12 Films With Dystopian Depictions of Earth’s Future

ecological-dystopian-films

(image from The Age of Stupid via The Sun)

Hollywood doomsday plots are dime-a-dozen, but more often than not the films feature extraordinary catastrophes like asteroid collisions, alien invasions and zombie take-overs. These 12 visionary films take a more realistic approach by creating dismal futures caused by present-day problems like global warming, wildlife extinctions and resource depletion.

Idiocracy (2006)

idiocracy-garbage-landscape

(image via City Pages)

When two people awake from a 500-year deep freeze, they find that the world has decayed into a glorified garbage dump. Commercialism and anti-intellectualism caused humans to become progressively dumber, eventually leading to the wanton destruction of the planet.

Delicatessen (1991)

delicatessen-human-meat

All animals have been hunted to extinction in this award-winning French dark comedy, but that does not stop the demand for meat. An old butcher owns a shop on the bottom floor of an apartment building, and with the meat supply dwindling, he uses the building’s tenants to stock his shop.

Americathon (1979)

americathon-peak-oil-cars

(image via Wikipedia)

Of all post-apocalyptic films, this is the most frightening:  the earth is out of oil, John Ritter is president, and Meat Loaf battles against the world’s last running car. As the trailer says, “See Americathon at your local theater before you see it happening in your own front yard!”

The Age of Stupid (2009)

age-of-stupid

(images via Baby Creative and the Sun)

Set in 2055, the film follows an old man as he looks back on humanity’s treatment of the planet with dismay. Unlike An Inconvenient Truth, the filmmakers keep the viewer enthralled with imagery and special effects while delivering a solid message.

Wall-E (2008)

wall-e-garbage-landscape

(image via I Watch Stuff)

Disney’s Oscar-winning film Wall-E envisions a world where all animal and plant life has died, but some lucky humans escaped to outer space in a giant ship. The film takes ideas from dystopian films of the past and wraps them up in kid-friendly packaging.

The Day After Tomorrow (2004)

day-after-tomorrow-climate-change

(image via Brimstone Pit)

While it is nowhere near a realistic depiction of the gradual effects of climate change, the film succeeds in being an action-packed Hollywood thriller that exposed countless people to the impact humans have on the planet.

A.I. Artificial Intelligence (2001)

ai-artificial-intelligence

(image via Wikipedia)

In a world ravaged from climate change, the human population has sharply declined. Scientists have worked to develop ultra-realistic robots called mechas to act as contributing members of society. While a new ice age eventually wipes out humanity, the mechas survive.

The Road Warrior/Mad Max 2 (1981)

road-warrior-mad-max-2

(images via movieposter.com and Match Cuts)

While the first film in the Mad Max trilogy neglects to explain why Australia has turned to a violent, desolate state, the Road Warrior reveals that a global energy crisis as the cause of society’s decline. With little oil left on the planet, rogue gangs reek havoc across Australia.

Logan’s Run (1976)

logans-run-overpopulation

(image via What’s Up NYC)

The few survivors of overpopulation and pollution live in an enormous dome that is sealed away from the harmful outdoors. However, the government requires that all people voluntarily submit to euthanasia at the age of 30 in order to control the population of the city.

Waterworld (1995)

waterworld-climate-change-flood

(image via Adoro Cinema)

Global warming has caused glaciers to melt, flooding the planet and ending civilization. A few humans managed to survive and build an exclusive society within a floating atoll. They get by in this new world by scavenging and trading with other communities.

Silent Running (1972)

silent-running-wall-e

(image via Wikipedia)

With all life on earth on the brink of extinction, humans propelled some plant life enclosed in several greenhouse domes into the orbit of Saturn, hoping to eventually use the plants to re-cultivate earth. Wall-E’s director admitted that this film heavily influenced him — and it shows.

Soylent Green (1973)

soylent-green-global-warming

(image via Fused Film)

Perhaps the ultimate dystopian thriller, Soylent Green depicts a world where fruits and vegetables are extremely rare due to overpopulation and global warming. While everyone remembers Charlton Heston’s line at the end of the film (“Soylent green is people!“), the film is better summed up with this: “People were always rotten, but the world was beautiful.”

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  • Evano
    April 2nd, 2009 at 8:54 pm

    Wow, so you include ‘The Day After Tomorrow’, a film that is neither dystopian nor futuristic, nor particularly visionary, and you leave out films like Brazil and Blade Runner, two fantastic and visionary films that depict harsh dystopia?

  • Evano's Affirmation
    April 3rd, 2009 at 8:01 am

    Indeed. Poor form.

  • William Shaw
    April 4th, 2009 at 7:09 am

    Er… Delicatessen? I think not. Not remotely about a dystopian future.

    Can I suggest No Blade of Grass.

    Farenheit 451?

    Tarkovsky’s Stalker?

    And of course McCarthy’s The Road is being made into a movie. I don’t think you’re going to get more dystopian that that one.

  • Fat Lester
    April 4th, 2009 at 3:09 pm

    I have to agree with William Shaw about “Fahrenheit 451″. Also, no such list is complete without “1984″ and “Atlas Shrugged”.

  • Erik
    April 4th, 2009 at 4:14 pm

    What about six string samarai?

  • Roald
    April 5th, 2009 at 5:24 am

    And what about Children of Men?

    The human race has lost the ability to procreate so children are very valuable. When 1 woman becomes pregnant against all odds, several factions wish to control her.

  • slugdor
    April 5th, 2009 at 5:44 am

    how could you have forgotten A Boy and HIs Dog (1975)?

  • electronic cigarette
    April 9th, 2009 at 11:38 am

    Logan’s Run was a great movie in the day. Not sure it could hold up to today’s audiences though. Blade Runner should have been on the list too.

  • the jon
    April 11th, 2009 at 8:19 am

    YES children of men is one of the best films ever also poor choice on some of them

  • Anonymous
    April 12th, 2009 at 5:40 pm

    V for Vendetta, maybe? I think it shows an almost realistic approach to a dystopia… Another one might be Babylon AD…

  • Marcellus Wallace
    April 13th, 2009 at 1:39 pm

    The reason they didn’t put those movies on this list is because those dystopias were the product of censorship and tyranny. Man made societies that hurt humanity and most importantly freedom. The movies on this list run contrary to that belief. They are meant to show that humans are intrinsically irresponsible dicks and it serves them right to be destroyed because its the product of our own selfish consumerism. The author did not base this list on the quality of the movie or the facts on climate change (see The Day After Tomorrow) and the energy crises but on how well they push that message through propaganda and misrepresentation of facts. This list was obviously written by one of those hate all humans environmentalists who believe it is fine for all of humanity to be killed based on the actions of a few. These movies don’t represent realistic views of our future but the future a lot of environmentalists would wish upon humanity for supposedly “fucking up the earth”.

  • Andrei
    April 15th, 2009 at 9:40 am

    Nice list and I agree with the the person above, V for Vendetta should be on that list. I’d also add Bladerunner and Terminator (all) (the future sequences). I’d also put Soylent Green.

  • Andrei
    April 15th, 2009 at 9:41 am

    oops, I forgot that Soylent Green was already on it.

  • Jeffersonite
    April 21st, 2009 at 9:03 pm

    Man made global warming is a stupid hoax and not worthy of discussion. The fools that believe such drivel are haters of people and free markets. Communists, in other words. If you let them lead you, you will end up dead or enslaved. I say we all need to burn as much carbon as we can get our hands on. When you rake up your leaves, burn them, trim your trees, burn the cuttings, cut your grass with your gas powered lawn mower every 3 days, drive the half block to the store, keep your empty milk, water, drink jugs in a bin and once a month, burn them. Burn all plastic waste. To hell with algore and his ilk.

  • Jeffersonite
    April 21st, 2009 at 9:15 pm

    Man made global warming is a stupid hoax and not worthy of discussion. The fools that believe such drivel are haters of people and free markets. Communists, in other words. If you let them lead you, you will end up dead or enslaved. I say we all need to burn as much carbon as we can get our hands on. When you rake up your leaves, burn them, trim your trees, burn the cuttings, cut your grass with your gas powered lawn mower every 3 days, drive the half block to the store, keep your empty milk, water, drink jugs in a bin and once a month, burn them. Burn all plastic waste. Pour used motor oil in the ground or in the water. To borrow from Rush, it is the height of arrogance to think that man can destroy what God has made. To hell with algore and his ilk.

  • Kody
    May 2nd, 2009 at 11:35 am

    Jeffersonite, I can’t tell if you are being facetious or not.

  • Kevin B.
    May 3rd, 2009 at 10:16 am

    First commenter nailed it. This list cannot be taken seriously when you somehow omit Brazil and Blade Runner in lieu of crap like The Day After Tomorrow. Tragic.

  • Danny
    May 3rd, 2009 at 12:47 pm

    I am glad to see shitty movies like Mad Max and Water World on the list. Even though those movies are kind of embarrassingly bad they do a good job considering how the environment will be different in a dystopian future. But I really think Children of Men should be on the list. It is the most chilling and realistic depiction of the future both socially/politically and ecologically.

  • SlimQuick
    June 7th, 2009 at 10:11 pm

    Very good list. But I’m a little surprised why none of the terminator movies is futured in the list.

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