Top 5 best alien invasion movies

Alien invasion movies, along with ghost stories, are my guilty pleasures. I love them because they are highly entertaining but also because a part of me really wants to believe in their existence. When we think about alien invasion movies, the first titles that come to mind usually are Independence Day or Men in Black, both great and enjoyable blockbusters, but there are other movies, better ones, out there for us to enjoy.

I’ve decided to compile a list of my top 5 favorite alien invasion movies for you guys to enjoy this summer.

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Edge of Tomorrow

Not only did Edge of Tomorrow manage to pull off the “Groundhog day” gimmick but it is also a complex and highly entertaining movie. Starring Tom Cruise and Emily Blunt, the film takes place somewhere in the future, where an alien race has invaded a good part of Europe, and the weary humans are quickly losing the battle against these seemingly undefeatable extraterrestrials. A PR officer is forced into battle and despite having been killed in combat, he wakes up to find himself reliving the events of the previous morning, leading up to his death. Stuck in a time loop, he must find a way to improve his fighting skills and kill the invading aliens.

Signs

Say what you will about M. Night Shyamalan, but the man knows how to build up a suspense. Signs is the second movie he released after The Sixth Sense, probably his last hit before a long drought, and although The Sixth Sense is his most popular film, I tend to prefer Signs because the whole story almost entirely takes place inside the house or on the property, which is quite a feat. The tension and the build up, intertwined with brief moments of humor, as well as the family dynamic brilliantly portrayed by Mel Gibson, Joaquin Phoenix, Rory Culkin and Abigail Breslin, make this film pretty complete. The story is pretty simple: a widow wakes up one morning to realize that crop circles appeared on his corn field over night. Believing it to be a prank by the neighbors’ kids, he quickly brushed the anomaly aside. It did not take long, though, for him to face the hard truth that there are other-worldly visitors on Earth, and that he, his brother and his children, might be at risk.

District 9

District 9 is a masterful metaphor for the segregation, xenophobia and apartheid taking place in South Africa. Presented in a found footage format, the film is about the tension between the people of Johannesburg and the millions of stranded aliens whose ship broke down in this area of the Earth. The aliens, derogatively called Prawns by the locals, were placed in a camp called District 9 but, over the years, the zone becomes a slum and the people of Johannesburg are increasingly less tolerant of this alien species they consider pests. For that reason, the government decided to relocate the Prawns to a new camp, further outside of the city. Wikus, the main character, works for the company hired for the task, and, after an altercation resulting in an injury in one of the alien’s shack, he slowly starts to mutate into a Prawn. Taking refuge in District 9, he finally understands what it’s like to be segregated, mistreated, disrespected.

The World’s End

The World’s End is the third and final installment of the Cornetto trilogy, and also the weirdest film of the three. Unlike the previous movies I mentioned, this one if a full blown comedy, directed by Edgar Wright, written by Edgar Wright and Simon Pegg, and starring, among others, Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, Martin Freeman and Rosamund Pike. A lonely, depressive and suicidal man convinces his four estranged childhood friends to return to their home village to complete “the golden mile”, a beer binge throughout 12 pubs, ending with The World’s End. Upon their return, they realize that all the villagers had been replaced by blue-blooded robot-like creatures. The film may not be as good as Shaun of the Dead but it does guaranty a good time.

Attack the Block

Now this is my new favorite alien invasion movie! I kept the best for last with Attack the Block. Starring, among others, John Boyega and Jodie Whittaker in their debut film, the story is basically about a group of teenagers protecting their South London neighborhood from a brutal alien invasion. It may not sound like much but the dialogues are witty and harsh, the alien monsters are impressively made and the whole film is everything it should be: entertaining, enthralling and exciting.

The Classics

The five movies mentioned above can be considered my top 5 favorite “new” alien invasion movies, but there are, of course, the classics, the ones that never go out of styles, the ones we can always go back to.

  • The Thing

  • Invasion of the body snatchers (1978)

  • Alien (though not technically an alien invasion movie since it takes place in space…)

  • They live (just for the incredible one-liner!)

The runner-ups

There are a few movies I did enjoy but not exactly made the cut, either because of the terrible ending or plot holes or whatnot. They nonetheless deserve a mention here:

  • Arrival (kudos for the originality of the aliens and their language)

  • 10 Cloverfield lane (should have stayed with the “is there or is there not an alien invasion” plot line)

  • War of the worlds

So this should cover a summer’s worth of alien movies, and of course, you should top it all off with Men in Black and Independence Day (just the first movies of their franchise!). They are, after all, really good summer blockbusters!

The Cornetto trilogy (aka Three Flavours Cornetto trilogy, aka Blood and Ice Cream trilogy)

Simon Pegg and Nick Frost are, in my opinion, the best modern-day comedy duo that we have. They have worked on a total of 8 movies together and the incredible chemistry they share with each other probably stems from the fact that they are long time best friends in real life. Add Edgar Wright to the duo and you get comedy gold like the Cornetto trilogy. The movies were co-written by Edgar Wright and Simon Pegg, directed by Wright and co-stared by Pegg and Frost.

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While none of the films are about ice cream, the frozen treat is a running gag in all 3 movies, hence the Cornetto trilogy. It's also, according to Edgar Wright, the best hang over remedy there is. Three movies, three flavors: strawberry for Shaun of the dead (red for zombies),  the original blue wrapper Cornetto for Hot fuzz (blue for the police reference) and mint for The World's end (green for aliens). The Cornetto is also among the few elements binding the three movies together because there are no recurring characters despite the fact that Pegg and Frost star in all three films. In each feature they play different characters, with different names and different personalities, living different lives. And yet, you could watch them all in one sitting and find nothing wrong with it. Why? Because the movies are hilarious, extremely well-written and produced, and the strong bond between Frost and Pegg make their characters exceptionally endearing.

Shaun of the dead

Shaun of the dead is a romantic zombie comedy about Shaun, an unfocused salesman who is trying to win his girlfriend's love back in the midst of a zombie apocalypse. Along the way, he also has to drag around his deadbeat friend, his girlfriend's annoying roommates and save his mother from zombie attacks. 

The idea for the film originated during the production of episode of Spaced, a British TV show Wright, Pegg and Frost worked on. During that particular episode, Pegg's character spent the whole night playing video games and started hallucinating that he was fighting zombies for real. It was at that moment that Wright thought of doing a whole feature about zombies. It was a brilliant idea because the film became an instant hit and cult-favorite. Though a comedy, Shaun of the dead is one of the best homages to the classic post-apocalyptic zombie movies like Night of the living dead. The film itself became, in my opinion, a classic.

Hot fuzz

After the hit that was Shaun of the dead, Edgar Wright and Simon Pegg teamed up again to write Hot Fuzz. 

Hot fuzz is a buddy cop comedy about Nicholas Angel, a Metropolitan police officer who is so good at everything that he makes his colleagues look bad. To remedy the situation, his superiors decided to "promote" him to the position of sergeant and transfer him to a small village, Sandford, in Gloucester. Sandford is statistically known as the safest village in the country. They hadn't had a murder in over 20 years and their biggest problems seem to revolve around a swan that's escaped. Angel had trouble adapting to his new slow-paced environment when he noticed something extremely odd about his new home: while the murder rate is very low, the accidents, on the other hand, are suspiciously frequent. No one wants to believe his conspiracy theories, except for his action-movie-obsessed partner. Together, they investigate the recent strings of fatal "accidents" that seem to befall on some residents.

Although I consider this film the weakest of the three, I must admit that it does possess a few comedy gems and is still worth a watch. 

The World's end

The World's End is the final installment of the Cornetto trilogy and by far the most "meta" of the 3 films!

The World'd End is a science-fiction comedy about Gary King, a depressed middle-aged man who is trying to reconnect with his estranged friends by revisiting the glory days of their childhood. To do so, he convinced them to return to their hometown in order to complete the "Golden Mile", a pub crawl of 12 pubs. One pint of beer in each pub. 

Upon their return, they couldn't help but feel like strangers in their own childhood village. At first, they thought that it was because they hadn't been there in a while, but they soon realized that it's because the village's inhabitants were all taken over by blue-blooded robot-like aliens. Despite this traumatizing discovery, they are still trying to complete the Golden Mile. While they're there, why the hell not?

While Shaun of the dead is an homage to the post-apocalyptic zombie movie, and Hot fuzz to the buddy-cop movie, The World's end pays reverence to body-snatcher films. It is also the movie that demanded a much bigger dramatic performance from its actors. Simon Pegg and Nick Frost delivered effortlessly. 

Reccuring themes

The Cornetto ice creams, obviously. In Shaun of the dead, Nick Frost's character groggily requested a Cornetto at the beginning of the film and Simon Pegg went out to purchase one at the convenience store without even once realizing that there are zombies around him. In Hot Fuzz, the 2 cops would often snack on these cones. And in The World's end, a Cornetto wrapper briefly flies in front of the characters towards the end of the film.

Fence jumping, for some reason. Poorly executed fence jumping, to be exact. The characters often try to jump over a fence as a short cut and fall over or break the fence.

Edgar Wright often explained that his 3 movie are about the dangers of perpetual adolescence. The theme is portrayed by Pegg in Shaun of the dead and The World's End, but it was Nick Frost's character that embodied the theme in Hot Fuzz

And finally, gore. The murder scenes and fight scenes are all extremely bloody. But when it's well done and fits the context, I'm fine with it.

All three movies are exceptional and deserve to be seen, remembered and appreciated.