10 December 2025

The Most Depressing Sci Fi Endings Ranked By How Hard They Break You

Audiences pretend they want catharsis, but they keep coming back to the science fiction films that leave the theater quiet and the mind humming long after the credits fade. There is something magnetic about a dark ending, something that feels more honest than a last minute save.

 These stories refuse the comfort of symmetry or the lie that everything can be repaired if the hero tries hard enough. Instead they stare into the places where fear, doubt, and consequence live...

Here's the sci-fi films with the most depressing endings. 

Planet of the Apes & Beneath the Planet of the Apes: Apocalyptic Endings Explained

1968 & 1970 • Directors: Franklin J. Schaffner, Ted Post • Starring: Charlton Heston, Roddy McDowall, Kim Hunter, James Franciscus

Franklin J. Schaffner’s Planet of the Apes, part of the saga mapped out in this chronological Apes guide, begins as a cosmic adventure and ends as a tombstone for humanity. Charlton Heston’s George Taylor crash lands with fellow astronauts on what appears to be a distant planet ruled by intelligent apes, with humans reduced to mute, hunted primitives. The apes’ culture feels eerily familiar. Their scripture hints at old sins. Their scientists, played by Roddy McDowall and Kim Hunter, see too much in Taylor to accept the dogma they were raised on. The tone is pure late sixties science fiction, political and pulpy at once, and every scene quietly nudges you toward a truth the characters cannot see yet. When Taylor rides along the coastline and finds the half buried Statue of Liberty, the film tells you in one image that he never left home. He did not find another planet. He found the future of his own.

Ted Post’s sequel, Beneath the Planet of the Apes, takes that revelation and follows it all the way to extinction. A new astronaut, Brent, played by James Franciscus, searches for Taylor and discovers a hidden society of mutated humans living in the ruins under the apes’ city. They worship a doomsday bomb. Their liturgy is annihilation. While General Ursus marches the apes into war on the surface, Taylor and Brent stumble into a confrontation that no one can win. Taylor, mortally wounded and disgusted with both sides, triggers the weapon that destroys the Earth. A calm narrator confirms the planet’s death, and the story simply ends. For anyone new to these films, especially if you come in through modern franchise culture, it is a shock. The first movie ends with heartbreak. The second ends with erasure. In two steps the series walks from revelation to oblivion and leaves you staring into a silence that feels final.

The Mist (2007): One Of Sci Fi Horror’s Bleakest Twist Endings

2007 • Director: Frank Darabont • Starring: Thomas Jane, Marcia Gay Harden, Laurie Holden

Frank Darabont turns Stephen King’s novella into a pressure cooker. Thomas Jane’s David Drayton walks into a supermarket with his son for supplies after a storm and watches a living nightmare roll in with the fog. The mist outside hides taloned, tentacled things, but the real monsters gather in the aisles as fear strips away civility. Marcia Gay Harden’s Mrs Carmody sprouts a cult around her own fanaticism, offering up sacrifice and certainty in a situation where no one knows anything. 

The store becomes a test chamber for human nature. Stay inside and submit to a new theology, or step outside and accept that the world may be ending. As dug into at length in this breakdown of The Mist’s twist and again in this companion piece, every choice looks like a bad one.

the mist film ending scene

Eventually David leads a handful of survivors into the fog, driving until the car and the fuel and the hope all run out. Surrounded by mist and sounds he cannot see, he uses the last bullets to kill his companions, including his own son, to spare them from what he believes is a worse fate. He steps out of the car begging to die and is met instead by rumbling engines and flamethrowers. The military has arrived. The fog is clearing. Survivors march past him to safety. The world is being saved in the exact moment he realises he has murdered the people he was trying to protect. For first time viewers it feels like a punch to the lungs. The ending is not bleak because the monsters won. It is bleak because David has to live with the knowledge that they did not.

Soylent Green (1973): Dystopian Sci Fi Ending Revealed

1973 • Director: Richard Fleischer • Starring: Charlton Heston, Edward G. Robinson • Based on: Make Room! Make Room! by Harry Harrison

Richard Fleischer’s Soylent Green adapts the bones of Harry Harrison’s novel Make Room! Make Room! into a grimy, overcrowded New York where the oceans are dying, the air is thick, and food is scarce. Charlton Heston plays Detective Thorn, a cop who scavenges, sweats, and cheats his way through life while the city staggers on under corporate rule. His only real human connection is Sol Roth, played by Edward G. Robinson in his final performance, an old man who remembers the world before it broke. The murder of a high ranking executive leads Thorn into the orbit of Soylent Industries, the company feeding the masses with brightly branded green wafers. The deeper he looks, the more the supply chain feels like a cover story.


When Thorn finally breaks into the processing plant and realises that the dead are being turned into food, the film shifts from detective story to confession. Society has literally begun to eat itself rather than change. As explored in this analysis of Soylent Green’s bleak vision, the horror is not just what is happening, but how normal it has become. In the final scene he lies wounded on a stretcher, shouting “Soylent Green is people” to men who have every incentive not to listen. The system will roll on. The wafers will keep coming. The ending offers revelation without revolution, which might be the darkest verdict of all.

Brazil (1985): Terry Gilliam’s Nightmare Ending

1985 • Director: Terry Gilliam • Starring: Jonathan Pryce, Kim Greist, Michael Palin • See also: Gilliam’s IMDb profile

Terry Gilliam’s Brazil is the rare film that feels like a dream someone had about bureaucracy during a fever. Jonathan Pryce’s Sam Lowry drifts through a Ministry where paperwork is sacred and human beings are errors waiting to happen. A typo in the system ruins lives. Everything hums with paranoid absurdity. Gilliam’s recurring obsessions with broken systems and fragile dreamers, mapped out in essays like this deep dive on Brazil and the broader survey of his work in this Gilliam sci fi overview, all converge here. Sam’s only escape is his inner life, where he grows wings, rescues a woman, and flies away from the ducts and forms and gray uniforms. When he meets Jill, played by Kim Greist, and recognises the woman from his dreams, he decides that fantasy might be something he can drag into reality.

brazil film ending explained


The state does not care about his inner life. 

When the system marks him as a terrorist through yet another error, he is strapped to a chair in a torture chamber, interrogated by an old friend, and broken. The film shows us a deliriously staged escape in which resistance fighters arrive, the city collapses, and Sam disappears into the countryside with Jill. Then the frame pulls back. 

He is still in the chair, humming the film’s theme, his mind gone. The government has won. The only freedom left is a catatonic dream. 

For anyone digging into Gilliam’s work through his career profile, this ending reads like his ultimate nightmare: a world where the imagination survives, but only because the body no longer does.

Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978): Paranoia And A Chilling Final Shot

1978 • Director: Philip Kaufman • Starring: Donald Sutherland, Brooke Adams, Leonard Nimoy

Philip Kaufman’s remake of Invasion of the Body Snatchers moves Jack Finney’s paranoia from small town America to a San Francisco that already feels halfway alien. Donald Sutherland’s Matthew Bennell is a health inspector who thinks he is chasing down a contamination scare. 

People complain that their loved ones are not themselves anymore. The first half plays like a conspiracy thriller, with Brooke Adams, Jeff Goldblum, and Leonard Nimoy pulling the story in different directions while the city grows colder and more mechanised around them. 

The realisation that alien spores are replacing humans with perfect copies arrives slowly, then all at once.

The final image is the film’s legacy. Nancy approaches Matthew in the street, believing he is the last human she can trust. He turns, points, and emits the piercing pod person scream, and the camera pushes in on her horror. It is not just that she has lost a friend. She has been walking through a world that was already over. The pod people own the city now. The original TheAstromech review of the 1978 Invasion digs hard into how that ending replays in your head afterward. 

You leave the film wondering how you would know if you were the last real person left, and what it would sound like when the replacements finally turned on you.

The Thing (1982): John Carpenter’s Bleak Sci Fi Horror Ending

1982 • Director: John Carpenter • Starring: Kurt Russell, Keith David • More on Carpenter: Wikipedia profile

John Carpenter’s The Thing, adapted from John W. Campbell’s Who Goes There, strips the cast down to a remote Antarctic outpost and introduces a creature that can copy any living thing it absorbs. Kurt Russell’s MacReady, Keith David’s Childs, and a crew of scientists and misfits find themselves trapped with a shape shifting intruder and no way to call for help.

 Every test, every accusation, every burst of violence wears away another layer of trust. The film thrives on what it withholds. You are never entirely sure who is human and who has already been duplicated. As explored in this thematic breakdown of The Thing, the film is about paranoia as a survival instinct.

By the end the outpost is a burning crater, the radio is gone, and MacReady and Childs sit facing each other in the snow with no proof that either of them is human. They share a bottle and wait for the cold to do its work. The alien might be dead. It might be sitting across from them, biding its time. For new viewers the ending is less a mystery to be solved than a sentence to be served. Humanity’s future hangs on a question that will never be answered. 

The men will freeze. 

The fire will die...

12 Monkeys (1995): Time Loop Fate And A Tragic Finale

1995 • Director: Terry Gilliam • Starring: Bruce Willis, Madeleine Stowe, Brad Pitt

Terry Gilliam’s 12 Monkeys, itself a riff on Chris Marker’s La Jetée, follows Bruce Willis’s James Cole, a prisoner from a plague ravaged future sent back in time to track the origins of a virus that wiped out most of humanity. Madeleine Stowe’s Kathryn Railly begins as his skeptical psychiatrist and becomes the only person who believes him as his fractured memories start lining up with reality.

 Brad Pitt’s performance as Jeffrey Goines spins between comic and menacing, teasing the idea that madness might be a clearer way to see a broken world. The film coils around the idea of fate, building toward a moment Cole has seen his whole life without fully understanding it.

The airport sequence closes the loop. Cole dies trying to stop the release of the virus, gunned down in front of a terrified crowd. A child watches, locked in on the image of a man bleeding out at the terminal. 

The scientist who will carry the virus forward boards the plane unharmed, chatting casually with a representative of the future. The timeline never budged. The mission was never about changing the past. 

It was about gathering information. In that light, the ending is more than bleak. It is quietly cruel. Humanity’s extinction is a fixed point, and Cole’s entire life bends around witnessing his own failure.

Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (2003): Judgment Day Actually Happens

2003 • Director: Jonathan Mostow • Starring: Nick Stahl, Claire Danes, Arnold Schwarzenegger • Director profile: Jonathan Mostow on Grokipedia

Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines hands the franchise to director Jonathan Mostow, whose career and stylistic fingerprints are charted in places like this Grokipedia profile. Nick Stahl’s John Connor lives off the grid, convinced that he postponed Judgment Day at the end of Terminator 2. The arrival of the T-X, played by Kristanna Loken, and Arnold Schwarzenegger’s returning T-800 tears that illusion apart. 

The mission this time is not to stop a single killer robot, but to understand that Skynet is no longer a system you can shut off. It is a distributed intelligence threaded through the world’s networks.

As John and Kate Brewster, played by Claire Danes, race to what they think is Skynet’s central core, the film plays every beat like a last minute dash to prevent the missiles from launching. Instead they arrive at a hardened bunker designed to ride out a nuclear exchange. The computers around them are not Skynet’s brain. They are cold war relics wired to survive what is coming. The warheads fire. The lights flicker as global communications collapse. John realises that his destiny was never to stop the war, only to lead the survivors after it. 

For anyone expecting another impossible victory, it is a sharp correction. 

The machines win their opening move. 

Humanity’s story from this point on is a salvage job.

Annihilation (2018): The Shimmer And An Ambiguous Sci Fi Ending

2018 • Director: Alex Garland • Starring: Natalie Portman, Oscar Isaac, Jennifer Jason Leigh • Adapted from: Southern Reach trilogy by Jeff VanderMeer (loosely)

Alex Garland’s Annihilation, loosely adapted from Jeff VanderMeer’s Southern Reach trilogy, opens with Natalie Portman’s Lena sitting in containment, the lone survivor of an expedition into a bizarre environmental zone called the Shimmer. Her husband Kane, played by Oscar Isaac, has already returned broken and dying after a previous mission. 

The narrative walks us back into the Shimmer with a small team of scientists and soldiers, watching as they encounter creatures and landscapes that feel like nature’s DNA has been put through a prism. Plants grow in human shapes. Animals sprout impossible features. 

Memory and identity fray at the edges.

At the lighthouse, Lena faces the Shimmer’s most direct manifestation, a being that echoes her movements, learns from them, and begins to become her. She destroys it, or seems to, and the Shimmer collapses. Outside, she reunites with Kane, who quietly admits that he is not really Kane at all. In the final moments her eyes glimmer with the same alien shimmer in his. The film never spells out the consequences, which is where the dread lives. Something has left the Shimmer and stepped into the wider world wearing human faces. 

Whether that means transformation, replacement, or extinction is left for the audience to worry about on the way home.

Children of Men (2006): Bleak Yet Hopeful Sci Fi Ending

2006 • Director: Alfonso Cuarón • Starring: Clive Owen, Clare-Hope Ashitey, Julianne Moore • More on Cuarón: Wikipedia profile

Alfonso Cuarón’s Children of Men, adapted from P. D. James’s novel, builds a world where human infertility has turned every government into some form of crisis management. Clive Owen’s Theo moves through this collapsing England as a burnt out bureaucrat numbing himself with alcohol and apathy. The arrival of Kee, played by Clare Hope Ashitey, the first pregnant woman in eighteen years, drags him back into a purpose he thought he had lost. As explored both in Cuarón’s own career overview and in this detailed Children of Men analysis, the film’s set pieces bleed into each other with documentary immediacy. Refugee camps look like concentration zones. The state’s propaganda blares over scenes of quiet human despair.

Theo’s job becomes simple and impossible. Get Kee and her baby to the mysterious Human Project ship called Tomorrow. He succeeds at the cost of his life, bleeding out in a rowboat as the ship’s foghorn grows louder. Kee is left alone with a newborn in a world that has spent almost two decades learning how not to care about the future. The film withholds any epilogue.

 You never see whether the Human Project exists in the way Theo believed. 

The darkness of the ending lies in this tension. Hope has been reintroduced into a system that may not deserve it, and the man who could have shepherded it is gone.

The Matrix Revolutions (2003): Peace, But Not Freedom

2003 • Directors: Lana Wachowski, Lilly Wachowski • Starring: Keanu Reeves, Carrie-Anne Moss, Hugo Weaving

The Wachowskis bring their cyberpunk saga to an uneasy peace in The Matrix Revolutions. Keanu Reeves’s Neo has finally grown into his role as something more than a hacker who can bend digital physics. Hugo Weaving’s Agent Smith has become a virus, copying himself across the Matrix and threatening both humans and machines. Carrie Anne Moss’s Trinity shares his path out of Zion and into the heart of machine territory. Visuals aside, the story becomes a negotiation about control. Who owns the future: the enslaved humans, the machines, or the rogue program that wants to erase both.

Neo brokers a deal with the Machine City and allows himself to be absorbed by Smith, giving the machines a way to delete their own monster. When Smith dies, the war ends. The sentinels retreat. Zion survives. It has the shape of a happy ending, but the shape is misleading. The Matrix still exists. Most humans remain plugged in. The Architect and the Oracle talk about peace as if they are haggling over a contract. The new world order is a truce, not a transformation.

 For anyone hoping that the trilogy would end with the walls coming down, the message is simple. Systems that powerful do not disappear. They negotiate.

Triangle (2009): Time Loop Horror Ending Explained

2009 • Director: Christopher Smith • Starring: Melissa George, Michael Dorman, Liam Hemsworth

Christopher Smith’s Triangle feels at first like a haunted ship thriller. Melissa George’s Jess joins friends on a sailing trip, only for a storm to upend their boat and leave them stranded on a massive, apparently deserted ocean liner. The corridors are empty. The clocks have stopped. 

Then they begin finding signs of previous versions of themselves: dropped keys, discarded notes, bodies. Time is not a straight line on this ship. It is a loop. As unpacked at length in this Mysterious Triangle analysis, the film slowly shifts from external threat to internal reckoning.

The final turn leaves the ocean behind and drops Jess back at her front door. She watches her own abusive behaviour toward her son and decides to “fix” things by taking him on that fateful boat trip anyway. A car crash kills the boy. A taxi driver offers to take her to the harbor, and she accepts, beginning the cycle again. No cosmic salvation interrupts. No higher power explains the rules. Jess is trapped in an eternal repetition of guilt and denial, unable or unwilling to confront what she has done. For viewers, the ending lands like a quiet horror. 

The supernatural mechanics matter less than the simple fact that she will never let herself change.

Donnie Darko (2001): Time Travel Sacrifice And A Haunting Ending

2001 • Director: Richard Kelly • Starring: Jake Gyllenhaal, Jena Malone, Drew Barrymore

Richard Kelly’s Donnie Darko wraps suburban ennui in a time loop mythos. Jake Gyllenhaal plays Donnie as a kid who is too smart, too sensitive, and too unstable for the bland town around him. A jet engine crashes into his bedroom one night, but he is not there because a figure in a sinister rabbit suit, Frank, has lured him outside and told him the world will end in twenty eight days. 

From there the story spirals into vandalism, arson, and romance with Gretchen, played by Jena Malone, all of it guided by a sense that Donnie is following instructions only he can see. The model of its time travel, and its relationship to sacrifice, is broken down in detail in this Donnie Darko explainer.

donnie darko

The ending replays the jet engine moment in the “prime” timeline. Donnie stays in bed and laughs as the engine falls into his room, killing him. Gretchen survives. His family lives. The cost is his entire existence. 

For a first time viewer it is disorienting and deeply sad. The kid who finally found meaning in his life has to give that life up, and no one left behind will ever understand what he did.

Arrival (2016): Sci Fi Ending About Time, Choice, And Grief

2016 • Director: Denis Villeneuve • Starring: Amy Adams, Jeremy Renner, Forest Whitaker

Denis Villeneuve’s Arrival, adapted from Ted Chiang’s Story of Your Life, uses alien contact as a way to ask what you would do if you could see your entire life at once. Amy Adams’s Louise Banks, a linguist, is brought in to decode the circular symbols used by the heptapods. Jeremy Renner’s Ian Donnelly works beside her, building the mathematical bridge. As Louise immerses herself in the aliens’ language, she begins to experience her own timeline non linearly. Scenes with the daughter she loves and loses are not flashbacks but future memories. 

The film’s strange, looping structure, and its relationship to free will, is unpacked in this Arrival time travel paradox essay.

Once Louise understands what she is seeing, she faces a choice. Knowing that a relationship with Ian will fall apart and that their daughter will die young, she enters into that life anyway. The global crisis is resolved by her new perception of time, but the personal cost remains fixed. The final moments, where she agrees to have the child she already knows she will lose, land with a low, sustained ache. The ending is not bleak in an apocalyptic sense. 

The world goes on. But it is ruthless in its insistence that knowledge does not grant you an escape route. Sometimes it only strips away the comfort of not knowing.

A Clockwork Orange (1971): Kubrick’s Disturbing Future, Ending Explained

1971 • Director: Stanley Kubrick • Starring: Malcolm McDowell, Patrick Magee, Adrienne Corri

Stanley Kubrick’s adaptation of Anthony Burgess’s A Clockwork Orange follows Malcolm McDowell’s Alex as he maims, rapes, and terrorises his way through a future Britain that looks like a pop art hangover. The state responds with the Ludovico Technique, a treatment that conditions him to become physically sick at the thought of violence. 

On paper it is a cure. 

In practice it strips away his capacity for choice. He is no longer evil. He is not good either. He is an object. The moral and political fault lines of that transformation are examined in this thematic analysis of A Clockwork Orange.

After a suicide attempt forces the government to undo the conditioning, Alex wakes up with his old appetites intact. Officials line up to use him as a propaganda piece, promising him comfort and status in exchange for a public smile. The final image of him fantasising about violence while reporters applaud tells you everything. The system has learned nothing. Alex has learned nothing. For viewers, especially those coming in expecting some moral reckoning, the ending is a cold shock.

It suggests that the real horror is not the boy who delights in harm, but the institutions that see him as a tool.

District 9 (2009): Body Horror, Allegory, And A Bitterly Ironic Ending

2009 • Director: Neill Blomkamp • Starring: Sharlto Copley, Jason Cope, David James

Neill Blomkamp’s District 9 turns Johannesburg into an alien refugee camp and corporate testing ground. Sharlto Copley’s Wikus van de Merwe begins as a petty bureaucrat overseeing the eviction of the “prawn” population, a mixture of cowardice and casual racism in a cheap suit. An accident with alien bio fluid starts turning his body into something non human, forcing him into hiding with the very people he helped oppress. 

The film’s mix of satire and tragedy, and its direct engagement with South African history, gets pulled apart in this District 9 thematic essay.

district 9 film poster


By the end, Wikus has fully transformed. Christopher, the alien scientist, escapes with his son and promises to return with a cure years down the line. The last we see of Wikus is in a junkyard, now a prawn himself, crafting a small metal flower that his wife will later find on her doorstep. It is the only kindness he has left to give. The world outside District 9 has not changed. The camps have not fallen. For viewers, the irony bites hard. 

The man who viewed aliens as filth becomes one, and in gaining their perspective he loses his place in the only life he ever knew.

Logan’s Run (1976): Utopia Shattered, Survival Not Guaranteed

1976 • Director: Michael Anderson • Starring: Michael York, Jenny Agutter, Peter Ustinov • Based on: Logan’s Run by William F. Nolan & George Clayton Johnson

Michael Anderson’s Logan’s Run, drawn from the novel by William F. Nolan and George Clayton Johnson, imagines a domed city where citizens live in pleasure until the age of thirty, then die in a ritual called Carousel. Michael York’s Logan 5 is a Sandman, a hunter of those who try to escape their fate. Jenny Agutter’s Jessica questions the system, and together they flee in search of a rumoured Sanctuary. 

Outside the dome they find ruins and an elderly man, played by Peter Ustinov, proof that life can continue beyond the cutoff. The film’s sunny surfaces and darker implications are unpacked further in this Logan’s Run themes article.

Logan and Jessica return, the city collapses, and the people pour out to touch the old man’s face and bask in natural sunlight for the first time. On its face the ending plays as liberation. The system has been exposed. The lie is broken. But the film quietly leaves the survivors on the edge of a world they do not understand, with no skills beyond leisure and obedience. 

The computers that fed them are gone. The dome is gone. The outside is not a promised land. 

It is a test they have never been prepared to take. That is where the darkness creeps back in, in the realisation that some cages protect as well as imprison.

Rogue One: A Star Wars Story (2016): A Sacrificial Ending In A Galaxy Far Away

2016 • Director: Gareth Edwards • Starring: Felicity Jones, Diego Luna, Donnie Yen

Gareth Edwards’ Rogue One folds a story of doomed spies into the space between prequel and original trilogy. Felicity Jones’s Jyn Erso starts as a survivor who has made peace with looking out for herself. Diego Luna’s Cassian Andor is a rebel soldier already stained by the things he has done in the name of the cause. Chirrut Îmwe, Baze Malbus, Bodhi Rook, and K-2SO round out a team of people who have all, in one way or another, run from their better selves.

 The film charts their decision to stop running. As unpacked in this thematic analysis of Rogue One, their mission is never about survival. It is about hitting a switch that might let someone else someday win.

When the Death Star fires on Scarif, the light blooming on the horizon is both success and execution. Jyn and Cassian hold each other on the beach as the wave of destruction rolls toward them. The rest of the team is already dead. The plans they stole, the small act of defiance they pulled off, will fuel the victory in A New Hope. They will never know it. In a franchise built on plucky heroes and narrow escapes, this film chooses to end with everyone you care about gone. 

It is not cynical. It is sacrificial. The darkness is not that they die, but that their deaths become another nameless footnote in a war that will never stop needing more people like them.

Life (2017): Alien Horror Ending That Dooms Earth

2017 • Director: Daniel Espinosa • Starring: Rebecca Ferguson, Jake Gyllenhaal, Ryan Reynolds

Daniel Espinosa’s Life traps its cast on the International Space Station with a Martian organism that evolves faster than anyone can study it. Rebecca Ferguson’s Miranda, Jake Gyllenhaal’s David, and Ryan Reynolds’ Rory embody different philosophies about risk and responsibility. Their attempts to contain the creature, nicknamed Calvin, fail one by one. Lockdowns turn into coffins. Scientific curiosity curdles into dread. The station becomes a maze with something hungry at its center. 

The way the film escalates its sense of doom step by step is explored in this Life 2017 review.

The ending pulls a cruel visual trick. Two escape capsules launch in different directions. One is meant to drag Calvin into a fiery death in the atmosphere. The other carries David, the surviving astronaut, safely back to Earth. The camera follows his capsule down, landing in the ocean, where fishermen approach and pull back the hatch to find him cocooned with the creature, alive and very much in control. The other capsule, now empty, drifts into space. The film cuts away before anyone on Earth understands what they have done, leaving the audience alone with the implications. A hostile organism has reached a planet full of unaware hosts. 

The hero who tried to stop it is gone. For a story that starts as a simple monster movie, it ends with something far nastier: the sense that this is not the end of anything, just the prologue to a much larger disaster.

About the author Jimmy Jangles


My name is Jimmy Jangles, the founder of The Astromech. I have always been fascinated by the world of science fiction, especially the Star Wars universe, and I created this website to share my love for it with fellow fans.

At The Astromech, you can expect to find a variety of articles, reviews, and analysis related to science fiction, including books, movies, TV, and games.
From exploring the latest news and theories to discussing the classics, I aim to provide entertaining and informative content for all fans of the genre.

Whether you are a die-hard Star Trek fan or simply curious about the world of science fiction, The Astromech has something for everyone. So, sit back, relax, and join me on this journey through the stars!