More UFO movies to check out......

 

E.T. (1981) . Yes, many people consider it a classic. The trouble is he was a little too cute. The scenes of the bumbling government containment reps are funny, but phoning home with a TI Speak and Spell is pushing it.
 
Invasion: UFO (1972) . A TV movie compilation of the best of the UFO TV series as the mysterious SHADO monitors alien activity around the Earth and protects us from the advancing menace. Gerry Anderson at his best.
 
Foes (1977). A ufologist’s dream come true: A UFO investigator single-handedly saving the world from the aliens.
 
Glitterball(1977) . A surprisingly well-done kids’ movie about an alien and its tiny spherical spaceship that must be protected from narrowminded grownups. Wait a minute, that sounds like another movie about kids and an alien...
 
Sphere (1998) . A much larger sphere found at the bottom of the ocean, which is where this panned movie should be sunk permanently. What on Earth was Dustin Hoffman doing in this?
 
Stardust Memories (1980) . When Woody Allen meets aliens, they of course advise him to tell funnier jokes and make better movies. Another highlight: a frighteningly accurate depiction of a UFO conference with wide-eyed believers.
 
Spaced Invaders (1990) . Silly movie in which aliens hear a rebroadcast of War of the Worlds and decide to help the Martians invade us on Hallowe’en. Cute.
 
Flight of the Navigator (1986) . A young boy disappears and reappears several years later flying an alien spaceship that thinks he is its pilot. Pee Wee Herman is sentient?
 
The Mothman Prophecies (2002) .* Okay, so there’s no flying saucer, but this is still so much a part of the UFO milieu it’s hard not to consider this movie as a marker for ufology. Dramatic buildup of menacing MIBs and the associated paranoia. (Never mind if it really happened.)
 
Space is the Place (1974) . What Liquid Sky tried to do with acid rock is done better in this movie, since avant-grade jazz is more likely to be preferred by aliens. Sun Ra and his band from outer space land in Oakland and face persecution for being too interesting.
 
*batteries not included (1987) . Miniature aliens help Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy battle evil businessmen. Yes, even robotic aliens can have babies.
 
The Thing From Another World (1951) . The classic first-contact story in which an alien spacecraft is found frozen in ice.
 
MIB (1997) and MIB II (2002) . Taken as a pair, this couple of movies has neat special effects,, but does little for ufology in any way. Of course, they were never designed as anything else.
 
The Cat From Outer Space (1978) . A nice, dated Disney movie that predated Cats and Dogs. Ken Berry and Sandy Duncan and Harry Morgan and Roddy McDowall and McLean Stevenson, all in one silly romp!
 
Independence Day (1996) . Infamous for its ridiculous premise that an Apple computer could be compatible with anything at all, let alone an alien computing system. Best scene: when UFO nuts welcome the giant saucer hovering directly above them, getting what they deserve.
 
The Man Who Fell to Earth (1976) . Who else but David Bowie could play an alien this convincingly? Best scene: Buck Henry in the spaceship, trying to be straight.
 
Starship Invasions (1977) . Robert Vaughn was in fine form battling Christopher Lee in this movie. Most memorable was Vaughn’s character’s ability to save the Earth with a pocket calculator.
 
Liquid Sky. Tiny aliens get an energy boost when someone has an orgasm. Nothing more needs to be said. (1982).
 
The Ambushers. Dean Martin as superspy Matt Helm trying to recover a secret American saucer from the evil South American baddies. Bears no resemblance to the original novel. (1967).
 
The Flying Saucer (1950) . The CIA and the Russians trying to get to the bottom of a wave of saucer sightings in Alaska. Kind of fun, really, for its time, but kind of lame.
 
Flying Saucer Daffy (1958) . Described as one of the worst Three Stooges movies, they try to fake a saucer photo and make money.
 
Mars Attacks! (1996) . Tim Burton’s homage to science fiction B movies of the 50s, with over-the-top performances and dumb in-jokes.
 
Dreamcatcher (2003) . A movie that can’t decide if it’s a UFO film, a monster movie, a comedy, a coming-of-age movie or a thriller. Stand By Me meets Predator.
 
Signs (2002) . Water and a baseball bat? We don’t need to use laser cannons to defeat highly-advanced aliens? Suspenseful film that really grabs you and plays on your fears, but, geez...
 
War of the Worlds (1953) . Heat rays zap armies and buildings as the Martians invade Earth. Not quite the way Wells described it, but good effects for its day.
 
Space Jam (1996) . Marvin and his friends invade Earth and challenge Larry Jordan to a game of basketball. Bugs Bunny saves the day.
 
Taken (TV) (2003) . Very ambitious ten-episode miniseries which follows UFO abductees and their progeny to a climactic conclusion proving that aliens are smarter than we are, but need to work on that sex thing. Nice shots of British Columbia pretending to be Maine.
 
Coccoon(1985) and Coccoon: The Return (1988) . Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy again, with Don Ameche! That’s some big saucer, but I guess you need it if you keep losing your pods on the ocean floor.
 
UFO Fever (2002) . Trailer trash decide to fake a UFO sighting to win a million dollars. Billed as “an all-improvised comedy,” it sure looks like it. I’m still in shock.
 
Scary Movie 3 (2003) . The third installment of the series, this time Charlie Sheen trying to help the President (Leslie Nielsen) save the world from the evil girl from The Ring and aliens who pee out of their index fingers. Highly silly, and with a tribute to Airplane! at the end.


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