The 12 Best Sci-Fi Movies on Netflix Right Now

Netflix has quietly built one of the most exciting sci-fi libraries around, and there has never been a better time to explore it.
From mind-bending space adventures to robot uprisings and post-apocalyptic wastelands, there is something here for every kind of fan.
Whether you love action, mystery, or stories that make you think, this list has you covered.
Grab your snacks and get ready to blast off into some seriously great cinema.
1. Godzilla Minus One (2023)

Few monster movies hit this hard emotionally.
Set in post-World War II Japan, this stunning film follows a traumatized nation trying to rebuild while facing something almost impossible to survive.
Godzilla here is not just a creature — he is a symbol of total destruction.
The human characters carry real emotional weight, making every scene feel deeply personal.
You feel their fear, grief, and desperate courage in a way most blockbusters never manage.
The special effects are jaw-dropping without ever overshadowing the story.
This is monster cinema at its most powerful and meaningful.
2. Spiderhead (2022)

What if someone could control exactly how you feel?
That unsettling question sits at the heart of Spiderhead, a slick sci-fi thriller set inside a high-tech prison where inmates volunteer for emotion-altering drug experiments.
Chris Hemsworth plays the charming but deeply sinister warden running the whole operation.
The film slowly peels back layers of manipulation and moral ambiguity, keeping you guessing about who to trust.
It is part psychological thriller, part ethical nightmare, wrapped in a glossy package.
If questions about free will and human control fascinate you, this one will stick with you long after the credits roll.
3. Leave the World Behind (2023)

Slow-burn dread is an art form, and this film masters it.
A family escaping to a rental home for a quiet vacation suddenly finds their getaway shattered by a mysterious cyberattack that cuts off all communication with the outside world.
Then strangers show up at the door claiming to own the house.
Julia Roberts and Mahershala Ali deliver gripping performances as paranoia and distrust spiral out of control.
The film never fully explains what is happening, which somehow makes it scarier.
Leave the World Behind taps into very real modern anxieties about technology, collapse, and who we trust when everything falls apart.
4. They Cloned Tyrone (2023)

Part blaxploitation homage, part conspiracy thriller, and entirely its own wild thing — They Cloned Tyrone is one of the most original sci-fi films in years.
John Boyega, Teyonah Parris, and Jamie Foxx form an unlikely trio stumbling onto a secret government cloning operation hidden right beneath their neighborhood.
The film is sharp, funny, and genuinely thought-provoking, weaving social commentary into its outrageous plot without ever losing its sense of fun.
The chemistry between the three leads is electric.
If you want something stylish that makes you laugh and think at the same time, look no further than this gem.
5. Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga (2024)

Before she became the unstoppable road warrior we met in Fury Road, Furiosa had a story worth telling.
This explosive prequel tracks her brutal journey from kidnapped child to fearless rebel in a scorched, resource-starved world ruled by violent warlords.
Anya Taylor-Joy commands every frame she is in.
George Miller brings the same relentless, visually overwhelming energy that made Fury Road legendary.
The action sequences are genuinely breathtaking — massive, chaotic, and choreographed with wild precision.
Furiosa is not just a backstory; it is a full-throttle saga about survival, rage, and reclaiming your own fate against impossible odds.
6. The Old Guard (2020)

Imagine living for centuries, fighting wars across human history, and still waking up every morning knowing you cannot die.
That is the burden carried by Andy and her team in The Old Guard, a stylish action film anchored by a powerhouse performance from Charlize Theron.
Beneath the impressive fight choreography and globe-trotting plot, the film asks genuinely moving questions about purpose, loneliness, and what immortality actually costs.
Watching characters grapple with the emotional weight of outliving everyone they love gives the action real stakes.
For a superhero-adjacent film, it carries surprising emotional depth and a refreshingly grounded tone throughout.
7. Army of the Dead (2021)

Zombies plus a casino heist sounds like the setup for a joke, but Zack Snyder plays it completely straight — and it works spectacularly.
Army of the Dead drops a crew of skilled mercenaries into a quarantined, zombie-overrun Las Vegas with one mission: crack a vault before the city gets nuked.
The film is big, loud, and unapologetically fun, packed with creative action sequences and surprisingly likable characters.
Snyder even throws in a zombie mythology twist that genuinely catches you off guard.
If you want a popcorn movie that delivers exactly what it promises without ever boring you, this hits the mark.
8. Interstellar (2014)

Christopher Nolan made a film about black holes, time dilation, and the survival of humanity — and somehow turned it into one of the most emotionally devastating father-daughter stories ever put on screen.
Matthew McConaughey plays a pilot who must leave his children behind to search for a new home for the human race.
Hans Zimmer’s legendary score swells through scenes that feel genuinely cosmic in scale.
The science is ambitious, the visuals are breathtaking, and the emotional gut-punch at the film’s midpoint is unforgettable.
Interstellar rewards patient viewers with one of cinema’s most ambitious and heartfelt explorations of love across time and space.
9. The Mitchells vs. the Machines (2021)

Robots taking over the world has never been this funny or this heartwarming.
The Mitchells are a wonderfully chaotic family on a cross-country road trip that gets hijacked when a rogue AI decides humanity needs to be eliminated.
Naturally, this gloriously weird family becomes the planet’s last line of defense.
The animation style is bold, creative, and bursting with personality — every frame feels hand-crafted with love.
Underneath the slapstick humor is a genuinely touching story about family connection in the digital age.
Kids and adults will find plenty to love here, and the jokes land at every level without feeling forced.
10. The Adam Project (2022)

Ryan Reynolds essentially plays off a younger version of himself, and the result is both funnier and more emotionally resonant than you might expect.
A time-traveling pilot crash-lands in the past and teams up with his 12-year-old self to stop a catastrophic mistake from reshaping the future.
The film moves fast and keeps things light, but it sneaks in genuinely touching moments about grief, parental relationships, and growing up.
Walker Scobell absolutely steals scenes as young Adam, perfectly mimicking Reynolds’ sharp comedic timing.
The Adam Project is a crowd-pleasing adventure that works equally well as a father-son story and a sci-fi romp.
11. Nimona (2023)

Nimona is one of those rare animated films that sneaks up on you completely.
Set in a futuristic world that blends medieval kingdoms with advanced technology, the story follows a disgraced knight who teams up with a chaotic, shapeshifting teenager named Nimona to clear his name and expose a larger conspiracy.
The film is funny, fast-paced, and visually inventive — but its real power comes from its emotional honesty about identity and belonging.
Nimona herself is an unforgettable character: unpredictable, hilarious, and quietly heartbreaking.
This is the kind of animated film that stays with you long after the final scene fades to black.
12. Spaceman (2024)

Loneliness in deep space is terrifying enough on its own.
Adam Sandler delivers one of his most quietly powerful dramatic performances as an astronaut sent on a solitary mission to the far edge of the solar system, only to find a mysterious alien creature living in the shadows of his ship.
Their unlikely conversations become the emotional core of the film, as the astronaut confronts painful truths about his crumbling marriage and his own emotional distance.
Spaceman is slow, meditative, and beautifully melancholic — not a film for everyone, but deeply rewarding for viewers willing to sit with its quiet, searching sadness.
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