9 Best Animated Sci-Fi Movies That You Should Watching Update 04/2024

Best Animated Sci- Fi Movies

What animated sci-fi films push the boundaries of what we think we’re capable of even further?

Animation is no longer exclusively for children. Cartoons have produced some of cinema’s most avant-garde, experimental, and thought-provoking works. Animated science fiction films provide filmmakers a wide range of creative options. When science fiction scripts are animated, the speculative worlds they describe come to life with a distinct brilliance and beauty.

The films on this list reflect some of the most innovative and intriguing views on alternate realities, extraterrestrial universes, post-apocalyptic nightmares, and technological dreamscapes… Animation and breathtaking imagery are used in a variety of ways in these films, whether they are popular or underground. We’ve selected our top ten favorite computer-animated films.

1. Fantastic Planet (1973)

Fantastic Planet (1973)

At 39 feet long, Draggs are the rulers of Yagam, a remote planet where Draggs are the dominant species. Human-like Oms have been enslaved by the Draggs, who are dwarfed by their tyrants. Draggs have a penchant for keeping Oms as pets, even going so far as to equip them with collars in an effort to tame them.

A surreal animation technique and Alain Goraguer’s dreamy soundtrack highlight the Oms’ battle for independence. Fantastic Planet won the Cannes Film Festival’s Grand Prix jury prize in 1973.

2. A Scanner Darkly (2006)

This paranoid Richard Linklater feature about a dystopian drug epide

It’s based on Philip K. Dick’s dystopian novel of the same name, which was directed by Richard Linklater. Linklater employed rotoscoping, which is drawing over source video frame-by-frame, to animate the film. In his award-winning film Waking Life, Linklater used a similar strategy.

A hallucinogenic substance known as Substance D terrorizes a universe inhabited by Keanu Reeves, Woody Harrelson, and Robert Downey Jr., who star in the movie. High-tech and dictatorial governments are using spies and monitoring technologies to stop the spread of the narcotic.

 3. Renaissance (2006)

Renaissance (2006)

French film Renaissance uses motion capture and computer-generated imagery to achieve its noirish appearance. Before being turned into computer models, the actors in the film donned special outfits and performed their scenes in front of stereoscopic blue screens.

In 2054, the Avalon Corporation, a monopoly that monitors every street in Paris, has taken over the city. When a well-known female scientist is kidnapped, Barthélémy Karas, a detective assigned to the case, finds himself drawn into an international conspiracy.

4. 9 (2009)

This computer-animated film by Shane Acker depicts a world on the verge of oblivion. To save the few remaining survivors, a stitchpunk known as 9 plans a scheme.

9.9 works diligently to demolish a war equipment called as the Fabrication Machine that seeks to eradicate all human existence with the help of a dysfunctional stitchpunk, innovators, and survivors. Original and witty, this post-apocalyptic sci-fi film is a refreshing change from the usual dismal and monotonous offerings in this genre of science fiction.

5. Akira (1988)

Akira (1988)

In Japan, Akira is regarded as one of the most influential anime films ever made. Neo-Toyko, a dystopian, corrupt mega-city dominated by gangs and militaristic tyrants, is the setting of the film, which was adapted from the manga by Katsuhiro Otomo.

Tetsuo, a member of a juvenile bike gang, realizes he has telekinetic powers after an accident. Akira employs cyberpunk elements and action movie sequences. It’s no secret that the Japanese military has been holding persons with similar extrasensory abilities, like Tetsuo, in captivity in order to utilize them. The fate of a prior prisoner, a telekinetic youngster called Akira, is revealed to Tetsuo after being detained against his will.

6. The Iron Giant (1999)

The Iron Giant, a political cartoon picture set in 1957, combines Cold War-era fear with Frankenstein monster motifs. Hogarth, a nine-year-old kid, discovers a 50-foot-tall robot floating in a lake. Hogarth’s compassion for the creature goes a long way in helping it recover from its ordeal.

The Iron Giant is perfectly harmless, save from its enormous size and penchant for devouring large chunks of metal. In contrast to this, the U.S. military sees the robot as a threat the moment they learn about it.

7. Paprika (2006)

Paprika (2006)

Yatsutaka Tsutsui’s science fiction novel, Paprika, was transformed into a breakthrough Japanese animated film. Animated by Satoshi Kon, this film explores the depths of the human soul.

She has developed a machine that lets her penetrate the dreams of her patients. A subliminal detective, Paprika, is born from Atsuko’s reincarnation as Paprika. She sets out in search of the thief’s trail of sensory devastation after her machine is taken.

8. Wizards (1977)

Following nuclear war, the last humans have become mutants and the Earth’s original legendary occupants have emerged after millennia of repression.

Wizards is a 1970s cartoon tale about two twin wizards, who happen to be competing for control of the world, who are both ghouls and sorcerers. He’s a kind guy but his brother Blackwolf wants to wage war against all remaining forces of good.

9. Ghost In The Shell (1996)

Ghost In The Shell (1996)

Ghost in the Shell is a classic anime that depicts life in a dystopian, post-apocalyptic Tokyo. All of humanity has been brought together in a matrix-like network known as Puppet Master in 2029. Kusanagi, a cyborg police officer, is assigned to lead the inquiry.

Kusanagi begins to question her own identity as a fleshy piece of artificial intelligence as she pursues Puppet Master. Because of this, the film’s title reflects the protagonist’s journey toward self-discovery.

10.  Heavy Metal (1981)

In order to transfer stories from Heavy Metal, a fantasy graphics magazine, to the big screen, a team of illustrators and animators came together to create this epic film. A green ball called Loc-Nar, which holds all of the world’s evil, connects each of the five stories.

Loc-Nar leaves a trail of death and ruin in its wake as it travels across time and space. Toward the end of the film, an Amazonian woman rides on a gigantic bird. Black Sabbath, Cheap Trick, and Devo are just some of the bands included in the film’s soundtrack.