If you watched Mickey 17 and it’s still bouncing around in your head, that makes sense. Bong Joon Ho built something strange that doesn’t explain itself too much. The movie throws you into a cold world where dying is just part of the job and where cloning isn’t a miracle but a routine. Robert Pattinson gives you two versions of the same guy, and both of them feel real in different ways.
One is worn out and trying to hold on to what matters. The other is angry and doesn’t want to be erased. The setup sounds wild, but it works because the questions are simple. What happens when your life is treated like equipment? How do you fight for yourself when someone else thinks you’re easy to replace?
The tone shifts a lot, and that’s part of the reason it sticks. One minute you’re laughing, and the next, you’re staring at something bleak. If that kind of sci-fi hit the right note for you, there are more films that move in a similar space. Some are quiet and slow, and others come at you fast. They all tap into that feeling where the world is bigger than you and not always on your side.
Movies you can’t miss if you loved watching Mickey 17
1. Snowpiercer (2013)

Snowpiercer takes place in a frozen world where all life has moved onto a single train that never stops moving. The poor live in the tail while the rich enjoy luxury near the front. One man decides to lead a revolt through each car to reach the engine.
Every section shows a new layer of control and cruelty. Bong Joon Ho uses the confined space to show how systems are built to trap people. Like Mickey 17, it looks at what happens when survival is treated as a reward and human lives are measured by their use to others.
2. The Platform (2019)

The Platform builds its entire story around one brutal idea. A tower full of prisoners shares a single food platform that moves from top to bottom. People at the top eat first, and the ones below get the scraps. No one knows how long they will stay on one level.
The system keeps everyone desperate and angry. Like Mickey 17, it shows what happens when people are forced to fight for survival inside something designed to break them. Both stories show how fast things fall apart when fairness is not part of the design at all.
3. Moon (2009)

Moon follows a man named Sam who works alone on a lunar base. He starts to feel strange after a crash and finds out he is not the only version of himself. Each clone believes it is the original. The slow unraveling feels heavy because nothing about his life is truly his.
Like Mickey 17, it looks at identity and memory through cloning. Both films ask what makes a person real when they can be replaced without notice. The quiet setting in Moon makes each moment land harder because there is nowhere for Sam to hide from the truth.
4. The Lobster (2015)

The Lobster is set in a world where single people are forced to find a partner in forty-five days or they get turned into animals. The rules are strict, and the people follow them without question.
The story feels cold, and the humor is dry, but it shows how pressure to fit in can twist human behavior. Like Mickey 17, it shows characters stuck inside a rigid system that decides what their lives are worth. Both films use strange setups to make real points about control and how people shape themselves to survive what they cannot fight.
5. Aniara (2018)

Aniara starts with a ship leaving Earth after it becomes unlivable. When the ship veers off course, it slowly becomes clear that it will never reach its destination. The people onboard start to break apart mentally and emotionally. The longer they drift, the more they lose touch with reality.
Like Mickey 17, it explores what happens when purpose disappears. Both films trap their characters in a closed system with no clear way out. The breakdown in Aniara is not loud but steady and painful. It shows how easy it is to fall apart when hope turns into a lie.
6. Brazil (1985)

Brazil drops you into a future where nothing works unless the paperwork says it does. Sam Lowry just wants to live quietly and find the woman who keeps showing up in his dreams. Instead, he falls deeper into a system that treats people like data points.
Terry Gilliam fills every scene with strange machines and awkward routines that make everything harder than it needs to be. Like Mickey 17, the story shows how giant systems crush people who ask questions. Both films follow a man trying to break free from something built to erase people who don’t fit.
7. Sorry to Bother You (2018)

Sorry to bother. You start with Cassius Green working in a call center where he learns to speak in a voice that helps him move up. As he climbs the ranks, he finds out the company is hiding something worse than bad pay. The film slowly shifts from satire to science fiction without changing its target.
Like Mickey 17, it looks at how companies use people until they stop being people. Both films take big swings with wild ideas but always return to the question of what it costs to survive in a world that wants control more than fairness.
8. High Life (2018)

High Life follows a man named Monte who is stuck on a ship full of prisoners used for science experiments. The crew slowly dies until Monte is left raising a child alone near a black hole.
The film stays quiet, but the tension never breaks. Robert Pattinson holds the story together with a character who keeps going because he has nothing else. Like Mickey 17, the film shows people being used for missions they never agreed to. Both stories ask what life means when someone else decides where you go and what your body is worth.
9. Ex Machina (2015)

Ex Machina begins with a young coder sent to test a robot named Ava inside a remote lab. The test is not what it seems, and soon he realizes both Ava and his boss are hiding something. The story builds slowly, but the questions hit hard. Can something artificial understand what freedom means?
Can someone create life without becoming responsible for it? Like Mickey 17, it shows how science gets used to strip away control from living things. Both films focus on people who learn too late that the line between experiment and cruelty was already crossed.
10. The Congress (2013)

The Congress follows actress Robin Wright, who agrees to sell her digital likeness to a studio that can use it forever. She later finds herself in a world where people escape into animated realities and lose touch with their real lives. The shift between live action and animation feels chaotic but never random.
The film questions what happens when you trade control for comfort. Like Mickey 17, it explores identity and what it means to be reduced to a product. Both films center on characters who are treated like property and must decide what they’re willing to lose to stay human.
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