Science Fiction is some of the coolest stuff we can watch, read, or listen to. It’s cool to see how accurate or nearly accurate it can be. Likely the best example of this is Jules Verne, who wrote tremendous novels like The Journey to the Center of the Earth (<\/em>1864) and Twenty Thousand Leagues Under The Sea<\/em> (1870). Verne discusses several crazy concepts for the time. Some of the ideas brought up were thought to ve impossible back then. In fact, Verne mentions what we’d one day call the submarine, Space Travel, the jukebox, and the holograph. While Verne was right about a lot of amazing things in his books, he wasn’t perfect. In fact, in his book From The Earth To The Moon<\/em>, he was terribly wrong about how we’d get to the moon. He claimed we’d shoot people into space as projectiles with a big gun. Obviously we aren’t journeying to the center of the Earth anytime soon either.<\/p>\n
No matter how accurate some writers are about the future, they are victims of the time they live in. It’s not Verne’s fault that he wrote his books in the 1800s and lacked the knowledge we have today. Yet this is what happens when you write about the future. Those future people can look back to see how accurate you were. Verne is one of many amazing writers who were both right and wrong about his future predictions. Yet some were completely wrong, and this involves far more than books. That is what our article is about, the science fiction out there that ended up getting the future very wrong. Enjoy!<\/p>\n
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The movie 2012<\/em> came out in November of 2009. The movie randomly threw us a few years into the future where we’re led to believe the world is pretty much ending. 2012<\/em> throws out the fact that the Earth’s core has heated up far too much, thus causing earthquakes, plate shifts, tsunamis, and more.<\/p>\n
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Timecop<\/em> is a 1994 movie that stars 90s action phenom, Jean-Claude Van Damme. The movie is set only 10 years into the future, in 2004. The writers hoped for too much by 2004, but probably the biggest the movie pushes through is the self-driving car. They claimed it would be in use all over the place by then.<\/p>\n
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The Science Fiction movie, Heatseeker,<\/em> was so 90s that it’s sad. Actor\/Martial Artist Keith Cooke is the main star of the movie. While he’s a real martial artist with a massive background in kickboxing that helped make the fights realistic, the movie itself never made sense. Released in 1995, it claims that somehow by 2019, the biggest sport in the world will be Cyborg Kickboxing.<\/p>\n
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We hope Death Race 2000<\/em> never becomes a reality. Released in 1975, the movie pushes that a new style of racing will be a huge form of entertainment. For drivers to get points, they must run over a pedestrian ideally killing them. The society wanted more population control, hence the “Death” Race part.<\/p>\n
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Weird science fiction film, Strange Days<\/em>, released in 1995, was written and produced by James Cameron. His ex-wife Katheryn Bigelow directed it. While Bigelow was praised, the movie fell flat mostly. The main issue was the future Cameron envisioned.<\/p>\n
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The Foundation Series<\/em>, written by brilliant science fiction writer Isaac Asimov, is tremendous. While Asimov came up with some ideas that eventually became a reality, he did not get certain things right with the Foundation Series<\/em>. The books were written from 1942 to 1993, so this is understandable. Asimov wrote in the series that a major Galactic Empire had been reigning for 12,000 years.<\/p>\n
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2001: A Space Odyssey<\/em> is an incredible movie that most would rank as one of the best science fiction movies of all time. However, we must address the elephant in the room. The Stanley Kubrick film came out in 1968, so a lot of this movie has issues scientifically based on now known material about our planets.<\/p>\n
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The I am Legend<\/em> film is based on a novel of the same name that was written in by Richard Matheson. The novel released in 1954, around 53 years before the film released in 2007. To their credit, they kept the 2009 year in the movie that Matheson had in his novel.<\/p>\n
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The Island<\/em> is a 2005 big-budget Michael Bay film that starred Scarlett Johansson and Ewan McGregor. The movie centers around two people, Lincoln Six Echo and Jordan Two Delta who live on an isolated compound. It’s claimed that the world around them has become too terrible for human life, yet a mysterious island is perfect.<\/p>\n
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Zenon: Girl Of The 21st Century<\/em> is one of the most popular Disney Channel Original Movies ever. The original came out in 1999, with two more following. However, it’s set in 2049. In the movie, Zenon lives on a massive space station with her parents. They work as scientists for a corporation led by a man named Parker Wyndham.<\/p>\n
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The book Fahrenheit 451<\/em> came out in 1953, well before the internet was even a thing. In the book, written by Ray Bradbury, we’re given a dystopian future 1999, but they never really offer a specific place. We’re led to believe it’s the American Midwest, however.<\/p>\n
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Videodrome<\/em>, released in 1983, is set in the Canadian 1980s mostly. The story surrounds Max Renn, the President of CIVIC-TV who is tired of their current programming and wants a change. One day, he comes across Videodrome, a Malaysian plotless TV show. Upon watching it, Renn sees brutal murders happening to anonymous victims.<\/p>\n
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The concept of the original Terminator<\/em> movie was that a Terminator robot would be sent back in time from the year 2029 to kill Sarah Conner. She’s apparently a crucial problem in the future, meaning her past death prevents her future existence. The Terminator<\/em> released in 1984 and gave themselves a huge window to time-wise.<\/p>\n
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The Running Man<\/em> takes place after a World Economic crash in 2017, which results in the United States becoming a totalitarian police state. They are able to censor any cultural activity they want, thus giving us game shows to entertain the population. “The Running Man” is one of those game shows where convicted criminals fight for their lives.<\/p>\n
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Escape from New York<\/em> came out in 1981 and stars Kurt Russell. Yet the movie is panned for being unrealistic. Apparently, in 1988, there is a 400% increase in crime. This results in the U.S. turning the entire city of Manhattan into a massive maximum-security prison. A 50-foot wall surrounds the prison and all bridges have been blown up.<\/p>\n
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The original Back to the Futur<\/em>e, starring Christopher Lloyd and Michael J. Fox came out in 1985. The movies were all released within 5 years in real-time but they had to always return to the year of the original film, 1985. Instead of the past, the second film focused on the future.<\/p>\n
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The Lost in Space<\/em> TV series ran from 1965-1968. The series mentions a few things that are problematic. First, the show is set in the year 1997. They predict a lot of impressive yet still nonexisting material.<\/p>\n
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Soylent Green<\/em> came out in 1973 and stars Charlton Heston. It’s actually based on a science fiction novel called Make Room! Make Room!<\/em> by Harry Harrison, published in 1966. The main plot is that by 2022, we’re going to be living in a dystopian world. However, this all begins at the tail-end of the 90s as we head into 2000.<\/p>\n
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The 12 Monkeys<\/em> movie stars Bruce Willis and Brad Pitt and was released in 1995. They gave themselves an over 20-year window but missed the mark a lot. The plot of the film is that a virus is released in 1996, which is now wiping out mankind heavily by 2035.<\/p>\n
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Demolition Man<\/em> was released in 1993, based on the book Brave New World<\/em> by Aldous Huxley, released in 1931. In the movie, by 1996, we’ve found ways to cryogenically freeze people. We apparently decided to use this concept for the California Cryo-Penitentiary. This results in most prisoners being put on ice until 2032.<\/p>\n
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Robocop: The Series<\/em> reportedly takes place around 4 to 5 years after the original movie, yet it ignores the events of Robocop 2 & 3. We never get exact dates but we’re led to believe its set in the late 90s and early 2000s. This can vary from episode to episode. The show features a future Detroit that has a severe financial collapse due to high crime and financial issues.<\/p>\n
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A Scanner Darkly<\/em> is a pretty weird but well-liked science fiction film. It’s unique in how it looks and feels, but the story has some flaws. The movie is based on a novel of the same name by brilliant science fiction author Phillip K. Dick. It was published in 1977 but the movie came out in 2006.<\/p>\n
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Daybreakers<\/em>, released in 2009, made a bold prediction about what would happen 10 years later. While the movie claims that a random virus released in the 2009 year, we’re sent forward 10 years in the movie. The virus apparently causes humans to essentially become vampires. As a result, the human population decreases constantly, leaving vampires lacking blood and becoming psychotic.<\/p>\n
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The original Blade Runner<\/em> came out in 1982 but is based in 2019. Going over 30 years into the future usually is smart, but their future seemed a bit too “optimistic” with tech and progress. Meanwhile, it’s behind on other things.<\/p>\n
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A Clockwork Orange<\/em> is a really weird yet slightly creepy science fiction 1971 Stanley Kubrick-led film based on the book of the same name. The book was written by Anthony Burgess and released in 1962. The timeframe of the story isn’t given but we’re led to believe, based on what was present, that we’re somewhere around 1995.<\/p>\n
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It seems science fiction media will never tire of robotic enhancements. This happens when someone perhaps has a critical injury that brings them near death. Perhaps a government agency is involved too! They’ll be given replacements for their body to cybernetically enhance them then go out on random world-saving adventures.<\/p>\n
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The TV show Buck Rogers in the 25th Century aired from 1979-1981. The show centers around NASA\/USAF Pilot, Captain William Anthony “Buck” Rogers. He launches into space via a spacecraft in May of 1987 but issues arise once he gets there. A life-support malfunction in the aircraft essentially freezes Buck.<\/p>\n