

#Sci fi movie about going back intime to slaves series
This may not be escapism, but as the increasing number of dystopian movies, novels and TV series prove, we remain captivated by stories of societies gone wrong and the struggle of individuals to overcome. That’s left a still very wide swath of cinema to consider, from sci-fi looks into the distant future to cautionary tales of a much more recognizable world in our present or even past. We’ve also eliminated post-apocalyptic films where society hasn’t been rebuilt to the point of a functioning government.

For our purposes here, we’ve focused on Earth, eliminating films where the threat is from another planet. Dystopian societies are marked by mass suffering and great injustice, and we don’t always have to look for fiction to see examples. Not to be confused with post-apocalyptic films (though the two may overlap), dystopian films deal with a decidedly human threat from those in control. It’s natural for us to explore those what-if scenarios in film, something we’ve been doing since at least 1932 when Fritz Lang brought Metropolis to life. As oppressive regimes across the globe turn to technology to control their populaces-and we see our own government putting kids in cages and eroding privacies we’ve long taken for granted-we get a glimpse the terrifying possibilities of where we may be headed. That dystopian movies have become a genre all their own speaks to our fears of the future.
