From the airtight Back to the Future to the delightfully dark The Empire Strikes Back, some classic sci-fi movies from the 1980s have aged incredibly well. Due to the cultural differences and shortened attention spans of the past couple of decades, movie, and it looks even more disted in light of the perfectly paced two-part adaptation that Denis Villeneuve released in the 2020s.
Tron’s visual effects look dated by today’s standards, Weird Science has a problematic sense of humor, and Howard the Duck’s human-duck love story is just bizarre. But for every ‘80s sci-fi movie that has aged badly, there are plenty that have aged like a fine wine. Movies like The Fly and The Terminator are close to perfect, while the action of Aliens and Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior still put modern blockbuster spectacle to shame. From Blade Runner to E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, there are a bunch of timeless sci-fi films from the ‘80s.
10 Predator (1987)
Directed By John McTiernan

A team of elite commandos led by Major Dutch Schaefer is sent on a rescue mission deep in the Central American jungle. However, they soon find themselves hunted by an extraterrestrial warrior with advanced technology and a penchant for collecting human trophies. As the creature picks them off one by one, Dutch must rely on his wits and combat skills to survive the ultimate test of man versus alien.
On paper, John McTiernan’s Predator might sound like a ridiculous movie. Arnold Schwarzenegger leads a team of commandos deep into the jungle, where they contend with a big-game hunter from another planet who wants to pick them off one by one for sport. The otherworldly tracker has the powers of invisibility and heat vision, and the plot boils down to a one-on-one confrontation between Schwarzenegger and the Predator. It shouldn’t work, but it’s a near-flawless masterpiece of action cinema.

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Predator starts off as a typical testosterone-fueled Schwarzenegger action-fest, but it gradually gets stripped down to a primal showdown between man and beast. It’s a surprisingly thoughtful meditation on humankind’s unending battle with the forces of nature. This story is so simple and bare-bones that it transcends the time in which it was made; it could’ve been made this year.
9 The Fly (1986)
Directed By David Cronenberg

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The Fly
- Release Date
- August 15, 1986
- Runtime
- 96 minutes
- Director
- David Cronenberg
Cast
- Seth Brundle
- Geena DavisVeronica Quaife
The Fly follows scientist Seth Brundle as he makes a groundbreaking teleportation experiment. During testing, he inadvertently merges with a housefly, leading to unforeseen consequences.
From Wolf Man to The Substance, David Cronenberg’s body horror masterpiece The Fly continues to influence filmmakers to this day. Jeff Goldblum stars as a scientist who invents a teleportation machine. While he’s testing it out, a housefly gets into the chamber with him and he comes out the other side as a horrifying hybrid of man and fly. The woman he loves, played by Geena Davis, is devastated to watch him slowly turn into a monstrosity she doesn’t recognize.
The Fly is as much a character-driven drama as it is a sci-fi horror movie. Seth Brundle’s transformation into a monster is visually stunning, but it’s also deeply heartbreaking. The emotions of Seth and Ronnie’s tragic love story are timeless, and Chris Walas’ makeup and prosthetic effects still hold up against the horror genre’s very best.
8 The Terminator (1984)
Directed By James Cameron

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The Terminator
- Release Date
- October 26, 1984
- Runtime
- 108 minutes
- Director
- James Cameron
Cast
- Terminator
- Michael BiehnKyle Reese
The Terminator, directed by James Cameron and released in 1984, features a cyborg assassin sent back in time to eliminate Sarah Connor, the mother of a future resistance leader. As the relentless machine pursues its mission, a human warrior is sent to protect her and secure humanity's survival.
James Cameron has been warning people about the dangers of artificial intelligence since the ‘80s, and his anti-A.I. message is sadly still just as relevant today, if not more so. The Terminator stars Linda Hamilton as everywoman Sarah Connor, who is targeted by a deadly time-traveling cyborg — played by Arnold Schwarzenegger — who has been sent from a post-apocalyptic future where Sarah’s yet-to-be-born son John is leading the resistance against the machines that took over the world.
The Terminator has a 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes.
John’s second-in-command Kyle Reese, played by Michael Biehn, is sent back in time to make sure Sarah isn’t killed before John is born. While it deals with heavy themes, The Terminator is a riveting cat-and-mouse thriller at its core. Visually and thematically, it’s a tech noir. But narratively, it’s a straightforward slasher with a cybernetic serial killer picking off every Sarah Connor in the phonebook. It’s perfectly paced, and filled with nail-biting tension.
7 Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior (1981)
Directed By George Miller

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Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior
- Release Date
- December 24, 1981
- Runtime
- 96 Minutes
- Director
- George Miller
Cast
- Bruce Spence
The Road Warrior, aka Mad Max 2, picks up after the original 1976 film and continues following Max's (Mel Gibson) journey through a post-apocalyptic Australia. This time, Max helps a group of locals escape bandits to protect their wealth of gasoline. George Miller again directs the Mad Max sequel and is often considered the fan-favorite of the original trilogy.
The Mad Max franchise as audiences know it today was created in George Miller’s Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior. After the first movie’s low-budget depiction of a dystopian near-future, Miller used the extra money afforded by the sequel to plunge audiences head-first into a gonzo post-apocalyptic wasteland ruled by gas-guzzling warlords. It’s essentially a sci-fi spaghetti western, presenting Max as a lone-wolf antihero rolling from town to town, protecting innocent civilians from ruthless gangs.
The thrilling set-pieces of The Road Warrior solidified Miller as one of the best action directors around (a reputation he still holds to this day).
The thrilling set-pieces of The Road Warrior solidified Miller as one of the best action directors around (a reputation he still holds to this day). He established his penchant for practical effects and death-defying stunt work with the mind-blowing car chases of Mad Max 2. The Road Warrior is more visceral and exhilarating than most of the action movies getting made today.
6 Blade Runner (1982)
Directed By Ridley Scott

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The original Blade Runner is a sci-fi neo-noir film set in 2019 in a dystopian cyber-punk society. Harrison Ford stars as Rick Deckard as a Blade Runner for the LAPD, tasked with hunting rogue replicants, genetically engineered humans designed to tackle tasks that human beings cannot. When four replicants go rogue and begin killing humans, Deckard is forced out of retirement to hunt them down and stop them - but the truth isn't as simple as it seems. Deckard will have to reckon with the philosophical dilemma of what makes someone human.
Ridley Scott created a breathtaking vision of futuristic Los Angeles in his neo-noir opus Blade Runner. Based on Philip K. Dick’s novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, Blade Runner stars Harrison Ford as Rick Deckard, a grizzled cop tasked with hunting down and destroying all the humanoid androids that have assimilated into human society. Ironically, as he kills the androids one by one, he gradually loses his own humanity.
Blade Runner has a pretty slow pace, especially by today’s standards, which may be challenging for some modern viewers. But it’s such a mesmerizing cinematic experience that the patient pacing actually works in its favor; it gives its audience plenty of time to soak in the neon-drenched visuals and philosophical themes. In between rain-battered action scenes and stunning snapshots of the future, Blade Runner begs the timeless question of what it means to be human.
5 Aliens (1986)
Directed By James Cameron

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Aliens
- Release Date
- July 18, 1986
- Runtime
- 137 minutes
- Director
- James Cameron
Cast
- Carrie HennNewt
- Ripley
Aliens, released in 1986, follows Ripley as she s a group of Colonial Marines returning to LV-426, site of her previous encounter with the extraterrestrial species. Having been in hypersleep for 57 years, her story of survival is met with doubt, yet she assists in confronting the new threat.
When James Cameron was hired to write and direct a sequel to Alien, he knew he couldn’t make a horror movie as fiercely effective as the original, so he pivoted to a different genre. Aliens is a high-octane action thriller that multiplies the threat of the xenomorph by the dozen. Sigourney Weaver’s Ellen Ripley reluctantly agrees to accompany a band of Colonial Marines to an off-world colony that’s been ravaged by a swarm of xenomorphs, on the off chance that there could be survivors who need help.
Aliens still holds up as one of the most exhilarating action movies ever made. And not only that; it’s one of the most emotionally engaging action movies, too. Ripley’s surrogate mother-daughter relationship with the colony’s only survivor — a young orphan named Newt — ensures that there’s a captivating, heartfelt drama underneath all the sci-fi spectacle.
4 E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial (1982)
Directed By Steven Spielberg

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E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial
- Release Date
- June 11, 1982
- Runtime
- 1h 55m
- Director
- Steven Spielberg
Cast
- Henry Thomas
Steven Spielberg's 1982 sci-fi classic E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial tells the story of Elliott Taylor (Henry Thomas), who befriends a small alien left stranded on Earth. When government forces come to take the benevolent creature away, Elliott does everything he can to protect his new friend, risking his own safety in the process in order to help E.T. return home.
After tackling the concept of alien visitors in the abstract in Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Steven Spielberg explored the topic on a more intimate level in E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial. Henry Thomas stars as 10-year-old Elliott, a lonely child of divorce who discovers a kindred spirit in a friendly, Reese’s Pieces-loving alien who got accidentally left behind on Earth. As Elliott and his siblings try to figure out a way to get E.T. back to his ship, he forms an unbreakable emotional bond with the alien.
Despite its sci-fi conceit, E.T. is one of Spielberg’s most personal films. It’s as much a coming-of-age drama about a kid dealing with loneliness and an absentee father as it is a sci-fi adventure about an alien trying to get back to his home planet. E.T. is just as touching today as it was when it became a box office smash.
3 The Thing (1982)
Directed By John Carpenter

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The Thing
- Release Date
- June 25, 1982
- Runtime
- 109 minutes
- Director
- John Carpenter
Cast
- T.K. Carter
- David Clennon
A team of researchers set out to study an alien spacecraft found in Antarctica, where they also discover an alien body on the site. The alien buried in ice is actually alive and has the ability to imitate human form. The group must find a way to distinguish who the real person is from The Thing and stay alive. John Carpenter's 1982 film is a remake of 1951's The Thing from Another World and stars Kurt Russel as the hero RJ MacReady.
John Carpenter’s reimagining of The Thing from Another World is one of the most masterfully crafted horror movies ever made. In The Thing, Kurt Russell leads a team of scientists at an Arctic outpost. When a shapeshifting alien entity makes its way into the facility and he has no idea how many people have been assimilated, he and his colleagues quickly become paranoid and start turning on each other.
Although it’s set up as a sci-fi chiller, The Thing has all the components of a whodunit. It has a group of people trapped in an isolated location, gradually getting picked off by an unseen killer, unsure of who they can trust. The Thing proved that Carpenter is a master of suspense — the blood test scene alone demonstrated that — and it’s just as compelling now as it was then.
2 Back To The Future (1985)
Directed By Robert Zemeckis

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Back to the Future
- Release Date
- July 3, 1985
- Runtime
- 116 minutes
- Director
- Robert Zemeckis
Cast
- Michael J. FoxMarty McFly
- Emmett Brown
Back to the Future follows teenager Marty McFly as he is inadvertently sent back to 1955, where he disrupts his parents' meeting. With the assistance of eccentric inventor Doc Brown, Marty must restore the timeline by ensuring his parents fall in love and find a way back to 1985.
Movies don’t come much more perfect than Back to the Future. Robert Zemeckis and Bob Gale’s screenplay is watertight — every word in the script is either setting something up or paying something off — and Michael J. Fox and Christopher Lloyd make for one of the most compelling on-screen duos in movie history. Fox plays Marty McFly opposite Lloyd as Doc Brown, the inventor of a time machine. When Marty accidentally goes back in time and unwittingly interrupts his parents’ meet-cute, he has to make sure they get together so he has a life to go back to.

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The time-travel storyline means that the movie is very much of the ‘80s, and when Marty goes into the past, it’s very much of the ‘50s. But despite featuring the cultural hallmarks of two bygone eras, Back to the Future is a truly timeless movie. It’s rock-solid storytelling full of lovable, relatable characters.
1 The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
Directed By Irvin Kershner

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Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back
- Release Date
- May 20, 1980
- Runtime
- 124 minutes
- Director
- Irvin Kershner
Cast
- Luke Skywalker
- Han Solo
The Empire Strikes Back is the second installment in the original Star Wars trilogy, directed by Irvin Kershner. Released in 1980, it follows Luke Skywalker as he trains under Jedi Master Yoda, while Princess Leia, Han Solo, and the Rebel Alliance face ongoing threats from the Galactic Empire and Darth Vader.
The first sequel to Star Wars, The Empire Strikes Back, is still ranked as one of the greatest sequels ever made. It established the trend of sequels taking a darker turn and exploring grimmer storylines and subject matter. Luke Skywalker goes to the swamp planet of Dagobah to train with Yoda as he prepares to confront Darth Vader, and Han Solo and Leia Organa fall in love as they flee from the Imperial fleet.
From Han and Leia’s romantic confession to Vader’s bombshell revelation that he’s Luke’s father, The Empire Strikes Back has some of the most iconic moments in Star Wars history.
From Han and Leia’s romantic confession to Vader’s bombshell revelation that he’s Luke’s father, The Empire Strikes Back has some of the most iconic moments in Star Wars history. It’s every bit the fun-filled space adventure that the first one is, but it also reflects the moral murkiness of real life (as Clerks pointed out). Four decades and more than a dozen Disney productions later, the Star Wars saga still hasn’t topped The Empire Strikes Back.
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