Movie · 2018 · Science Fiction, Horror · 1h 55m · R · English
Curator score: 5.8/10 (1.3M ratings)
Fear what's inside.
Overview
A biologist signs up for a dangerous, secret expedition into a mysterious zone where the laws of nature don't apply.
Ratings
Curator score: 5.8/10
IMDb: 6.8/10
Letterboxd: 3.57/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 88%
Metacritic: 79
TMDB: 6.4/10
Director
Alex Garland
Production
Paramount Pictures, Skydance Media, DNA Films, Scott Rudin Productions
Cast
Natalie Portman, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Gina Rodriguez, Tessa Thompson, Tuva Novotny, Oscar Isaac, Benedict Wong, Sonoya Mizuno, David Gyasi, John Schwab, Sammy Hayman, Josh Danford, Kristen McGarrity, Kumud Pant, Honey Holmes, Hiten Patel, Kola Bokinni, Cosmo Jarvis, Matthew Simpson
Where to watch
MGM Plus
Curator Review
Verdict
A striking, cerebral sci-fi horror film that blends body horror, grief, and cosmic mystery into something unsettling and memorable. It’s not for viewers who want clear answers, but it rewards patience with bold imagery, strong atmosphere, and a deeply eerie final stretch.
Best for
fans of atmospheric science fiction
viewers who like ambiguous, thought-provoking endings
body-horror and cosmic-horror audiences
people drawn to grief-driven character studies
fans of slow-burn dread and striking visual design
Skip if
you want straightforward plot explanations
you dislike abstract or symbolic storytelling
you prefer constant action over mood and unease
body horror makes you uncomfortable
you want a conventional monster movie
Overview
Annihilation is one of those rare studio sci-fi films that feels genuinely haunted. Alex Garland turns a simple premise into a study of mutation, self-destruction, and the terror of change, using the expedition structure to peel back the characters as much as the landscape around them. The result is less about solving a mystery than surviving contact with one.
Worth noting
The film’s biggest strength is its atmosphere: shimmering color, sickly beauty, and a sense that nature itself has become alien. It moves with a cool, clinical precision until it suddenly doesn’t, and the final act lands like a fever dream that is both grotesque and strangely intimate. Even when it frustrates, it does so on purpose.
Bottom line
This is a movie for viewers who like their science fiction to feel philosophical and their horror to feel existential. It lingers because it refuses to reduce its ideas to a neat explanation, instead leaving you with images and emotions that keep mutating after the credits.
Top Letterboxd reviews
Erik 🎼 (5★) · 10771 likes
This is what it feels like to chew 5 gum but in hell
#1 gizmo fan (4.5★) · 10065 likes
the last 15 minutes of this movie are scarier than anything I’ve ever seen in my entire life
2014 · Thriller, Science Fiction · 1h 29m · NR · Curator 6.5/10 (578.7K ratings) · Where to watch: Amazon Prime Video, Peacock Premium, Philo, Night Flight Plus, Cineverse, Amazon Prime Video with Ads, Peacock Premium Plus
A compact, mind-bending thriller that turns a small group setting into a destabilizing encounter with reality itself.