Fiction Becomes Fact
Some movies, especially sci-fi flicks, can easily look dated by today’s standards—after all, what happens when we’ve reached, say, 2019 with no flying cars (looking at you, Blade Runner)? But sometimes, a movie gives us some pretty good predictions about what might happen in the future. Here are 15 movies where fiction became reality.
Woman In The Moon: Shoot For The Moon
Before President Kennedy voiced his longing to send Americans into space, Woman in the Moon, a 1929 German silent film, was already there. Several gadgets used for space travel, as shown in the movie, have become a reality.
Woman In The Moon: NASA Likes It
The most significant prediction in Woman in the Moon was the launch countdown. The film gives the moviegoer a feeling of suspense by counting down to zero, a staple of every NASA launch.
Troy: Zero To Hero
No, not Hercules. Another famous Greek character in this action-packed adventure predicts a cast member's future with ironic accuracy—Achilles. Troy tells the story of Helen, who, despite marrying the Spartan King, runs away to Troy with her love, Paris. But that's just the beginning.
Troy: Achilles The Warrior
The Spartans, along with their Greek allies, fight Troy for Helen's return. Achilles, portrayed by Brad Pitt, spends most of the film showing his fighting prowess on the beaches of Troy. But on set, Pitt got a big dose of irony.
Troy: A Line In The Sand
After nearly completing filming and months of running on sand, Pitt tore his Achilles tendon. Perhaps there was a line in the sand Pitt shouldn't have crossed? Ouch!
The Net: A Catch-All
The Net is a psychological thriller starring Sandra Bullock. Her character, Angela Bennett, a computer programmer, is trying to protect her identity while running from an unknown enemy. The Net's villain can break into your home and steal from you without ever being there, courtesy of the Internet. Sounds familiar.
Invisible thieves may leave a bad taste, but The Net also has an appealing prediction.
The Net: Pizza Anyone?
The Net predicted today's online ordering trend with gusto. From dinner to clothing, The Net suggests a world where online ordering is standard, not simply a sci-fi speculation, as it was in 1995 when the movie was released.
The Running Man: Reality TV
With Arnold Schwarzenegger's help, the 1987 film The Running Man offers moviegoers a glimpse of entertaining reality TV. Today's reality TV requires a tough-as-nails mindset to win. Thank goodness our current programs don't have the same life-or-death scenario as The Running Man.
The Running Man: Not Just Reality TV
Not only does Schwarzenegger use his acting prowess to help the film predict today's entertaining real-life competitions, but The Running Man also gives glimpses of flat-screen TVs and voice-activated electronics. What's more, 2019 is the year in the film.
The Purge: Election Year: Fear And Trembling
If reality TV isn't scary, a good horror movie's predictive skill will keep you on edge. The Purge: Election Year showcases with terrifying accuracy the current unrest in a contested American Presidential election. But there’s one detail in the movie that hits too close to home.
The Purge: Election Year: America, The Great
The Purge: Election Year is the story of Charlie Roan, a woman who, as a child, was her family's only survivor of the yearly purge. Now a 2040 presidential candidate, Roan campaigns to end the purge. Her opponents use lethal means in their attempt to end her.
Does it sound vaguely familiar? Maybe? Still, The Purge Election Year is a close version of America's current political tensions than seemed possible.
The Birds: Be Kind To The Birds
What's just as scary as politicians? Murderous birds. Sounds comical? Not to Tippi Hedren's character, Melanie Daniels, in Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds. You may not believe birds are bad for your health now, but after watching The Birds, you might think again about how you treat your feathered friends.
The Birds: Of One Mind
Daphne du Maurier's novel of the same name is the basis for the film adaptation, and in it, birds attack people unexpectedly and without reason. This ended up being an eerie prediction: 50 years later, du Maurier’s son and his family were similarly scared when they became the target of disgruntled seagulls camping outside their English cottage.
Rosemary's Baby: Don't Wake The Baby
In Rosemary’s Baby, Rosemary Woodhouse (Mia Farrow) believes in her unborn child's inherent evil. That may sound funny, but for the film’s director, Roman Polanski, evil became a part of his own unborn child's story.
Rosemary's Baby: Don't Speak Of The Devil
After the film finished shooting, an unspeakable evil befell Polanski and his wife, actress Sharon Tate. Sadly, Tate, who was pregnant at the time of her death, became perhaps the most famous victim of the Manson family.
Poltergeist: Not In Good Spirits
Like most paranormal horror movies, 1982's Poltergeist is one scary movie. In it, the Freeling family unintentionally disturb Native burial grounds and find themselves cursed. What makes Poltergeist more terrifying is not the plot but the "Poltergeist curse".
Poltergeist: A Cursed Film
Two young actors cast in Poltergeist lost their lives in the six years between the first and third releases. Dominique Dunn, cast as the oldest Freeling child, Dana, was murdered in 1982 by an ex-boyfriend. She was only 22. Heather O'Rouke passed on in 1988, at age 12, from a congenital condition. She played Carol Anne.
The Omen: Interesting Idea
Released in 1976, The Omen is the story of Damien Thorn, a child prophesied to be the antichrist. American diplomat Robert Thorn, played by Gregory Peck, and his wife Katherine, portrayed by Lee Remick, adopt Damien after their infant's death. Producer Harvey Bernhard was given the film's idea but cautioned not to make it. Why? Let's see.
The Omen: Untimely Deaths
Some felt the film would upset the Devil, inviting evil into their lives. As it happened, Peck's son took his own life just as filming began, making both Peck and Robert bereaved parents. But there’s more.
The Omen: Special Effect
John Richardson's brilliant special effects created a scene in The Omen where a character is decapitated. While working on his next film, Richardson was in a car accident with his assistant, who was decapitated. But that’s still not all.
The Omen: Diabolical Mayhem
Peck and executive producer Mace Neufeld flew to the set on separate planes, each struck by lightning. And adding to all that calamity, the Irish Republican Army bombed Neufeld's hotel during filming.
The Truman Show: Make Them Laugh
A hearty laugh is always good for the soul. The Truman Show boasts another of Jim Carrey's brilliant performances. It also envisioned a society obsessed with watching others. Sound familiar?
The Truman Show: Did You Know?
In The Truman Show, Truman Burbank lives unaware that an entire world shares his ups and downs and witnesses his most intimate moments. Fast-forward to today, where some believe they unknowingly live within a TV show, and where some TV shows do follow people’s day-to-day.
Airplane 2: Let's See
Some comedies have given audiences a glimpse of a specific kind of future technology—tech that can see through us all. Loved for its wacky one-liners and sight jokes, Airplane 2 also shows the potential of this futuristic surveillance.
Airplane 2: Happy Birthday
Airplane 2 jokes about full-body scanners that can see passengers in their birthday suits. These gags were silly in 1982, but have become far more realistic in 2024.
Network: Whatever It Takes
Network tells the story of veteran newsman Howard Beale, who is willing to end his life on-air. His station, the UBS Evening News, endorses his idea, knowing Beale's on-air death will increase ratings.
Network: Only Time Will Tell
In his 2000 Chicago Sun-Times column, critic Roger Ebert wrote that Network is a masterfully prophetic film. After all, Howard Beale's same manic, ranting, and unscripted energy is precisely what fuels reality TV today.
Wag The Dog: Political Distractions
Wag The Dog is a darker comedic foray into political predictions. Presidential adviser Winifred Ames (Anne Heche) gets help from political spin doctor Conrad Brean (Robert De Niro). They distract the public from the sitting president's scandal—two weeks before election night. Sound familiar? Keep reading.
Wag The Dog: Hollywood Distractions
A political strategy film is hardly prophetic. However, this is where Wag The Dog takes the ball and runs. Dustin Hoffman's character, Hollywood producer Stanley Motss, works with Brean to fabricate a war in Albania that will ultimately distract the media.
Wag The Dog: 24-Hour News.
Wag The Dog was released in 1997, when CNN, Fox News, and MSNBC were new. Today, nothing is outlandish about the government and news media working together. Patriotic stories make the government look good and provide content for 24-hour news networks, something the writers of Wag The Dog likely could not fathom.
The Muppets: Let's All Get Along
The Muppets not only help children develop language and literacy skills but also learn life lessons about decency and morals. Thanks to The Muppets, children also learned about the law…and witnessed one weird prediction.
The Muppets Movie: That's Not Nice
Jason Segel, who acted in and wrote for The Muppets Movie, learned that all Muppets couldn't be friends all of the time—well, not without a price, that is. Segel wrote a scene where the Muppets try to recruit Elmo but are unable to because of Elmo's lawyer. Funny, right? It depends on who you ask.
The Muppets Movie: Pay The Real Price
Elmo's real-life lawyers weren't laughing, cutting the scene entirely from the film. So, despite all the Muppets being, well, Muppets, the privilege of working with them all is going to cost you. Lesson learned.
Mr. & Mrs. Smith: Just A Movie
Mr. & Mrs. Smith is the story of a couple working as spies. One day, their respective employers instruct them to "end" the other. Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie were strangers when filming began back in 2004. Once on the set, however, fiction became fact.
Mr. & Mrs. Smith: Method Actors
Pitt and Jolie did not remain strangers. They went "method" in their acting and ended up getting together on-set despite Pitt's marriage to Jennifer Aniston. But that's not all.
Mr. & Mrs. Smith: Not Secret Secrets
After becoming "Brangelina" and a paparazzi goldmine for years, the power couple infamously separated in 2019. Like their characters in the film, Brad and Angelina have been trying to "end" each other in court proceedings ever since. Seems like Mr. & Mrs. Smith was a road map for their relationship.