Hollywood Tried To Bury These Sci-Fi Movies

Hollywood Tried To Bury These Sci-Fi Movies Hollywood has always been more comfortable with science fiction as spectacle than as philosophy. Every film on this list has a specific, nameable story of institutional failure: studios that rewrote endings without the director's knowledge, released films eight months before they were finished, lost irreplaceable footage in a salt mine in Transylvania, or used an actress's drowning death as a pretext to abandon a production they wanted to walk away from. These are not films that failed because they were bad. They were buried because the studios that made them didn't know what to do with questions they couldn't turn into a franchise. The internet has spent thirty years quietly undoing that work — restoring audiences to films that were always waiting for them. Ten films. Each one with a burial story as compelling as the film itself. --- 0:00 — Intro 0:38 — #10: Blade Runner (1982) 2:45 — #9: The Thing (1982) 5:11 — #8: Event Horizon (1997) 7:27 — #7: Tron (1982) 9:42 — #6: Sunshine (2007) 12:05 — #5: Enemy Mine (1985) 14:44 — #4: Serenity (2005) 16:41 — #3: Explorers (1985) 18:53 — #2: The Fountain (2006) 21:36 — #1: Brainstorm (1983) 24:47 — Final Thoughts --- #SciFiMovies #HiddenGems #bestmovies #topmovies #ClassicSciFi #UnderratedMovies #filmessay --- This video may contain copyrighted material (movie clips) used under the fair use provisions of U.S. copyright law (17 U.S.C. § 107) for the purposes of commentary, criticism, and entertainment. All rights to the original content belong to their respective copyright holders. No copyright infringement is intended. If you are a copyright holder and have concerns, please contact us before filing a claim.