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That would be Brad Pitt. But he has contributed to the genre, twice in films that are straightforward sci-fi and twice in movies that have sci-fi elements but aren’t quite full-on members of the genre. Let’s rank them, both in term of overall quality and how important they were to his career.
4) World War Z

It seems we’re finally getting a sequel to World War Z, but time will tell if it picks up where the 2013 film’s narrative left off. Probably not, considering it’s not a particularly beloved film, though it did make a respectable enough amount of money and received a marginally positive response from critics.
The issue with World War Z is that it wears its reshoot issues on its sleeves. The ending is nonsensical and anti-climactic but even before then it’s not all that involving. It kind of just moves from one “run from the fast zombies” scene to the next. As for Pitt’s Gerry Lane, he’s so underwritten that he could have been played by any actor, including one with less range who is far less expensive. There’s a good chance that’s the direction the sequel goes, and we’d be hard-pressed to say that a lack of Pitt would be a total dealbreaker.
Stream World War Z on Paramount+.
3) Ad Astra

Ad Astra has a lofty concept at its core yet an intimate focus. It’s fairly hard sci-fi but, at the end of the day, it’s really about a complex father-son dynamic.
Oddly enough, it’s when the movie isn’t focusing on the sci-fi half of itself that it’s at its strongest. Furthermore, for anyone expecting some bombast (not an unfair expectation given its big budget and gloss), this isn’t the sci-fi movie for you. Dare we say it can actually be slow at times. But in terms of emotional payoff, Ad Astra does quite well in the third act.
Stream Ad Astra on fuboTV.










