have important meetings around the same kind of tabletop, which is lit from below, like a photographer's lightbox, giving them all the same fierce pallor. But Sunshine also channels queasy modern anxieties from our modern age: a world of climate change, weapons of mass destruction and even suicide bombers. [ read more ] - - - # 4 - 12 Monkeys (1995) - Two words: Terry Gilliam.
How the World would end: People will die due to virus. The Buzz: This movie gave Brad Pitt his Golden Globes (Best Supporting Actor) and an Oscar nom for the same category. Featured Review: Rolling Stone's Peter Travers: Even when Terry Gilliam's latest leap into the wild blue of futuristic fantasy is at its most confounding, you leap along with him. Such is the seductive power of his twisted imagination. Whether it's Monty Python, Brazil, Time Bandits or The Fisher King, Gilliam guarantees a thrilling ride. 12 Monkeys is no exception. Bruce Willis, in an eruptive performance of startling emotional intensity, stars as Cole, a prisoner tagged for an experiment that may get him killed. The year is 2035. Nearly 40 years earlier, a killer virus spared only 1 percent of the planet's population. In a lab located under the city of Philadelphia, scientists prepare to wrap the naked Cole in condomlike latex and zap him back to 1996 to find out how to reclaim the earth. Above ground the city is uninhabitable, except by the wild animals who roam deserted skyscrapers and department stores. Gilliam, along with the gifted cinematographer Roger Pratt and production designer Jeffrey Beecroft, fashions a disturbing and dazzling lost world. [ read more ] - - - # 3 - Terminator (1984) - Endlessly imitated, The Terminator made the reputation of cowriter/director James Cameron -- who would go on to make 1997's titanic Titanic -- and solidified the stardom of Arnold Schwarzenegger.
How the World would end: Machines will annihilate human population and become the dominant specie. The Buzz: From Arnold to Edward Furlong to some of today's up and coming, including Anton Yelchin and Sam Worthington, the Terminator series remain one of cinema's best bet to launch the careers of the very talented. Featured Review: Variety: The Terminator is a blazing, cinematic comic book, full of virtuoso moviemaking, terrific momentum, solid performances and a compelling story. The clever script, cowritten by director James Cameron and producer Gale Anne Hurd, opens in a post-holocaust nightmare, A.D.2029, where brainy machines have crushed most of the human populace. From that point, Arnold Schwarzenegger as the cyborg Terminator is sent back to the present to assassinate a young woman named Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton) who is, in the context of a soon-to-be-born son and the nuclear war to come, the mother of mankind's salvation. A human survivor in that black future (Michael Biehn), also drops into 1984 to stop the Terminator and save the woman and the future. [ read more ] - - - # 2 - 28 Days Later (2002) This movie succeeds in many ways - a new, fresh look at zombies, the interplay of the society and the individual during chaotic and violent times. It also gave the audience a truly memorable and fulfilling cinematic experience.
How the World would end: Virus will wipe out the population. The Buzz: Boyle explains that, with the aim of preserving the suspension of disbelief, relatively unknown actors were cast in the film. Cillian Murphy had at the time starred primarily in small independent films, while Naomie Harris had acted on British television as a child. However, actors Christopher Eccleston and Brendan Gleeson were well-known character actors. Eccleston, who went on to greater notablity for his portrayal of the Ninth Doctor in the 2005 series of Doctor Who, had already appeared in films such as The Others, Gone in 60 Seconds, eXistenZ and Shallow Grave (another film directed by Boyle). Likewise, Gleeson had appeared in several films, including Braveheart, Lake Placid, The General and eventually, the Harry Potter series. Featured Review by Mick Lasalle (San Francisco Chronicles) : "28 Days Later" is almost a great apocalyptic thriller. It has eerie images, a compelling situation and an unusual capacity to surprise. It incites an irresistible state of unease, the sense of disaster only seconds away, as well as a deep hunger to know what comes next. There's no real relief until its last moments. Yet the movie falls short two-thirds of the way in. Thereafter, it becomes impossible not to feel the filmmakers' strain -- and feel the story being muscled in odd directions in pursuit of thrills at all cost. By the finish, the movie is getting by on little but adrenaline and audience goodwill. Still, that goodwill runs fairly deep, because, taken all in all, "28 Days Later" is a superior motion picture. [ read more ] - - -
# 1 - Children of Men (2006) - Stunning, intriguing and ultimately disturbing, this Alfonso Cuaron movie provides one of the most fascinating look at the world in the near future.
How the World would end: Man's inability to procreate. The Buzz: Children of Men was not a financial success, but attracted positive reviews from critics and acclaim from filmgoers. The film was recognised for its achievements in screenwriting, cinematography, art direction, and innovative single-shot action sequences, receiving three Academy Award nominations and winning two BAFTA awards. It has gone on to take many accolades after its release, with many critics and associations recognizing it as a contemporary sci-fi classic. Featured Review: Peter Bradshaw (The Guardian): What will the end of the world look like? As shabby and nasty as the way it looks here is my guess. This explosively violent future-nightmare thriller, directed by Alfonso Cuarón and adapted from the novel by PD James, has simply the most extraordinary look of any movie around: a stunningly convincing realisation of a Beirut-ised London in the year 2027, in which terrorist bombs have become as dreary and commonplace as cancer. No one does dystopian satire like the English and this story is in a recognisably vernacular tradition, though owing as much to John Wyndham as George Orwell. It actually reminded me of bygone television chillers such as Barry Hines's Threads and the 1970s classic Survivors, with their distinctive and now unfashionably high-minded determination to confront the worst outcomes imaginable. It is, perhaps, odd that Cuarón sticks with the 1992 novel's reluctance to predict the internet, and media-watchers will be intrigued to see that in 2027 the London Evening Standard has evidently seen off web and freesheet competition to stay in its monopoly pole position on the capital's sandbagged streets. But despite the stylisations and grandiloquent drama, there is something just so grimly and grittily plausible about the awful world conjured up here, and the full-on urban warfare scenes really are electrifying. [ read more ] - - - What's on your mind? Do you have other 'end of the world' movies which should have made this list? What do you think of the list of 10 movies above - any movie in particular you dislike? Let us know what you think! - - - |
tMF Directory
Quick Guide
![]() |
Sponsored Ads
blog advertising is good for you
Latest News
- Jim Sturgess' new movie Heartless has a trailer!
- 82nd Academy Award Nominations Announced
- Blake: Top Ten Movies of 2009
- tMF READERS' SURVEY: Who are 2009's Top 3 hottest young actors?
- Up In The Air Soundtrack: Sad Brad- Help Yourself
- Spike Jonze's "I'm Here" - Short Film Trailer
- MOVIES + FASHION: A Retrospective [ with Video Clips ]
- David: Top Ten Movies of 2009
- Joseph Gordon-Levitt invites fans and moviegoers to collaborate & create art and media
- A Preview of 'Heartless' straight from Noel Clarke
Lifestyle + Fashion + Models
![]() |
Sponsored Ads
50 Essential Foreign Films
![]() |
tMF's list of the best foreign films (circa 2000-2008): Content-wise, the 50 movies feature stories about war and peace, love and romance, family affairs, coming-of-age tales, cultural and religious diversity, social issues (including prostitution and abortion) and personal - celebrating life or facing death with dignity. Coverage-wise, tMF list down many of the best foreign films from 2000 until last year from the UK, France, Germany, Spain, Italy and about 15 other countries in Europe, North and Latin America and Asia-Pacific.
| The best in French cinema | Movies from the UK | Spotlight on German cinema |
Movie Reviews
- Sundance Review: The Man Next Door (El hombre de al lado)
- Sundance Review: The Killer Inside Me
- Sundance Reviews: Welcome to the Rileys
- Sundance Review: Jack Goes Boating
- Sundance Review: Night Catches Us
- Spotlight Review: Fish Tank
- Spotlight Review: A Prophet (Un prophète)
- Movie Review: A Single Man
- Movie Review: Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call - New Orleans
- Movie Review: Up in the Air
Latest Comments
Featured Trailers
| Remember Me - Robert Pattinson plays young rebel! |
| Mammoth - Gael Garcia Bernal and Michelle Williams! |
| Kick-Ass - Aaron Johnson and Nic Cage kick ass! |
| Clash of the Titans - Definitely one to watch! |
| 2012- Roland Emmerich’s latest disaster epic. |
| Prince of Persia- Jake Gyllenhaal's new movie has a trailer! |
| Nowhere Boy - Aaron Johnson is John Lennon |
| Daybreakers - Ethan Hawke as modern vampire |
| Invictus - Morgan Freeman is Mandela! |
| Avatar - James Cameron's latest epic |
| Alice in Wonderland - Extended trailer! |
| The Messenger - Ben Foster's best performance. |
| The White Ribbon - Michael Haneke's award winner! |
| Antichrist - Lars von Triel's latest shocker. |
Updated regularly! Watch the latest movie trailers here - complete with details about the story, cast and crew!
- - -
Top Movie Links
Fansites of the Month
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Are there fansites you think would be good candidates for tMF's fansite of the month? Let us know!



















