SF&F movies had a bit of a mixed bag in the 2000s, with the emergence of CG-drenched giga-blockbusters that eschewed intelligence and logical coherence in favour of massive explosions. Whilst some of these films remained nonetheless entertaining on a superficial level (
Star Trek XI,
Transformers), rather more just degenerated into somewhat befuddled messes (
Terminator Salvation,
Transformers II).
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This coincided with the recurrence of an odd phenomenon where a single, decent SF or fantasy flick would be successful and followed by two increasingly lame sequels which threw out the very things that made the first film great (usually good pacing and a running time not measured in interglacial epochs) in favour of over-indulgence, lack of writing discipline and general crappiness. Here's hoping that the already-planned
Avatar franchise can learn a lesson from the bloated
Star Wars (although the first film in that case was more 'crushingly mediocre'),
Matrix and
Pirates of the Caribbean trilogies (as well as the
Chronicles of Riddick, although that seems to have stalled after just one disappointing sequel).
Elsewhere, things were healthier. Pixar delivered one superb animated movie after another, whilst British director Christopher Nolan revitalised the
Batman franchise and gave us several startlingly good original movies as well, namely
Memento and
Insomnia, as well as his superb adaptation of Christopher Priest's
The Prestige. Original, intelligent SF&F cinema was also present in the form of
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (which I haven't actually watched all the way through yet, hence its non-appearance on the main list below),
Donnie Darko,
Moon and a number of foreign-language films, such as
Let the Right One In and
Pan's Labyrinth. Danny Boyle gave us the splendid
28 Days Later and
Sunshine (as well as the non-genre
Slumdog Millionaire), the former of which sort-of inspired the excellent horror spoof
Shaun of the Dead (whose makers went on to make the superior but non-genre
Hot Fuzz). SF-related comedies were also around this decade, with the amusing
Galaxy Quest (technically released right at the end of 1999 but on general release in the 2000s) and the
Star Wars-riffing
Fanboys being quite entertaining.
Of course, the 2000s were dominated by superhero movies, ranging from the very good (
X-Men 2) through the middling (
Batman Begins,
Spiderman 2,
Iron Man) to the downright godawful (
Elektra,
Ghost Rider). Unfortunately, as the decade closes there is no sign of the rush to adapt comic books to the screen abating in favour of more original properties. Another trend this decade was for cinema to employ special effects to bring both vast fantastical and historical armies to the screen, through the
Lord of the Rings trilogy, the
Narnia movies, the extremely dull
Eragon and several huge historical epics, namely
Gladiator,
Kingdom of Heaven,
Troy and the remarkably bad
Alexander. Cinema's experience with fantasy this decade proved rather mixed, with
Lord of the Rings and
Harry Potter's massive box office presence not being replicated elsewhere, with
The Golden Compass and the second
Narnia movie relying on foreign sales for much of their profit.
The All-For-Noughts SF&F Movie of the Decade
After much thought, this choice goes to
The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring, the opening movie in Peter Jackson's hugely successful three-part adaptation of J.R.R. Tolkien's novel. Jackson successfully captures much of the spirit of Tolkien's book with a perfectly-cast movie that moves with a relentless pace. Whilst
The Two Towers and
The Return of the King were both still accomplished adaptations, significant problems crept into their scripts that become more obvious on later rewatches (some solved but others exasperated by the extended editions), whilst the first movie in the sequence remains a strong, compelling and indeed visionary film.
Other Major Movies of the Noughts
Koushun Takami's
powerful novel - a hyped-up
Lord of the Flies with added grenades and machine guns - would seem essentially filmic, but the potential for the film adaptation missing the point and turning into just a violent splatterfest was quite high. Luckily, director Kinji Fukasaku seemed to 'get' the novel of
Battle Royale and captured its spirit splendidly in his compelling, brilliantly-acted and quite shockingly violent movie released in 2000. Occasionally it is rumoured that there will be an American remake, but thankfully the notion seems to pass.
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Also debuting in 2000 was
Pitch Black, an accomplished, small-scale SF thriller about a bunch of interstellar passengers crashing on a remote planet. Vin Diesel plays the ambiguous protagonist Riddick to growling perfection whilst the threat of the nocturnal creatures who only come out during the eclipse is developed through a taut pace and some astonishing visuals. The overblown and rather silly sequel,
The Chronicles of Riddick, is not without merit (its visual design is impressive, at least) but's intriguingly the tie-in computer games (
Escape from Butcher Bay and
Assault on Dark Athena, both featuring Diesel's voice work) which develop Riddick's character and story impressively.
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If you want to go see a film that leaves you scraping your brain off the ceiling in confused bewilderment, David Lynch is your man.
Mulholland Drive, which nearly won the top spot, is an intellectual and emotional puzzle box that you have to interpret, deconstruct and build back up to work out what the heck it was that you just saw. Intense, visually impressive and features, with Naomi Watts' character(s), a blistering barnstorming performance that she has never quite equalled since.
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At the other end of the entertainment spectrum lies Bryan Singer's
X-Men 2 (which apparently has the horrific title
X-Men United in the USA, which thankfully we didn't get landed with here). Proving that in the first movie he was just clearing his throat, here he delivers high-octane thrills as well as a strong central relationship between Ian McKellen's Magneto and Patrick Stewart's Professor X, whilst Hugh Jackman kicks quite a lot of ass whilst Brian Cox does some more of his brilliant scenery-devouring villain schtick (see also his magnificent bad guy turn in
Troy). One of the better comic book movies of the decade, although it arguably never quite replicates the balletic genius of the opening one-mutant assault on the White House.
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Zombies were big in the 2000s, but
Spaced's Simon Pegg, Nick Frost and Edgar Wright were on hand to see them off with cricket bats and
Batman vinyl soundtracks. Punctuated by moments of extreme gore and ultraviolence,
Shaun of the Dead is simply a very funny take on the cliches of the genre with a bit of real emotion to it as well. The same team reunited three years later for
Hot Fuzz, which may be non-genre but is so fantastic it's going to get a mention anyway (along with Timothy Dalton's quite mind-bogglingly evil turn as the villain). Their third film is apparently in the planning for a 2011 or 2012 release.
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Sticking with the funny, Trey Parker and Matt Stone gave the US a new theme tune in 2004 with
Team America: World Police, a seemingly never-ending mickey-take of everyone and everything in sight. People on the left and the right of the political spectrum alike were torn apart (in Michael Moore's case, literally) as the
Thunderbirds-inspired 'Team America' set out to stop the terrorists (allied to North Korea!) from blowing up the Western world. Quite remarkably entertaining.
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Returning to the serious side of things, 2006 gave us
Children of Men, Alfonso Cuaron's adaptation of the PD James novel. Set in a future where no children have been born for years and Britain is being ripped apart by civil strife, Clive Owen is superb as the man who is tasked with protecting the first pregnant woman in decades. A powerful, intense movie with some of the most intense action and combat sequences since
Saving Private Ryan, with sterling support from Michael Caine and Chiwetel Ejiofor.
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The same year gave us Christopher Nolan's take on Christopher Priest's
The Prestige. The movie is slightly less powerful than
the novel, dropping as it does the books' remarkable framing structure and haunting ending, but it is certainly more focused as a result. Hugh Jackman and Christian Bale are on top form, as is Michael Caine in a supporting role (Caine definitely had a career renaissance this decade) and Nolan's direction is impressive.
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Another very close candidate for film of the decade was Matthew Vaughn's adaptation of Neil Gaiman's
Stardust. Almost flawlessly entertaining, well-acted, with a light and genuinely witty touch that makes it the modern answer to
The Princess Bride, and every bit as good. Especially notable for Robert De Niro's turn as a ruthless pirate captain yearning to come out of the closet.
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Danny Boyle's underrated
Sunshine is one of the most visually impressive SF movies since
Blade Runner.
Sunshine's premise is a bit dubious, but the astonishing visuals of the mission to the Sun, a fantastic soundtrack (courtesy of a collaboration between British dance band Underworld and composer John Murphy) and some remarkable performances by the likes of Cillian Murphy and Michelle Yeoh combine to make this a great film. The 'twist' in the final act was probably a big mistake though.
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Rounding off the decade, Zack Snyder's take on
Watchmen was a solid adaptation, although in retrospect perhaps a little too respectful to the movie (although the new ending actually makes more sense than the comic book's), and Ozymandias is miscast. Outside of that, it packs most of the story of the graphic novel successfully into two hours with some striking visuals and a great soundtrack (the use of Cohen's 'Hallelujah' aside).
District 9 was also very good and
Avatar was solid, but since I only reviewed them recently I won't mention them again here.
Brief MentionsOther films of interest released in the 2000s:
Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon,
Bubba Ho-Tep,
Frequency,
AI,
From Hell,
Monsters Inc.,
Spirited Away,
28 Days Later,
Minority Report,
Equilibrium,
Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl,
Hellboy,
Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow,
Batman Begins,
Serenity,
War of the Worlds,
Curse of the Golden Flower,
Pan's Labyrinth,
28 Days Later,
28 Weeks Later,
300,
The Simpsons Movie,
Transformers,
Cloverfield,
The Dark Knight,
Hellboy II,
Avatar,
The Incredibles and the splendid ultra-low budget effort
The Gamers II: Dorkness Rising.
Worst SF&F movie of the 2000s: I want to say
Battlefield Earth, but I can't in good conscience as I haven't seen it. So I'll plump for
Dungeons and Dragons II: Wrath of the Dragon God, which me and my friends had to physically endure for an hour and a half and only got to the end of by refusing to admit defeat and plighing ourselves with beer. That it managed to be comprehensively worse than the original movie is an astonishing feat, one that I thought no film could achieve, thus this managed it, which is nothing short of astonishing.
Most Disappointing Movies of the Decade: This has to be the treble going to George Lucas for
Attack of the Clones,
Revenge of the Sith and
Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, none of which lived up to their forebears or achieved their potential.