12 totally cool science-fiction TV movies of the 1980s
Family drama is the typical stuff of made-for-TV movies. When you flip through old issues of TV Guide, you'll see ads for titles like Something About Amelia, Please Don't Hit Me, Mom and The Burning Bed. Domestic suspense is cheap to film.
But occasionally, the networks go all out and splurge on genre pictures. In the 1970s, horror movies became all the rage. Slasher stories and scares were selling tickets at the box office, thanks to blockbusters like The Exorcist and The Amityville Horror, so TV rode the wave.
When the 1980s rolled around, the hit flicks of the days were all science-fiction spectacles. E.T., Back to the Future, The Terminator, Tron, Dune, Return of the Jedi, Flash Gordon… and so on. Once again, the small screen looked to the big screen for inspiration. Sci-fi and fantasy were hot. Thanks to ALF, furry aliens could even headline sitcoms.
The sci-fi TV movies of the '80s range from brainy to silly to dystopian. Today, most of them go overlooked. Here are twelve that stick in our mind and bring back memories of microwave popcorn on the couch.
The Lathe of Heaven
1980
Ursula K. Le Guin is one of the few sci-fi masters of the 20th century. Her novels explored notions of identity and nature. The Lathe of Heaven, which blurred the psychological line between dreams and reality, was the author's tribute to Philip K. Dick. But when the film adaptation first aired on PBS (and, by the way, it was the Public Broadcasting Network's first direct-to-TV movie, one with a sizable budget of $250,000) Le Guin could not watch in her hometown of Portland, the setting of the film, due to a massive power outage in the Northwest. It remains one of the more philosophical sci-fi movies ever made for the medium.
Image: PBS
The Return of the King
1980
Rankin/Bass, the animation studio behind all your favorite holiday specials, adapted the third and final part of J.R.R. Tolkien's immortal Lord of the Rings trilogy for ABC in the dawn of the decade. Oddly, it was not an official sequel to Ralph Bakshi's 1978 animated film The Lord of the Rings, which adapted just the first two books of the trilogy. It was, however, a sort of follow-up to Rankin/Bass' 1977 cartoon The Hobbit. So, two studios told the complete tale, in two completely different animation styles, with no coordination. You are excused if this confused you as a child.
Image: The Everett Collection
The Day After
1983
The Cold War drummed up enough nuclear angst for an entire genre of films. The Red Scare filtered down into action films Red Dawn. The Day After took a more realistic approach to the question, "What would happen if a nuclear war broke out between the U.S.A. and U.S.S.R.?" Jason Robards, John Lithgow, JoBeth Williams and Steve Guttenberg were enlisted to tell the tale. A whopping 100 million or so Americans tuned in to watch, about half of all television households.
Image: The Everett Collection
V
1983
Ever get the sense that some people you meet are reptilian aliens hiding under human skin? That's the premise behind this franchise-starting TV sensation. A flying saucer of seemingly peaceful Visitors arrives the U.N. But one TV cameraman (Marc Singer) discovers they're truly sinister lizards in disguise. It's all a bit like They Live meets Battlestar Galactica. And it spawned a sequel (V: Final Battle) and series (V: The Series), not to mention tie-in novels.
Image: The Everett Collection
The Blue Yonder
1985
Art Carney of The Honeymooners played an old man who builds a time machine in this Disney movie. His 11-year-old neighbor travels back to 1927, where he meets his grandfather, the genius who came up with the plans for the time machine. The movie also called Time Flyer, which was probably a lot less confusing and Air Force-y.
Image: The Everett Collection
Ewoks: The Battle for Endor
1985
The Star Wars Holiday Special get knocked as the ultimate low point in the Star Wars franchise (and it is) but at least is remembered, and even somewhat ironically enjoyed. The '80s Ewoks movies, on the other hand? They've been wiped from our collective memory like a Jedi mind trick. The two live-action, made-for-TV productions were set between The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi. Warwick Davis (Wicket) was the only major actor from the major Star Wars flicks to work on these. Ewoks: The Battle for Endor was the second of the two, but we're focusing on it because it simply sounds a lot cooler than its predecessor, 1984's Caravan of Courage: An Ewok Adventure.
Image: The Everett Collection
Babes in Toyland
1986
The made-for-TV movie gathered an unlikely assortment of talent — in hindsight, at least. Drew Barrymore, hot off cinematic horror hits Firestarter and Cat's Eye, starred in this retelling of the traditional operetta. Oh, and it had Keanu Reeves, in one of his earliest lead roles, not to mention a scary cyclops bird monster that sticks in our memories/nightmares. These budding stars were under the direction of Clive Donner, who had helmed Woody Allen's What's New Pussycat? (1965) and The Nude Bomb (1980), the big-screen Get Smart movie.
Image: The Everett Collection
I-Man
1986
Before Scott Bakula became a sci-fi legend thanks to his lead role in Quantum Leap, he was starring in this Disney TV movie, which gave him Wolverine's accelerated healing powers (if not the claws). Around the same time, he was also starring in the sitcom adaptation of Gung Ho.
Image: Disney
The Worst Witch
1986
See if this plot sounds familiar: A kid attends a prestigious wizarding school in England, where an evil professor plots to take over the magical world. Yep, years before Harry Potter came around there was Mildred Hubble (Fairuza Balk), who flew around on a broom and took potions class at Miss Cackle's Academy for Witches. It also brought to mind The Facts of Life, considering Charlotte Rae played Miss Cackle. The delightful Tim Curry helped this one stick in our minds for years.
Image: The Everett Collection
Not Quite Human
1987
Take the dad from Growing Pains and the plot from Small Wonder and you had a success. Alan Thicke plays a scientist who builds an android "teenage son." Naturally, he calls him "Chip." It all goes a bit Short Circuit from there. Not Quite Human II followed in 1989.
Image: The Everett Collection
Earth Star Voyager
1988
When Star Trek: The Next Generation premiered in 1987, the one nit that many fans picked regarded Wesley, the whiney teenage son aboard the Enterprise. A year later, Disney boldly went where no Trekker had gone before, and essentially made a Star Trek clone where the entire crew was adolescent. But Earth Star Voyager did have some cool synthesizer music and retro graphics.
Image: Disney
The Incredible Hulk Returns
1988
Thor and Daredevil were on screens decades before the Marvel Cinematic Universe and Netflix made them famous. The two characters turned up as foils to the Hulk in The Incredible Hulk Returns and Trial of the Incredible Hulk, which returned Bill Bixby and Lou Ferrigno to their beloved roles as vagabond and beast. Just look at how Viking-y Thor looked.
Image: The Everett Collection
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