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The 25 Best "Worst" Sci-Fi Movies of All Time

1-25

So bad it's brilliant.

Nazarii Verbitskiy Nazarii Verbitskiy
TV Shows & Movies - July 18th 2026, 19:00 GMT+2
Battle Beyond the Stars

25. Battle Beyond the Stars (1980)

Roger Corman saw Star Wars make a fortune and decided to build his own version out of spare parts and pure hustle. Battle Beyond the Stars borrows the Seven Samurai plot, bolts on foam rubber aliens, and features a young James Horner as composer before he became a household name. Robert Vaughn replays his The Magnificent Seven role in space, looking mildly embarrassed the entire time. The special effects wobble and the dialogue creaks, but the sheer scrappy ambition makes the movie weirdly charming. | © New World Pictures

Space Mutiny

24. Space Mutiny (1988)

Space Mutiny would have vanished into obscurity forever if Mystery Science Theater 3000 hadn't featured it. The plot involves a generation ship, a mutiny, and space battles recycled from Battlestar Galactica. Names like Ty Greene and Dave Ryder get shouted with a seriousness the material never earns, and the fight choreography looks like a zero-gravity bar brawl. Without the television riffing, viewers would have forgotten this film decades ago. | © Trans World Entertainment

Robot Monster

23. Robot Monster (1953)

A gorilla suit with a diving helmet bolted on top is the entire alien threat in Robot Monster, yet that image outlasted movies with massive budgets. Ro-Man wanders around bubble machines wiping out humanity while delivering lines that suggest he is confused by his own invasion plan. The special effects budget went to stock footage of fighting dinosaurs, spliced in for no clear reason. Watching it now feels like a fever dream someone accidentally filmed. | © Astor Pictures

The Adventures of Pluto Nash

22. The Adventures of Pluto Nash (2002)

Eddie Murphy plays a moon-colony nightclub owner in The Adventures of Pluto Nash, a movie that cost a fortune and made almost none of it back. The premise plays like an unfinished joke, complete with Randy Quaid as a robot sidekick and a villain reveal that lands with a thud. Warner Bros. released the movie to immediate box-office disaster, cementing its status as one of Hollywood's legendary bombs. Watching it today offers a bizarre time capsule of early 2000s excess. | © Warner Bros.

Wing commander movie

21. Wing Commander (1999)

Freddie Prinze Jr. leading a space navy sounds like a joke, and Wing Commander plays it completely straight. The video game source material gets a big-screen budget but none of the interactivity that made it fun, leaving just stiff dialogue and confused space battles. Saffron Burrows and Matthew Lillard try their best, but the script gives them nothing to work with. The legendary flop killed big-screen video game adaptations for a decade. | © 20th Century Fox

Skyline

20. Skyline (2010)

Skyline had a visual effects budget that punched way above its weight, which made the story's flaws obvious. Giant alien ships hover over Los Angeles, sucking people into blue light with effects that still hold up better than the acting. The ending swerves into an absurd body horror twist that retroactively makes the movie funnier. It earned its infamy because the visual effects team apparently forgot to hire a script doctor. | © Universal Pictures

Battle Los Angeles

19. Battle Los Angeles (2011)

Aaron Eckhart spends most of Battle Los Angeles barking orders like he wandered in from a military recruitment commercial. The plot plays like a video game mission briefing stretched to two hours, featuring aliens who want Earth's water for reasons no one explains. Shaky cameras and constant gunfire try to hide the thin story. Somehow, the sheer commitment to loud, dumb spectacle makes it watchable anyway. | © Sony Pictures / Columbia Pictures

Maximum Overdrive

18. Maximum Overdrive (1986)

Stephen King sat in the director's chair exactly once, and Maximum Overdrive is the reason he never went back. The premise features a comet turning machines against humanity, showcasing a killer semi-truck with an Australian flag and a Green Goblin face terrorizing a truck stop. King has admitted he used a lot of cocaine during filming, which explains everything on screen. AC/DC provides the entire soundtrack, making vending machines shooting soda cans feel like a genuine rock opera. | © De Laurentiis Entertainment Group

The Black Hole

17. The Black Hole (1979)

Disney tried to make its own answer to Star Wars with The Black Hole, and the mismatch shows in almost every scene. You get a haunted spaceship, a silent killer robot named Maximilian, and a finale that suddenly turns into a trippy vision of heaven and hell. The tonal whiplash between kid-friendly adventure and existential dread never resolves itself, which is exactly why fans still discuss it decades later. | © Walt Disney Productions

Aliens vs Predator Requiem

16. Alien vs. Predator: Requiem (2007)

Alien vs. Predator: Requiem takes two franchises with decades of mythology and dumps them into a fog-choked suburb where you can barely tell what is fighting what. The Strause Brothers stripped out the color grading so aggressively that entire action scenes play out in near-darkness, turning every showdown into a guessing game. A predalien hybrid, human subplots nobody asked for, and a government cover-up round out a plot that feels assembled from spare parts. | © 20th Century Fox

Johnny Mnemonic

15. Johnny Mnemonic (1995)

Keanu Reeves plays a data courier with a hard drive in his skull, and somehow that is the least strange part of Johnny Mnemonic. The dialogue lands somewhere between cyberpunk poetry and a bad translation, with Reeves screaming about barbed wire in his brain. Then there's the hacker dolphin named Jones who shows up to help crack encryption, a plot turn the movie treats with complete seriousness. | © TriStar Pictures

The Lawnmower Man

14. The Lawnmower Man (1992)

Stephen King famously got his name pulled from The Lawnmower Man because the finished film barely resembled his short story. What's left is a simple gardener turned into a psychic superbeing through virtual reality experiments, rendered in CGI that looks like a screensaver having a breakdown. The plot swings from lab tests to full-blown cyber godhood so fast it barely stops to explain itself. Watching it now feels like looking at how the early 1990s imagined the future of computers. | © New Line Cinema

Aliens vs Predator

13. Alien vs. Predator (2004)

Two of horror's biggest franchises finally met in Alien vs. Predator, and the result was smaller than either one alone. The PG-13 rating gutted the gore fans expected, turning acid blood and skull trophies into something you could watch with your parents. Paul W.S. Anderson buries the plot under an Antarctic pyramid and a rushed human cast nobody remembers. Still, watching a Predator get riddled with Xenomorph teeth in the final act gives viewers the trashy payoff they came for. | © 20th Century Fox

Moonfall

12. Moonfall (2022)

Roland Emmerich already blew up the White House and flooded the planet, so for Moonfall he decided the moon itself is a fake megastructure hiding an ancient AI. The plot escalates from lunar gravity disaster into full alien conspiracy territory within twenty minutes. John Bradley's conspiracy theorist ends up being right about everything, which is the least strange part of the movie. It fails as science and barely holds together as a story, but the sheer commitment to insane lore makes it impossible to look away. | © Lionsgate

Lifeforce

11. Lifeforce (1985)

A crew of astronauts finds a stash of naked energy vampires floating in a comet, and somehow that is the least strange part of Lifeforce. Tobe Hooper directs it like a horror movie, a disaster flick, and a softcore art project all fighting for control of the same reel. Soul-sucking zombies level London while the plot keeps insisting this is all deeply serious business. It never once slows down long enough to notice how insane it looks. | © TriStar Pictures

Will Smith in After Earth

10. After Earth (2013)

Will Smith built his career on charisma, then made a movie where he spends most of the runtime injured and silent while his son does the acting. Jaden Smith carries After Earth with a strange flat-line delivery that never quite lands as emotion or discipline. The premise itself, humans fleeing a ruined Earth only to crash right back on it, feels like a cosmic joke the movie refuses to acknowledge. The movie plays like a serious drama that forgot to check if anyone was buying it. | © Sony Pictures / Columbia Pictures

The Happening

9. The Happening (2008)

Plants become the villains in The Happening, and somehow that is not even the strangest part. Mark Wahlberg spends the movie talking to a plastic plant like it holds the secrets of the universe, delivering every line with a confusion that never fits the panic around him. Instead of dying quickly from the airborne toxin, victims wander off calmly and end their lives in ways that feel more comic than tragic. M. Night Shyamalan built a horror premise so odd that the terror curdled into something audiences could not stop laughing at. | © 20th Century Fox

The Core 2003

8. The Core (2003)

The Core asks audiences to accept that Earth's inner core has stopped spinning and only a nuclear bomb can fix it. Scientists drill straight down in a ship made of unobtanium, dodging giant crystal caves along the way. Every law of physics gets tossed out the window, and the movie never once apologizes for it. Hilary Swank and Aaron Eckhart deliver every ridiculous line with total sincerity, which makes the whole thing fun to watch. | © Paramount Pictures

Zardoz

7. Zardoz (1974)

Zardoz gave the world Sean Connery in thigh-high boots and a red diaper, and nothing after that image can be unseen. John Boorman built a bizarre future where a giant stone head flies around demanding guns while lecturing about penises being evil. The plot barely holds together, jumping between immortality cults and psychic gods with no patience for clarity. Somehow that chaos makes it more fun to watch than most serious sci-fi ever manages. | © 20th Century Fox

Barbarella

6. Barbarella (1968)

Jane Fonda spends most of Barbarella either losing her clothes or floating through sets that look like a furniture showroom on acid. The plot barely holds together around a missing scientist and a weapon called the Positronic Ray, but nobody watches this for the story. What people remember is the opening zero-gravity striptease, the evil queen's throne room, and a pleasure organ that short-circuits from too much ecstasy. It is campy in a way that feels completely unashamed of itself. | © Paramount Pictures

Super Mario Bros

5. Super Mario Bros. (1993)

Nobody asked for a grimy dystopian Brooklyn where dinosaurs evolved into Dennis Hopper in a suit, yet that is exactly what Super Mario Bros. delivers. Bob Hoskins spends the entire runtime looking like he knows he made a mistake, which adds to the fun. The Goomba redesigns alone prove nobody involved played the games or cared to. Decades later, it plays less like a video game movie and more like a fever dream that escaped containment. | © Buena Vista Pictures

Cropped Jupiter Ascending

4. Jupiter Ascending (2015)

Jupiter Ascending spent millions building a universe where Channing Tatum wears wolf ears and roller-skates through the sky to save Mila Kunis. The Wachowskis believed in every ridiculous piece of it, from the space bureaucracy jokes to Eddie Redmayne whispering his entire performance like he's mad at a pillow. None of it should work together, and yet the sheer commitment makes it fun to watch unfold. This is what happens when a blockbuster forgets to be embarrassed about itself. | © Warner Bros.

Flash Gordon

3. Flash Gordon (1980)

The soundtrack by Queen alone tells you this movie has no interest in being subtle. Sam Jones plays Flash Gordon like a confused football player who wandered onto a spaceship, and somehow that works in the film's favor. Ming the Merciless struts around in outfits that look stolen from a disco, while the sets glow in every neon color available in 1980. Nobody involved seems to be acting so much as performing at maximum volume, and that commitment is exactly why it holds up. | © Universal Pictures

Plan 9 from Outer Space

2. Plan 9 from Outer Space (1959)

Ed Wood did not have money, actors, or a script supervisor, and every frame of Plan 9 from Outer Space proves it. Paper plate UFOs swing on visible strings while a cape-wearing chiropractor stands in for Bela Lugosi, who died partway through shooting. The dialogue makes no sense from one line to the next, yet somehow that only makes it more entertaining. Decades of critics have called this the worst movie ever made, and that title turned into its biggest selling point. | © Reynolds Pictures

Battlefield Earth John Travolta

1. Battlefield Earth (2000)

John Travolta plays a nine-foot alien named Terl, and his scenes look like they were shot through a fish tank. Battlefield Earth leans on Dutch angles so constantly that watching it feels like the camera operator lost their balance and never got back up. The plot involves psychlos, gold, and humanity's last survivors, but none of that matters once you see the costume design. It is a movie that spent seventy million dollars proving money cannot buy competence. | © Warner Bros. Pictures

1-25

Not every sci-fi flop deserves the bargain bin. Some movies are so gloriously misguided, so packed with rubber monsters, wild plots, and dialogue nobody should have approved, that they loop right back around to being a great time. Here are the top 25 sci-fi movies that are so bad, they're actually good.

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Not every sci-fi flop deserves the bargain bin. Some movies are so gloriously misguided, so packed with rubber monsters, wild plots, and dialogue nobody should have approved, that they loop right back around to being a great time. Here are the top 25 sci-fi movies that are so bad, they're actually good.

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