WARNING: spoilers. A Post-apocalyptic film is a sub-genre of science fiction, and is set in a world or civilization after nuclear war, plague, or some other general disaster. This list looks at ten of the ultimate films in this genre and it hopefully differs from the usual films found on these lists by introducing a few films that are less well known these days.
The Quiet Earth (based on the novel of the same name) explores how a person can go mad when he realizes he’s the only one left on Earth following a terrible catastrophe that he helped cause. The portrayals of Hobson’s madness and how he pulls back from the brink are both satisfying—especially because the latter happens before Hobson realizes that he’s really not alone. The Quiet Earth ends on an uncertain note (a real WTF?!? moment) that makes you think long after the movie ends.
The second film in the Mad Max trilogy begins with a classic prologue back-story; a narrator informs us that the world has “crumbled and…The cities have exploded;” and that the world had gone to (Nuclear) war. The survivors roam the countryside in feral biker gangs with oil the main commodity, the film’s comic-book post-apocalyptic/punk style has been copied endlessly. Max (Mel Gibson) is an ex police man with a suped up sports car and sawn off shotgun who defends a band of settlers working an oil refinery against the crazed gang.
This was the second film of George A Romero’s Living Dead series and shows, in larger scale, a zombie epidemic. In the film the dead have risen and prey on human flesh. The film follows a group of survivors of the outbreak who barricade themselves inside a shopping mall. As time passes the undead try to get in to the mall as the outside society has collapsed. The novelty of their situation begins to wear and one of the women becomes heavily pregnant. By this time, all emergency broadcast transmissions from the outside world have stopped which gives a real sense of claustrophobia and isolation. Their end comes as a gang of bikers break into the mall and, in the process, let in the zombies.
This story is centered on a microcosm of a post-apocalyptic society where food is so rare it’s extremely valuable and used as currency. The story centers on an apartment building with a delicatessen on the ground floor. The owner of the eatery also owns the apartment building and he is in need of a new maintenance man since the original “mysteriously” disappeared. A former clown applies for the job and the butcher’s intent is to have him work for a little while and then serve him to quirky tenants who pay the butcher in grain. The clown and butcher’s daughter fall in love and she tries to foil her father’s plans by contacting the “troglodytes”, a grain eating sub-group of society who live entirely underground. The “trogs” are possibly the most sensible of the lot, as they see food as food and not money. This movie reflects a type of science fiction called la Nouvelle Vague.
In the aftermath of an atomic war, much of humanity has been destroyed. Only Australia remains, but time is short as the winds will inevitably spread nuclear fallout and everyone knows they have only a few months to live. Among those coming to terms with the inevitable is a U.S. navy officer, Cmdr. Dwight Towers, whose submarine and crew were at sea when the holocaust occurred; Moira Davidson, a free-spirit who develops a close attachment to Towers; Julian Osborne, whose dream is to win the Australian Grand Prix automobile race; and Lt. Cmdr. Peter Holmes, who is as concerned about his wife and newborn child’s future as his own.
In a devastated Paris in the aftermath of WWIII, The few surviving humans begin researching time travel, hoping to send someone back to the pre-war world for food, supplies and maybe a solution to their dire position. One man is haunted by a vague childhood memory that will prove fateful. This is the film that stands here in place of 12 monkeys, which borrows heavily from it. Everyone has seen 12 monkeys, not everyone has seen La jetée – but they should.
This was one of the great 70’s sci fi classics before the before the big FX of Star Wars and Close Encounters made it cheesy by comparison. After a Nuclear war, people live in a domed city of the future where everyone dies (“Renewed”) at age 30. Anyone who disagrees and tries to escape the city is tracked down by Sandmen and murdered. Logan, a Sandman is forced to search for “Sanctuary” – a place to which people have apparently escaped. Classic ’70s stuff that also spawned a TV show.
Day of the Triffids is a 1962 British film unusual at the time for being in colour. It has had a huge influence on future classics like 28 days later and many Zombie films. Triffids are giant plants with the ability to kill with a poisonous sting; a man wakes up in hospital with his eyes bandaged and has missed an unusual meteor shower that has blinded most people on Earth. He finds the population struggling to stay alive with this sudden affliction, some cooperating, and some fighting: after just a few days society is collapsing with the Triffids preying on the survivors. This is a classic must-see film.
Made in 1971 based on the novel I Am Legend and ten times better than the recent Will Smith remake despite some cheesy make up and effects, the Omega man is the classic last man on Earth story. A Biological war has killed most of the world’s human population. Army Colonel Robert Neville (Charlton Heston) is immune and rules Los Angeles by day trying to track down and kill the other survivors who have joined together as “The Family” – a cult of night dwelling mutants infected with a plague from the fallout of the war. At night he is a prisoner in his own fortified home as the Family seeks to destroy him.
A sci fi legend, Planet of the Apes won many awards in its day and was one of the first sci-fi franchises with 4 sequels and a TV show. 3 Astronauts Led by Taylor (Charlton Heston) crash-land on an unknown planet in the year 3978 A.D. after a 2006-year voyage (during which the crew ages only 18 months). The three set off through a desert and find an oasis. They decide to go swimming and then the fun begins: they are captured by Gorillas on horseback. The gorillas take Taylor to “Ape City,” where he discovers that the apes, who can talk, are in control and humans, who cannot talk, are hunted and enslaved. Taylor manages to escape the Ape City to “The Forbidden Zone” where he discovers the apes’ world was, at one time, controlled by humans, but at some point in history, apes developed and the roles reversed. The ending is one of the great twists of cinema:
As chuck rides on the beach with his new mate a familiar object comes into view and Heston sinks to his knees bellowing “they finally did it & god dam you all to hell!” the picture zooms out to reveal the remains of the Statue of Liberty, half buried in the shoreline – showing that all along, they were actually in Earth’s future.
Notable Mentions: The Day After, 28 Days Later, The Postman, Waterworld, A Boy and his Dog






























@nicoleredz3: (60):
–blogball–i got this one–ill save ya 5 minutes, i have the dvd right here and watched it again yesterday after being reminded of it on this list…..
testament was directed and produced by lynne littman and came out just after ‘the day after’, fall of 1983…–cast included jane alexander (the ring, in love and war), lucas haas (the kid from witness in his first role, william devane (marathon man, space cowboys), mako iwamatsu (the sand pebbles), kevin costner, rebecca de mornay, etc
jane alexander was nominated for a best actress oscar, but lost to shirley macclain (terms of endearment)….it did win a christopher award.
this movie was fairly disturbing….took place on one street, in one neighbourhood, in the same house, in the matter of about 3 months. it was almost like a character study, examining normal everyday people in the time immediately following a nuclear bombing. the most interesting thing, i found, was that the movie concentrated on the lives of the people, without divulging *who* sent the bomb, and understating the nuclear war aspect. by concentrating on the interpersonal relationships (and rather b***** aspects of everyday life), rather than the socio-political impact of nukes, the viewers were able emerse themselves in the lives of this family. this film is extremely apolitical, which sets it apart from other cold war type films at the time (wargames, the day after, special bulletin, threads, etc).
definately worth checking out if this subject matter intresting to you…..
@dewkmosi: d’oh! My BAD!
hi all, I saw “Threads” yesterday in light of this list – and wohoo – it’s a bloody BLOODY well made movie. It’s one of those movies they used to make before shock and awe became the mainstream of no-brainer flicks like SAW. After watching a movie like Threads you feel like your guts have been torn out and your throat cut. Shockingly real. GRIPPING Stuff. It’s one of those movies you Never forget as long as you live. It doesn’t have a happy ending. I miss those days.
@oliveralbq: The Day After. Woah. I think Threads was a UK remake of this movie in an accute effort to stem the threat of nuclear war. IT WORKED. This movies was appearantly watched by a whopping 100million viewers on the date of broadcast; many of whom were traumatised and used a 1-800 counselling service the ABC Network operated during the ‘event’.
“Reagan wrote in his diary that the film “left me greatly depressed,” and that it changed his mind on the prevailing policy on a nuclear war. In 1987 during the era of Mikhail Gorbachev’s glasnost and perestroika reforms, the film was shown on Soviet television. During the signing of the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty at Reykjavik, Meyer [director] received a telegram from President Reagan that said, ‘Don’t think your movie didn’t have any part of this, because it did.’”
–
NOTE: Why would anybody want to have nightmares by watching one of these films? Well, afterwards I realised just how grateful I am that life as we know it is still going on. PS. It helps to have plenty of comfort food to munch on.
@oliveralbq:
Thank you!
@oliveralbq (61): A very good review mate – of a movie still unforgetable after 15 years
Just one typo: Wargames (1983) was the movie starring Matthew Broderick as the computer hacker. The War Game (1965) was the short (45min) docu-drama made for television but subsequently banned by the BBC. Peter Watkins – he’s still hardcore to this day.
@Lifeschool:
I cannot stand Matthew Broderick, but is “Wargames” any good?
Thanks to this website, I’m slowly becoming a movie addict… That’s a good thing.
@Lifeschool: (64):
–thank ya thank ya …. i always mix those up….
and chime in on this:@nicoleredz3: (65): “is “Wargames” any good?”
—not really…i mean it was better 27 years ago, but watching it now, it is so so very very dated, using archaic terminology, completely preposterous jumps in plot, and asanine premeses. in other words, its very juvenile, and would be best suited quite far down your cinematic priority list.
@oliveralbq: (66)
Dang… Thanks for the heads up!
When I run out of good stuff to watch, maybe THEN I’ll give it a go.
Great movies, all.
I just rewatched “On The Beach” last week, and was just as moved as I was the first time I saw it at the Cinearama Dome.
@oliveralbq: asinine is the perfect word to encapsulate that movie!
What?! I freakin loved Wargames! Although…that is to say it was a favorite of mine as a kid…and it’s been at least 12-15 years since I’ve seen it, so it’s probably not all I remember it to be. And I like Project X better.
Also, I adore Matthew Broderick…
@Dk: (70)
So nice to meet another complete alternate of myself…
The Matrix?
…anyone?
Check “The Noah” that probably should be up there on top but still an obscurity. Not for everyone: no zombies, no special effects, not even color but…
I would nominate Threads, Testament and The Day After if you’re looking for movies which really explore the feelings one might have if some of these things actually happened. I remember Jason Robards returning to his bombed-out house looking for his wife who is obviously dead. He finds a man camping out in what used to be his living room. They fight but they’re both old and dying of radiation poisoning. They end up kind of hugging each other and Robards keeps saying “What have we done. What have we done.” For post apocolyptic cheese, I also like The Stand, if you can mentally eliminate Molly Ringwald’s presence from the entire movie.
Michael Haneke’s TIME OF THE WOLF. When society crumbles, I wager it’ll play out pretty much how this film depicts it will.
What? No Soylent Green?
'Mad Max 2' is the best sci-fi / action movie ever made, if only the US were able to produce anything as near as good on the same budget.
@Ban: I notice when people talk about horror/dystopia/post-apocalyptic movies, they NEVER mention Soylant Green. I must admit, I have never seen it (it is hard to get ahold of where I am) but I think the premise is absolutely sound, and could be an amazing movie.
I really wish someone would make a REAL movie about Day of the Triffids, that follows the book properly, and where the triffids don't look like Christmas Trees. The BBC 1981 mini was good, except it did deviate slightly from the book. I found some of the good political themes missing. (but that's just my opinion;))
Could Eraserhead be considered somewhat post apocalyptic? I've always thought that was supposed to be set in a post-apocalytpic world, after a nuclear disaster, with the baby being a result of it. But I don't know for sure. Freaky though!
What about Blindness? Damn, that was a good movie/book.
This list sucks, the "editing" of the original sucks & pretty much most of the comments sucks. I can think of better "post-apocalypse" movies off the top of my head – Bladerunner, Terminator 2, the Matrix – all superior post-apocalypse flicks. Road Warrior is a good selection. Planet of the Apes and Day of The Triffids are two of the most over-rated pieces of garbage in the history of sci-fi cinema in my opinion. 28 Days Later is a better telling of the triffids idea, .., the new I Am Legend is a very good film also in my view – much better than the predecessors.
I haven't seen "Omega Man", but being a fan of the book "I Am Legend" by Richard Matheson, it sounds like it would ***** me off as much as the Will Smith fiasco did. The only movie to even do that story justice so far was "Last Man On Earth" starring Vincent Price. Much closer to the book than the new movie was, and from the sounds of it, "Omega Man" too.
book of eli
Add New Comment thanx for the option,
I'm glad to see La Jetée in this list!
I can't believe The Stand was not on the list.
I agree with wyckid1 – The Stand should be on this list. I made a list of post-apocalyptic flicks with a water (or lack of water) theme, as a lot of them have that trend. Please feel free to comment on it: http://aswm.org/wordpress/1230/strange-wetlands-i…
Shame on you for not listing this movie: http://www.classicfilmguide.com/indexe7ec.html?s=…
The World, the Flesh and the Devil (1959)
Honorable mention:
When Worlds Collide (1951
Wow! i was pretty sure Delicatessen would end up here. Great list Lazri!
Blade Runner
It deserves to be in this list.;
well i dont know any of these movies was expecting ones from 2010
Wow! I Remeber these movies from when i was a kid but now i am 40 and I Need a date night with my husband good selection!! Now i just need to fin the kids a sitter!
It,s Great to see Mad Max got a mention and it get,s u thinking could the world really turn out like that let,s hope not.
What abt “threads” it’s an epic pre- and post- apocalyptic movie that even though it’s old is creepy and realistic.
boo.
too much self-proclaimed expertise going on in this list and in the comments…
randall being the voice of the “***** the mainstream” and the OP being the voice of “mostly mainstream” when in fact most of the movies mentioned are just *****e.
as for i am legend or other hollywood visual effect vehicles, just remember – their sole job is not to be adaptations as much as “original” interpretations so that hollywood can make box office bank.
good post-apoc the postman? waterworld? really?
kevin costner = trouble…lets not forget the awful dances with wolves and some of the finest, aka, most mundane narration of all-time…sounds like forest gump reading ghost whisperer. (the books truly not that much better, historically inaccurate *****e)
why bash dawn of the dead?
the original was pretty stunning, the implication of fear being rooted in philosophical risks such as, the world is done, no more farming, etc – everyone is becoming a mindless zombie…and yet, these flesh eaters still carry out the day-to-day activities they know as second nature to motor skills….consumerism.
*****e.
instead of making lists like these or playing armchair general, how about some of you go make some films? eh?
yeah, didnt think so.
How do you not have The Matrix listed? 0.o
I remember watching some apocalytic type film when I was a youngun. For the life of me I cannot remember its title. It was a typical 80′s film set in USA. The main parts I remember is there was a girl who went to meet her boyfriend at the cinema, he was the projectionist. They fall asleep in the projection room and when they wake up in the morning everyones disappeared. The boyfriend quickly gets killed off and she ends up wandering the city alone. Being a woman she ends up in a large mall checking out all the freebies on offer when, from what I recall, her sister turns up (whats the chances) They end up being pursued by people who have mutated and wear cloaks as a mutant fashion statement. The only other thing I recall about the film is the ending. They meet up with some guy who ends up savin them from the mutants and they end up driving off into the distance in a red trans am/porsche (fancy sports car). If any of you have any ideas as to what this films is I would love to hear from you. I do take on board it sounds very similar to a lot of other apocalyptic films.
Does anyone know of an old science fiction movie ( perhaps late 40′s or 50′s) in which there are only a few survivors, one being a nice black man. I think there is only one woman, and the stigma is that she prefers the black guy, but everyone says she must not be with him….I cannot for the life of me find this movie.
9 is an honorable.mention, and the modern day Dawn of the Dead was pretty good.
What is the best search engine http://google.com or http://yahoo.com?
Le Derniere combat?
What about Book of Eli?
Why wasn’t there anything made after the invention of the internet on here? This list is old news, granted they are all good, but there are a lot of movies made since 2000 that should be on this list. Most notably, Children of Men, 28 Days later and Sunshine, just to name a few. This list is good, but you should have named it “Top 10 Ultimate Post-Apocalypse movies made more than 10 years ago.”
thanks for giving an honorable mention to The Postman.
A victim of 1990s critic’s love/hate affair with Kevin Costner, it’s criminally underrated.
These movies suck 100%
I have seen better.
Like that one movie about a guy and his dog trying to find a Utopia City that runs on Nuclear Power. They fight for survival and eventually he must eat his beloved childhood pet (dog). He also happens to own a Jeep that runs on anything. (unfortunately i cannot remember the name of that movie)… There is also resident evil extinction, doomsday, dawn of the dead, akira, probably even more that i cant remember…
How many of these films have you actually seen? A blanket statement like “all these movies suck” with no reasoning? Fail.
“This Is Not A Test” gives great insight into the mindset of those in 1962 who wondered what the end of the world might be like. Remember, the Cuban Missile Crisis was going on at that time, as well.
It’s a little slow, but interesting as it depicts a collection of strangers thrown together by a crisis. Nice twist at the end, too.
It was an independent film by Frederic Gadette.
how can you possibly think any of them films look good, how can films that fake be good your number 1 is from the 60′s
Come on… gtfo with your bulgarian movies.
Good day! This is kind of off topic but I need some guidance from an established blog. Is it very difficult to set up your own blog? I’m not very techincal but I can figure things out pretty fast. I’m thinking about making my own but I’m not sure where to start. Do you have any points or suggestions? Appreciate it
The 1984 Day of the Triffids British miniseries is far Superior to the cheesy 1962 film. Although not necessary, both films fail to point out that triffids, the sickness, and the lights in the sky that caused blindness were all the man-made results of biological warfare or research. It’s a little more clear in the book, which is awesome.
what? didnt you ever hear of book of eli? i never even heard f half of these movies.
I am so glad to see Delicatessen listed on here. It is an amazing movie with a fantastic soundtrack and of course the irresistible Dominique Pinon as Louison the clown. The synchronicity scene alone is worth watching.
Very nice post. I simply stumbled upon your blog and wanted to say that I have truly enjoyed browsing your blog posts. After all I will be subscribing to your feed and I am hoping you write once more soon!
Hi there, just turned into aware of your weblog through Google, and located that it is truly informative. I’m going to watch out for brussels. I’ll appreciate should you proceed this in future. Numerous other folks will be benefited from your writing. Cheers!
9 was another great post apocalyptic movie. It’s one of my favorite movies. Also Akira and V for Vendetta
We are a gaggle of volunteers and opening a brand new scheme in our community. Your web site provided us with valuable information to work on. You’ve performed a formidable activity and our entire community will be grateful to you.
Name
Name
I just like the valuable info you supply in your articles. I will bookmark your weblog and check again right here frequently. I’m somewhat certain I’ll be told lots of new stuff right here! Best of luck for the next!
Tremendous things here. I am very happy to peer your post. Thanks so much and I am looking ahead to contact you. Will you please drop me a mail?
What about Soylent Green? I have seen almost all of those listed but find that you left off this one!!
Name