The Future Is Here
We may earn a commission from links on this page

21 Pictures that Sum Up the Whole History of Science Fiction

We may earn a commission from links on this page.

Science fiction is the genre of ideas — but it's also given us some unforgettable pictures along the way. Every era in science fiction's history has shown us a new vision of the strange and futuristic, and one image can spawn a million reflections in your mind's eye.

Here are 21 unforgettable pictures that showcase the whole history of science fiction.

Advertisement

Top image: the iconic Transporter effect from the original Star Trek.

Advertisement
Advertisement

1. A Trip to the Moon (1902) - based on the novels From the Earth to the Moon by Jules Verne and The First Men in the Moon by H.G. Wells, Georges Méliès created this image of humans reaching our only natural satellite.

2. Thomas Edison's Frankenstein (1910) - the first real science fiction novel became one of the first movies ever made, by the man who helped put electricity in everyone's home

Advertisement

3. Metropolis (1927) - Just seven years after the play Rossum's Universal Robots, Maria the robot seduced the workers — and the world.

Advertisement

4. Lensmen by E.E. "Doc" Smith (1937), and the rise of Golden Age science fiction pulps

Advertisement

5. Superman (1938) - the first real superhero, and the alien who captured our imaginations

Advertisement

6. Foundation (1942) - Isaac Asimov invents psychohistory and cements science fiction as the genre of the technocrat. Image by Michael Whelan

Advertisement

7. The Day The Earth Stood Still (1951) - the first 1950s paranoia movie is also the most thoughtful, and the iconography of Klaatu's ship and Gort helped define a decade

Advertisement

8. Godzilla (1954) - the Kaiju era begins, and the fear of atomic destruction has its poster creature

Advertisement

9. Forbidden Planet (1956) - Robby the Robot became the most famous of the 1950s robots, coinciding with the rise of space age "Googie" style

Advertisement

10. 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) - There are so many great images in Kubrick's film, but the scenes of weightlessness, and the panic of floating out of the airlock, might be the most influential

Advertisement

11. Ringworld by Larry Niven (1970) - the era of the "huge object in space" included some insane vistas and mind-blowing concepts, but none more awesome than Ringworld. Image by Cortney Skinner

Advertisement

12. The New Wave - around the same time that authors like Ursula K. Le Guin, Michael Moorcock and Samuel Delany were reinventing science fiction, artists like Jean Giraud/Moebius were creating new ways of seeing

Advertisement

13. Star Wars (1977) - Hard to pick one influential image from Star Wars — but this one shot, of the stars turning into streaks of light by uncanny speed, defined the exhilarating speed and vastness of George Lucas' galaxy, and was copied endlessly.

Advertisement

14. Alien (1979) - H.R. Giger's design aesthetic influenced everything from the Borg in Star Trek to every great science fiction horror movie

Advertisement

15. Blade Runner (1982) - It's hard to pick one image for the rise of Cyberpunk — I almost went with the cover of Mirrorshades — but Blade Runner helped define the genre's aesthetic

Advertisement

16. Tron (1982) - and meanwhile, Tron gave us our first computer VFX and our first glimpse of a virtual world

Advertisement

17. Akira (1988) - the iconic anime classic brought us a new vision of apocalypse and mutant havoc

Advertisement

18. Jurassic Park (1993) - the first realistic CG creatures and the foundation for the past 20 years of immersive storytelling

Advertisement

19. The Matrix (1999) - gave us "bullet time" but also a new way of looking at reality as constituted by computers

Advertisement

20. The New Space Opera - from Iain M. Banks to Paul McAuley, from Firefly to Battlestar Galactica, from Halo to Mass Effect, epic space adventures rose again

Advertisement

21. The Road by Cormac McCarthy (2006) - in many ways, the past several years have been defined by post-apocalyptic and dystopian worlds, from The Hunger Games to The Walking Dead.