Annal:2005 Saturn Award for Best Science Fiction Film
From AwardAnnals
Results of the Saturn Award in the year 2005. For a ranked list of films, try an honor roll:
- Saturn Award for Best Science Fiction Film
- Science Fiction films
- Science Fiction directors
- Speculative Fiction films
- Speculative Fiction directors.
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
- 2005 Saturn-Sci-Fi winner
- 2005 BAFTA-Film nominee
- 2005 Golden Globe-Musical/Comedy nominee
- 2005 Hugo-Video nominee
- Score: 28.55
Screenwriters rarely develop a distinctive voice that can be recognized from movie to movie, but the ornate imagination of Charlie Kaufman (Being John Malkovich, Adaptation) has made him a unique and much-needed cinematic presence. In Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, a guy decides to have the memories of his ex-girlfriend erased after she’s had him erased from her own memory—but midway through the procedure, he changes his mind and struggles to hang on to their experiences together. In other hands, the premise of memory-erasing would…
Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow
- 2005 Hugo-Video nominee
- 2005 Saturn-Sci-Fi nominee
- Score: 12.55
While setting a milestone in the progress of digital filmmaking, Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow resurrects a nostalgic fantasy world derived from a wide variety of vintage inspirations. It’s a dazzling dream for anyone who appreciates the look and feel of golden-age sci-fi pulp magazines, drawing its unique, all-digital design from such diverse sources as Howard Hawks adventures, Fritz Lang’s Metropolis, Buck Rogers, Blackhawk comics, The Third Man, cliffhanger serials, and the action-packed Indiana Jones franchise.…
- 2005 Saturn-Sci-Fi nominee
- Score: 6.55
When global warming triggers the onset of a new Ice Age, tornadoes flatten Los Angeles, a tidal wave engulfs New York City and the entire Northern Hemisphere begins to freeze solid. Now, climatologist Jack Hall (Dennis Quaid), his son Sam (Jake Gyllenhaal) and a small band of survivors must ride out the growing superstorm and stay alive in the face of an enemy more powerful and relentless than any they’ve ever encountered: Mother Nature!
- 2005 Saturn-Sci-Fi nominee
- Score: 6.55
A young man struggling to access sublimated childhood memories finds a technique that allows him to travel back to the past. Occupying his childhood body, he is able to change history. But every change he makes has unexpected consequences.
- 2005 Saturn-Sci-Fi nominee
- Score: 6.55
In the year 2035, technology and robots are a trusted part of everyday life. But that trust is broken when a scientist is found dead and a skeptical detective (Smith) believes that a robot is responsible. Bridget Moynahan co-stars in this high-tech action thriller that questions whether technology will ultimately lead to mankind’s salvation…or annihilation.
- 2005 Saturn-Sci-Fi nominee
- Score: 6.55
With a plot that might’ve been lifted from The X-Files, nothing is quite what it seems in The Forgotten, a psychological conspiracy thriller with Julianne Moore doing fine work as a grieving mother whose nine-year-old son was killed in a plane crash. At least, that’s what she’s been led to believe, but when even her husband (Anthony Edwards) tries to convince her that she’s delusional and never had a child, things start to get very spooky indeed. Dominic West (from HBO’s superb series The Wire) plays a similarly traumatized father, and when…
