Recently an early 80s sci-fi film Brainstorm, starring Christopher Walken, was broadcast on local TV. The film centred on the invention of a device that could record and transmit someone's experiences (all of their senses, not just sight) allowing other people to experience the same thing (an idea that was later used in Strange Days). An interesting idea, but the film itself quickly became boring, not really knowing what to do with the concept. But at one point, one of the scientists testing the new technology dies, and at the end of the film, Walken's character experiences her death that had been recorded. We catch a glimpse of hell (very gruesome) before the soul ascends to the cosmos, towards a heavenly light.... It may have been hokey, but was honestly one of the most stunning endings I've ever seen.
A similar example is Fire in the Sky, which for the most part is incredibly slow-moving and tedious, before the truly shocking abduction sequence in the last twenty minutes.
Any other good examples of this in sci-fi?
A similar example is Fire in the Sky, which for the most part is incredibly slow-moving and tedious, before the truly shocking abduction sequence in the last twenty minutes.
Any other good examples of this in sci-fi?