10 Sci-Fi Movies on Netflix Canada That Will Blow Your Mind
Oblivion (2013)
Tom Cruise has starred in no less than four sci-fi epics since 2000, and Oblivion is by far the most beautiful—and the most underrated—of the bunch.
(C) Photo: Universal Pictures
Source Code (2011)
The pulse-pounding sophomore feature from Duncan Jones (Moon) follows Colter Stevens (Jake Gyllenhaal), a U.S. army pilot who wakes up on a Chicago commuter train—in the body of another man.
(C) Photo: Summit Entertainmanet
The Invisible Man (2020)
One night, Cecilia Klass (Elisabeth Moss) completes a daring escape from the compound of her boyfriend, Adrian Griffin, a wealthy but violent and manipulative scientist.
(C) Photo: Universal Pictures
Don’t Look Up (2021)
When two astronomers (Jennifer Lawrence and Leonardo DiCaprio) discover that a comet is on a collision course for Earth, their grave findings are greeted with…indifference, jeers and opportunism.
(C) Photo: Netflix
Pacific Rim (2013)
When a portal opens at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean, bringing with it droves of monstrous alien creatures called Kaiju, the Earth's nations unite to avoid extinction.
(C) Photo: Netflix
Edge of Tomorrow (2014)
Like Groundhog Day but with more explosions, this shoot-‘em-up stars Tom Cruise as U.S. Army Major William Cage, a public relations officer in France who is thrown into a never-ending battle against aliens after getting stuck in a time loop.
(C) Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures
Sorry to Bother You (2018)
Horse/man hybrids, union-busting mega-corps, cultish worship of CEOs, and the primacy of the all-powerful meme
(C) Photo: Focus Features
High Life (2018)
Devotees of French filmmaker Claire Denis know that regardless of what genre the French auteur decides to work in, audiences should expect elements of horror and gore.
(C) Photo: Netflix
Snowpiercer (2013)
South Korean master Bong Joon-ho’s first English-language film transports viewers to Snowball Earth, a post-climate-collapse society where the few remaining humans subsist on a train that perpetually circles the globe.
(C) Photo: Lionsgate
Mother/Android (2021)
Following the familiar trope in which the machines revolt against their human masters, Mother/Android sees our robot friends develop a will of their own, turning smartphones into incendiary devices and androids into attackers.