10 Greatest Sci-Fi Thrillers of the Last 15 Years, Ranked

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A bald Emma Stone as seen from above in Bugonia Image via Focus Features

Ryan Heffernan

Published May 22, 2026, 12:05 AM EDT

Ryan Heffernan is a Senior Writer at Collider. Storytelling has been one of his interests since an early age, with his appreciation for film and television becoming a particular interest of his during his teenage years. 

This passion saw Ryan graduate from the University of Canberra in 2020 with an Honours Degree in Film Production. In the years since, he has found freelance work as a videographer and editor in the Canberra region while also becoming entrenched in the city's film-making community. 

In addition to cinema and writing, Ryan's other major interest is sport, with him having a particular love for Australian Rules football, Formula 1, and cricket. He also has casual interests in reading, gaming, and history.

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Combining the high-concept allure of commanding genre filmmaking with propulsive stories of heart-racing excitement, science fiction-thriller cinema has long been a stalwart of breathtaking, mind-bending artistry regardless of whether it takes the form of major studio blockbusters or low-budget indie gems. The last 15 years alone exemplify this, with sci-fi thrillers from all corners of the world earning critical acclaim and audience fanfare for their compelling narratives, thematic resonance, and visual majesty.

From Oscar-winning sensations that leave viewers awe-struck and spellbound with their frenetic storytelling to skewering, socially-minded films that live on as hidden gems on streaming, these movies stand among the best and most absorbing sci-fi thrillers ever made. They're pulsating, powerful, and perfectly perplexing, embroiling the watcher in all the twists and turns on display while establishing themselves as quintessential modern masterpieces that all science-fiction fanatics and thrill-seekers need to see.

10 'The Platform' (2019)

The Platform, Miharu looks up, sat on the platform which is covered in half-eaten food Image via Netflix

Subtlety be damned, The Platform launches into a dystopian dissection of class structure, capitalist greed, and the unfairness of any form of social hierarchy with a venomous fervor that is gripping from the opening minutes. Set in a bizarre vertical prison where inmates are fed from a descending platform, leading those at the top to gorge themselves while those on the lower levels starve, it follows Goreng (Iván Massagué) as he sets out to change the system so that everyone may eat.

The Spanish movie became a surprise sensation when it was released globally on Netflix in 2020, watched by over 56 million households in its first four weeks on the streaming platform. Audiences responded to its commanding message of social inequality and the evil desperation it breeds, as well as its unique, high-concept premise. Its popularity was certainly buoyed by the sense of containment many felt during the COVID-19 pandemic, but The Platform’s allure extends far beyond its close-knit confines, flaunting a simple, minimalist ire regarding wealth and poverty that resonated with millions.

9 'Coherence' (2013)

Emily and Mike looking intently in Coherence. Image via Oscilloscope Laboratories

A phenomenal triumph of indie cinema, Coherence weaves an absorbing and mind-melting story of existential dread, parallel universes, and the severity of consequences. It transpires on the night that Miller’s Comet passes Earth, following eight friends whose strained relations are put to the test when they learn the passing of the comet has created several mirror realities, each with different versions of themselves. As they scramble to make sense of the chaos, they also discover they may be in a fight for their lives against their alternate selves.

Coherence is truly ingenious in its ability to present a mercilessly elaborate and intricately plotted movie and yet have every surge of tension and every dread-filled discovery hit with visceral wrath. Indeed, it's a hidden gem of modern sci-fi suspense laced with callous character-driven drama. It epitomizes sci-fi at its most convoluted and confounding, delivering a wonderfully winding head-scratcher that has become one of the most underrated movies of any genre of its decade.

8 'Snowpiercer' (2013)

Chris Evans, Jamie Bell & John Hurt in a crowd looking ahead and feeling anxious in Snowpiercer. Image via Radius TWC

In true Bong Joon Ho fashion, Snowpiercer excels as an enthralling and exuberant immersion in fast-paced genre storytelling that, beneath its captivating surface of entertainment and spectacle, holds a piercing social commentary as well. In an apocalyptic future, Earth has descended into an ice age. What few survivors remain live on a train traversing the globe. Eager to shatter the train’s bleak class structure, Curtis (Chris Evans) leads the impoverished to rise against the ruling class and take control of the engine room.

Snowpiercer combines a visually stunning and immersive dystopian setting and pulsating outbursts of true action thriller cinema. It also shines as a claustrophobic and chaotic push towards freedom and liberty where poverty is grimy and ferocious, and wealth, in all its indulgent lavishness, is coldly decadent. Always probing at questions of morality, fairness, and humanity even as its violent suspense takes centre stage, Snowpiercer is an engrossing sci-fi thriller with plenty to say.

Collider Exclusive · Sci-Fi Survival Quiz Which Sci-Fi World Would You Survive? The Matrix · Mad Max · Blade Runner · Dune · Star Wars

Five universes. Five completely different ways the future went wrong — or sideways, or up in flames. Only one of them is the world your instincts were built for. Eight questions will figure out which dystopia, galaxy, or desert wasteland you'd actually make it out of alive.

💊The Matrix

🔥Mad Max

🌧️Blade Runner

🏜️Dune

🚀Star Wars

TEST YOUR SURVIVAL →

01

You sense something is deeply wrong with the world around you. What do you do? The first instinct is often the truest one.

APull on every thread until I understand the system — then figure out how to break it. BStop asking questions and start stockpiling — food, fuel, weapons. Questions don't keep you alive. CKeep my head down, observe carefully, and trust no one until I know who's pulling the strings. DStudy the patterns. Every system has a rhythm — learn it, and you learn how to survive it. EFind the people fighting back and join them. You can't fix a broken galaxy alone.

NEXT QUESTION →

02

In a world of scarcity, what resource do you guard most fiercely? What we protect reveals what we believe survival actually requires.

AKnowledge. If you understand the system, you don't need resources — you can generate them. BFuel. Everything else — movement, power, escape — runs on it. CTrust. In a world of fakes and informants, a truly reliable ally is rarer than any commodity. DWater. And after water, information — the two things empires are truly built on. EShips and credits. The galaxy is big — you survive it by being able to move through it freely.

NEXT QUESTION →

03

What kind of threat keeps you up at night? Fear is useful data — if you're honest about what you're actually afraid of.

AThat reality itself is a lie — that everything I experience has been constructed to keep me compliant. BA raid. No warning, no mercy — just the roar of engines and then nothing left. CBeing identified. Once someone with power decides you're a problem, you're already out of time. DBeing outmanoeuvred — losing a political game I didn't even know I was playing. EThe Empire tightening its grip until there's nowhere left to run.

NEXT QUESTION →

04

How do you deal with authority you don't trust? Every dystopia has a power structure. Your approach to it determines everything.

ASubvert it from the inside — learn its rules well enough to weaponise them against it. BIgnore it and stay out of its reach. The further from any power structure, the better. CAppear to comply while doing exactly what I need to do. Visibility is the enemy. DManoeuvre within it carefully. You can't beat a system you refuse to understand. EResist openly when I have to. Some things are worth the risk of being seen.

NEXT QUESTION →

05

Which environment could you actually endure long-term? Survival isn't just tactical — it's physical, psychological, and very much about where you are.

AUnderground bunkers and server rooms — cramped, artificial, but with access to everything that matters. BOpen wasteland — brutal sun, no shelter, constant movement. At least the threat is honest. CA dense, rain-soaked city where you can disappear into the crowd and nobody asks questions. DMerciless desert — extreme heat, no water, and something enormous living beneath the sand. EThe fringe — backwater planets and busy spaceports where the Empire's attention rarely reaches.

NEXT QUESTION →

06

Who do you want in your corner when things fall apart? The company you keep is the clearest signal of who you actually are.

AA tight crew of believers who've seen behind the curtain and have nothing left to lose. BOne or two people I'd trust with my life. Any more than that and someone talks. CNobody, ideally. Alliances are liabilities. I work alone unless I have no choice. DA community bound by shared hardship and mutual survival — people who need each other to last. EA ragtag team with wildly different skills and total commitment when it counts.

NEXT QUESTION →

07

Where do you draw the line — if you draw one at all? Every survivor eventually faces a moment that tests what they're actually made of.

AI won't harm the innocent — even the ones who'd report me without hesitation. BI do what I have to to protect the people I've chosen. Everything else is negotiable. CThe line shifts depending on who's asking and what's at stake. DI draw a long-term line — nothing that compromises my people's future, even if it'd help now. ESome lines, once crossed, can't be uncrossed. I know which ones they are.

NEXT QUESTION →

08

What would actually make survival worth it? Staying alive is one thing. Having a reason to is another.

AWaking others up — dismantling the illusion so no one else has to live inside it. BFinding somewhere — or someone — worth protecting. A reason to keep moving. CAnswers. Understanding what I am, what any of this means, before time runs out. DLegacy — shaping the future in a way that outlasts me by generations. EFreedom — for myself, for others, for every world still living under someone else's boot.

REVEAL MY WORLD →

Your Fate Has Been Calculated You'd Survive In…

Your answers point to the world your instincts were built for. This is the universe your temperament, your survival instincts, and your particular brand of stubbornness were made for.

The Matrix

You took the red pill a long time ago — probably before anyone offered it to you. You're a systems thinker who can't help but notice the seams in things.

  • You're drawn to understanding how the system works before figuring out how to break it.
  • You'd find the Resistance, or it would find you — your instinct for spotting constructed realities is the machines' worst nightmare.
  • You function best when you have access to information and the freedom to act on it.
  • The Matrix built an airtight prison. You'd be the one probing the walls for the door.

Mad Max

The wasteland doesn't reward the clever or the well-connected — it rewards those who are hard to kill and harder to break. That's you.

  • You don't need comfort, community, or a cause larger than the next horizon.
  • You need a vehicle, a clear threat, and enough fuel to outrun it — and you're good at all three.
  • You are unsentimental enough to survive that world, and decent enough — just barely — to be something more than another raider.
  • In the wasteland, that distinction is everything.

Blade Runner

You'd survive here because you know how to exist in moral grey areas without losing yourself completely.

  • You read people accurately, keep your circle small, and ask the questions others prefer not to answer.
  • In a city where humanity is a legal designation rather than a feeling, you hold onto something that keeps you functional.
  • You're not a hero. But you're not lost, either.
  • In Blade Runner's world, that distinction is everything.

Dune

Arrakis is the most hostile environment in the known universe — and you are precisely the kind of person it rewards.

  • Patience, discipline, and political awareness are your core strengths — and on Arrakis, they're survival tools.
  • You understand that the long game matters more than any single victory.
  • Others come to Dune and are consumed by it. You'd learn its logic and earn its respect.
  • In time, you wouldn't just survive Arrakis — you'd begin to reshape it.

Star Wars

The galaxy far, far away is vast, loud, and in a constant state of violent political upheaval — and you wouldn't have it any other way.

  • You find meaning in being part of something larger than yourself — a cause, a crew, a rebellion.
  • You'd gravitate toward the Rebellion, or the fringes, or whatever pocket of the galaxy still believes the Empire's grip can be broken.
  • You fight — not because you have to, but because standing aside isn't something you're capable of.
  • In Star Wars, that willingness is what makes all the difference.

↻ RETAKE THE QUIZ

7 'The Call' (2020)

Actor Park Shin-hye as Seo-yeon, knelt in a dark, ramshackle house, looking worriedly at her cell phone in The Call. Image via Yong Film

Combining time-loop hysteria with a visceral psychological tension that borders on outright horror, The Call is an underappreciated gem of heart-stopping cinema from South Korea that thrives on the back of its brilliant writing, atmospheric intensity, and striking performances. Original, chilling, and exceptional at ratcheting up the suspense, it unfolds as two women in the same house 20 years apart are connected by a mysterious phone. Through their discussions, it becomes clear that 1999’s Oh Young-sook (Jeon Jong-seo) is a serial killer determined to change the past of Kim Seo-yeon (Park Shin-hye) if she doesn’t help her change her own fate.

A sinister spin on butterfly effect science-fiction that sees minor actions in the past have monumental consequences in the present day, The Call is an enthralling concept realized with outstanding technical prowess and sharp narrative pacing. Maintaining tension throughout the entirety of its 112-minute runtime, the South Korean thriller is a hidden gem of scorching psychological suspense that plays with fundamental sci-fi tropes beautifully.

6 'Source Code' (2011)

Jake Gyllenhaal as Colter Stevens works to defuse the train bomb in Source Code Image via Summit Entertainment

2026 marks 15 years since Source Code was released, and the taut sci-fi thriller remains both a cult hit of the genre and an underrated treat of modern cinema. Jake Gyllenhaal stars as Colter Stevens, an army officer who is continuously sent into a simulated recreation of a commuter train bombing with the objective of identifying the culprit. With just eight minutes to investigate the busy train with each simulation, Stevens grows increasingly frustrated as he struggles to find results, especially when he learns the simulation is based on a real attack that could just be the start of a serial bomber’s reign.

Director Duncan Jones—in just his second directorial effort after his ravishing debut with 2009’s Moon—extracts suspense from the mounting complexity of the train bombing, ensuring every re-entry into the simulation presents more questions than answers. It thrives off its storytelling precision and intelligence, even implementing a tender romantic subplot that feeds the narrative rather than distracts from it. Ceaselessly compelling, exuberantly exciting, and thrilling from start to finish, Source Code is a triumph of modern science-fiction suspense.

5 'Gravity' (2013)

Sandra-Bullock in an astronaut suit in Gravity Image via Warner Bros.

One of the defining cinematic sensations of 2013, Gravity stunned the masses with its intense, suffocating atmosphere, outstanding visual effects, and Sandra Bullock’s blistering lead performance. Such was its esteem that it won seven Academy Awards from a staggering 10 nominations, more than any other movie throughout the 2010s. Moreover, it also became one of the highest-grossing movies of its year with a box office gross of $723.7 million.

It follows Dr. Ryan Stone (Bullock), an engineer on her first space mission, as she finds herself in a terrifying fight for survival when space debris destroys her shuttle while spacewalking, leaving her stranded in the cosmos and having to quickly conceive a plan to return to Earth. Viscerally eerie and relentlessly suspenseful, Gravity soars off the back of Alfonso Cuarón’s astute direction to deliver a harrowing, albeit visually astonishing, nightmare of desperation and isolation.

4 'Bugonia' (2025)

Custom image of Emma Stone as Michelle for Bugonia interview Image via Focus Features

Mixing sci-fi thrills with psychological drama, dark comedy, and skewering social satire, Bugonia stands comfortably among the wildest and most wonderful movies released in recent years. Directed by the ever-compelling Yorgos Lanthimos, it revolves around two conspiracy theorists who abduct the CEO of a major pharmaceutical conglomerate, believing her to be a member of a malevolent alien race carrying out a plan to eradicate humanity by targeting Earth’s honeybees.

It is absurd, and unashamedly so. The genius of it is how Lanthimos leans into its lunacy to conjure grounded, palpable dread. Bugonia procures bouts of laughter and moments of pathos, but its truest form is the air of quiet angst that permeates beneath the surface throughout every scene of the movie. Also featuring Jesse Plemons and an Oscar-nominated Emma Stone at the top of their game, Bugonia shines as a confounding and complicated parable of modern-day hysteria that is difficult to grasp in full, but is never anything other than utterly transfixing.

3 'Nope' (2022)

A subtle pivot that yielded engrossing results, Nope sees Jordan Peele pivot ever-so-slightly away from the cerebral sci-fi horror of his first two movies, leaning more in the direction of blockbuster thrills. An awe-inspiring experience of mounting suspense, sci-fi spectacle, and large-scale storytelling, it follows a Hollywood horse wrangler and his sister as they attempt to document footage of what they believe to be an alien ship lurking in the skies above their ranch.

As has become a trademark of Peele’s, Nope excels at combining pulsating R-rated intensity with sci-fi tropes while also incorporating elements of comedy, character drama, and stirring social commentary into the fold. Its emphasis on the potential dangers of exploiting a phenomenon for self-gain is particularly pointed in today’s world, and the inflections of Western drama and ravishing, yet often chilling excitement. Nope is a uniquely ensnaring treat of sci-fi suspense that captures a special sense of adventurous and harrowing blockbuster brilliance.

2 'Predestination' (2014)

Sarah Snook and Ethan Hawke in Predestination Image via Pinnacle Films

An intricate terrorist investigation, an unreservedly confounding exploration of identity, and a time-bending, paradoxical head-scratcher, Predestination has garnered a significant cult following off the back of its shocking complexity. However, it is far more than just a mind-scrambling sci-fi. Indeed, the Australian psychological thriller thrives as an enrapturing, time-jumping investigation and a character-driven drama charged with outstanding performances and nuanced, contemplative characters.

Ethan Hawke stars as an enigmatic temporal agent traveling through time in pursuit of an elusive terrorist known as the “Fizzle Bomber.” When he meets John (Sarah Snook), a scorned young writer with a tortured past, he offers him the chance to take revenge on the man who ruined his life while aiding in the investigation. It’s dense, demanding, and often disturbing, but within its most confronting depths is where Predestination finds its most emotionally loaded and intriguing moments. It is both an unforgettable sci-fi mystery thriller and a piercing character drama loaded with gobsmacking twists.

1 'Ex Machina' (2014)

Alicia Vikander as Ava looking at human faces on a wall in Ex-Machina. Image via A24

Written and directed by genre maestro Alex Garland, Ex Machina is a sophisticated and sharply contained slow-burn thriller that uses its integral sci-fi elements to posit questions related to everything from the dangers of A.I. to the abuse of power within tech companies, and even the nuances of gender dynamics in the modern world. Caleb (Domhnall Gleeson) is a young programmer who wins a week-long getaway to his boss’ remote luxury home. Upon a rival, he learns he has been recruited into an experiment to test the intelligence and capabilities of a robot named Ava (Alicia Vikander).

Through subtle revelations and precise plot beats, Ex Machina excels as a simmering thriller of concealed character motives and unfurling cat-and-mouse intrigue. Dialogue and interactions are the film’s version of gunfire and explosions, with private conversations and subtextual inferences carrying the intensity. It is no surprise that Ex Machina also complements the might of its story with three incredible performances, rousing thematic depth, and an unshakable sense of atmospheric unease. It is one of the defining movies of the 21st century so far and an all-time classic of sci-fi suspense.

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