The best sci-fi movies on Max right now

    By Blair Marnell
Updated May 7, 2025

It’s a good sign when Max picks up a relatively high-profile sci-fi movie like Companion, because the lineup of science fiction movies on this movie has been stagnant for months.

While it’s a good thing for subscribers when Max’s lineup of films is fairly consistent, it doesn’t do them any favors when there are rarely new options in this particular genre. Even certain movies like Ready Player One — which were released by Warner Bros. Pictures — aren’t always on Max. So its return is welcome, for however long that lasts. You can catch these films and the rest of the best sci-fi movies on Max below.

In need of some more streaming recommendations? We also have guides to the best new movies to stream, the best movies on Max, the best shows on Max, and what’s new on HBO and Max that are worth looking through.

Year: 2025 Runtime: 1 hour, 38 minutes Director: Drew Hancock

There are several twists in Companion, but the movie doesn’t waste any time revealing that Iris (Sophie Thatcher) is an AI-powered android… which was news to Iris herself! As far as Iris knew, she was just a normal young woman who was happily in a relationship with Josh (Jack Quaid). The revelation about Iris’ true nature comes out during a retreat when she is physically attacked and forced to defend herself.

Josh may have made a few modifications here and there to make Iris seem as human as possible. That was probably a mistake, because now that Iris knows the truth, she’s reevaluating a lot of things, including her relationship with Josh. She thought they made each other happy. Now, she’s going to make her own choices.

Year: 2018 Runtime: 2 hours, 20 minutes Director: Steven Spielberg

Steven Spielberg’s adaptation of Ernest Cline’s Ready Player One isn’t all that different from our world. The people in that story spend way too much time online to get away from real life, but at least they have an incredibly realistic VR world called the OASIS to visit. The VR tech in reality has a long way to go to reach that. James Halliday (Mark Rylance), the co-creator of OASIS, never intended for humanity to become so overly reliant on it. Before he died, Morrow hide secrets in the game that will give the first person who finds them complete control over OASIS.

Wade Watts (Tye Sheridan), Samantha Cook (Olivia Cooke), Helen Harris (Lena Waithe), and their other friends initially compete with each other for the grand prize before joining forces as the High-5. However, IOI CEO Nolan Sorrento (Ben Mendelsohn) won’t give up control of OASIS without a fight, even if that means unleashing violence and death in the real world.

Year: 2025 Runtime: 1 hour, 33 minutes Director: Kyle Mooney

If the Y2K bug had been as catastrophic as feared, it still wouldn’t have mirrored the events of the sci-fi horror comedy that shares its name. Y2K starts off innocently enough as a teenager named Eli (Jaeden Martell) pines for the girl of his dreams, Laura (Rachel Zegler), who already has a boyfriend to kiss on New Year’s Eve.

But as the clock hits midnight and the year 2000 arrives, technology goes haywire, and even household appliances are attempting to kill any humans they can catch. Eli and Laura are among the lucky survivors of the first attack, but they’re now in a world where humanity’s days may be numbered. At this rate, they’ll never live to see 2001.

Year: 1984 Runtime: 1 hour, 48 minutes Director: James Cameron

It took less than two hours for director James Cameron to establish Arnold Schwarzenegger’s title character in The Terminator as one of the most fearsome monsters in cinematic history. The T-800 Terminator may not have mastered human behavior or speech, but it is absolutely relentless in its mission to kill Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton), a waitress who has no idea why it wants her dead.

Kyle Reese (Michael Biehn), a time traveler from the future, does his best to protect Sarah and to explain why she’s so important to the future of humanity. But there won’t be much of a future for the world if the Terminator manages to track them down. Even four decades later, the original film in the franchise is still thrilling to watch.

Year: 2012 Runtime: 1 hour, 36 minutes Director: Pete Travis

It often surprises American fans to learn that Judge Dredd is considered a comic book icon in the United Kingdom on par with Batman. Especially since the Judge Dredd comics are Britain’s dark vision of America’s future as Mega-City One, a place where Judges act as police and prosecutors before handing down sentences on the spot. The 1995 Judge Dredd movie starring Sylvester Stallone never captured that dystopian concept as well as the 2012 reboot did.

Dredd may not have the big budget that its predecessor had, but it has fantastic action and a great duo in the lead with The Boys‘ Karl Urban as Judge Dredd and Olivia Thirlby as a rookie Judge named Cassandra Anderson. During a training mission for Anderson, she and Dredd are locked in a towering apartment complex owned by a drug lord known as Ma-Ma Madrigal (Game of Thrones‘ Lena Headey). And Ma-Ma has placed a price on Dredd and Anderson’s heads that’s so high it will even attract attention from their would-be allies.

Year: 2017 Runtime: 2 hours, 17 minutes Director: Luc Besson

The French sci-fi comic Valerian and Laureline influenced several sci-fi filmmakers, including George Lucas. In 2017, director Luc Besson attempted to make the duo movie stars, but only one got top billing in Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets. The film’s name comes from Alpha, which we call the International Space Station. Eight centuries into the future, the ISS has expanded with representatives from all across the universe and become a shining city in space.

However, this city has a dark secret that haunts the dreams of Valerian (Dane DeHaan), as much as he’d rather focus on trying to woo his partner, Laureline (Cara Delevingne). While investigating reports of a dangerously irradiated part of Alpha, Valerian and Laureline stumble across the information that could tear down everything humanity has poured into the station.

Year: 1981 Runtime: 1 hour, 57 minutes Director: Terry Gilliam

Forget about that Time Bandits TV revival that Apple TV+ released. Terry Gilliam’s Time Bandits movie is dazzling and imaginative in a way that the show could never be. The story follows a young boy named Randall (David Rappaport) who joins a group of dwarves led by Fidgit (Star Wars‘ Kenny Baker) who have a map that allows them to go anywhere in history. They subsequently become thieves and steal from various eras during their wild misadventures.

In their travels, Randall and his new friends meet Robin Hood (John Cleese), Agamemnon (Sean Connery), Napoleon (Ian Holm), and more historical figures. They’ve also seriously angered the Supreme Being (Ralph Richardson), and drawn the attention of Evil (Tron‘s David Warner), who wants the map for himself.

Year: 2015 Runtime: 2 hours, 8 minutes Director: The Wachowskis

The Jupiter in Jupiter Ascending is played by Mila Kunis, a young woman with no idea about her secret royalty in a space dynasty of humans from other worlds. For most of her life, Jupiter has simply been as ordinary as anyone else. But suddenly, Jupiter finds herself targeted by intergalactic assassins.

Jupiter’s only protector is Caine Wise (Channing Tatum), a character with a name a bit on the nose after the reveal of his genetic history. Caine’s goal is to get Jupiter away from Earth and out of immediate danger. However, he’s only succeeded in bringing her closer to the faction that’s trying to kill her and steal her claims.

Year: 2024 Runtime: 1 hour, 24 minutes Director: Brandon Vietti

“Who watches the Watchmen?” Alan Moore and artist Dave Gibbons’ seminal superhero deconstruction has already been adapted into live action by director Zack Snyder. Damon Lindelof then followed with a Watchmen sequel series for the comic in 2019 on HBO. The recently released animated film Watchmen Chapter 1 is a second attempt at adapting the original story without some of the changes that Snyder made for his film.

Babylon 5 creator J. Michael Straczynski, who wrote some of the Before Watchmen prequel comics, penned the new script for veteran animation director Brandon Vietti. In this alternate vision of 1985, Richard Nixon (Max Koch) is still president, and America’s supremacy is assured by the power of Doctor Manhattan (Michael Cerveris). Someone is trying to change that, and the renegade vigilante Rorschach (Titus Welliver) remains the only one who sees the signs of a conspiracy against former superheroes. Nite Owl/Dan Dreiberg (Matthew Rhys), Silk Spectre/Laurie Juspeczyk (Katee Sackhoff), and Ozymandias/Adrian Veidt (The Last of Us‘ Troy Baker) don’t take Rorschach’s warning seriously. By the time that changes, it may be too late to stop what has already been set in motion

Year: 2011 Runtime: 1 hours, 45 minutes Director: Rupert Wyatt

The movie may be called Rise of the Planet of the Apes, but it’s really the rise of Caesar (Andy Serkis), the world’s first chimpanzee with nearly human levels of intelligence. Because of the circumstances of his birth, Caesar doesn’t really fit in with either apes or humans, but he spends most of his formative years as a surrogate son to Dr. Will Rodman (James Franco), a man who is using an experimental drug to treat Alzheimer’s patients like his father, Charles (John Lithgow).

Despite Will’s good intentions, his wonder drug has adverse effects, and it can also greatly enhance the intelligence of primates. When Caesar is forced out of Will’s home and made to endure abuse by his new human captors, he fights back. And Caesar knows all too well how to make his new tribe of primates just as smart as he is.

Year: 2015 Runtime: 2 hours, 22 minutes Director: Ridley Scott

The story of how author Andy Weir self-published The Martian on his website before it became a best-seller is almost as inspiring as the novel he wrote. Don’t expect to see any alien Xenomorphs in this Ridley Scott film. The only hard turn into science fiction for this movie is that humanity’s space shuttle technology finally allows NASA to send a manned mission to Mars.

Unfortunately for Dr. Mark Watney (Matt Damon), a freak accident on the planet’s surface leads his crew to believe that he’s perished. Left alone on Mars, Mark has to figure out how he can survive four long years before the next mission. Once Mark makes contact with Earth, the debate about whether to rescue him forces Commander Melissa Lewis (Jessica Chastain) and the rest of her crew to make some hard choices.

Year: 2024 Runtime: 1 hour, 55 minutes Director: Adam Wingard

After fighting each other in Godzilla vs. Kong, the two monsters have retreated into their separate corners three years later in Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire. Kong gets to rule down below in the Hollow Earth while Godzilla extends his dominance over his fellow Titans on the surface. Unfortunately, the good times can’t last forever because there’s a threat brewing that could have devastating consequences for the world. Neither Kong nor Godzilla can win this battle by themselves. But together, these two giant creatures may prove to be the salvation of the entire world… if they can figure out how to get along.

Year: 2009 Runtime: 1 hour, 44 minutes Director: Vincenzo Natali

When scientists try to play God, they almost always get burned. Splice is no exception, as Clive Nicoli (Adrien Brody) and Elsa Kast (Sarah Polley) disregard their employers’ wishes by creating a human/animal hybrid whom they call Dren (Delphine Chanéac). Dren may have some human characteristics, but she is far from what we would call humanity.

Additionally, Clive and Elsa’s attempt to isolate Dren backfires, as she continuously mutates and evolves. Dren’s a fast study when it comes to men and women, and she has no feelings of paternal love for her creators. If she’s this dangerous now, how deadly will Dren be in her final form?

Year: 2024 Runtime: 2 hours, 46 minutes Director: Denis Villeneuve

Box office hits have been few and far between in 2024, but Dune: Part Two did so well that it secured a future for the third film, Dune: Messiah. Timothée Chalamet reprises his as Paul Atreides, the last living male heir of his house following the destruction of his family by House Harkonnen. Now living among the Fremen with his mother, Lady Jessica (Rebecca Ferguson), Paul quickly wins the admiration of his new tribe. And several of their number believe that Paul is a figure of prophecy who will lead them to reclaim their world.

One of the few Fremen who refuses to bow to Paul is Chani (Zendaya), the young woman who loves him. Elvis‘ Austin Butler co-stars as Feyd-Rautha, an even more ruthless member of House Harkonnen who stands in the way of Paul’s ascension. Even if Paul can defeat Feyd-Rautha, his victory may have dire consequences for the entire universe.

Year: 1987 Runtime: 1 hour, 43 minutes Director: Paul Verhoeven

The original RoboCop strikes a balance between serious sci-fi and truly hilarious satire that never veers into farce. Director Paul Verhoeven pulled that off with the help of his leading man, Peter Weller, who still manages to convey RoboCop’s humanity with just the lower half of face for most of the movie. In the near future, the corporation OCP is in charge of Detroit’s police department. When OCP Senior President Dick Jones (Ronny Cox) stumbles with his brutally lethal ED-209 law enforcement robots, his rival, Bob Morton (Miguel Ferrer), sees his chance to push the RoboCop project.

But for a man to become a machine, he has to die first. And it’s not long before Officer Alex Murphy (Weller) is murdered by one Jones’ criminal underlings, Clarence Boddicker (Kurtwood Smith). Upon his revival as a cyborg, Murphy is initially the perfect candidate to be RoboCop. Yet soon enough, Murphy remembers who he was and how he died. This sends Murphy on a quest for justice that he may not be able to finish by himself.

Year: 2021 Runtime: 2 hours, 36 minutes Director: Denis Villeneuve

Impatient viewers may have a hard time with the modern adaptation of Frank Herbert’s Dune because it really takes its time getting to a cliffhanger ending for the upcoming sequel. Unlike David Lynch, director Denis Villeneuve had the room to space things out, so to speak. The result is one of the most lavish sci-fi epics in decades.

Timothée Chalamet stars as Paul Atreides, but a good deal of this film belongs to Paul’s father, Duke Leto Atreides (Oscar Isaac). Despite his suspicions that he was sent to Arrakis to fail, Duke Leto genuinely believes he can improve the lives of the native Fremen and bring peace to the most important planet in the universe. Unfortunately for House Atreides, their enemies have already made plans to destroy them, and Paul may be the only one who can keep his family line alive.

Year: 1968 Runtime: 2 hours, 23 minutes Director: Stanley Kubrick

The word “masterpiece” tends to get thrown around a lot in film criticism. But 2001: A Space Odyssey more than lives up to the hype even decades later. director Stanley Kubrick and writer Arthur C. Clarke crafted an unforgettable sci-fi epic that is told more through visuals than anything spoken aloud.

Keir Dullea and Gary Lockwood star respectively as Dr. David Bowman and Dr. Frank Poole. Together, David and Frank are part of a deep space mission to investigate a massive alien monolith that may be connected to the origins of humanity millions of years earlier. Unfortunately for David and Frank, their onboard artificial intelligence, HAL 9000, is developing some very dangerous and paranoid tendencies that may threaten more than just their mission.

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