my choice doesn't have to be under scrutiny anymore than other choices that have been listed. until, all of them are answered as to why they are important to the genre or weren't repeats of prior films or have an important legacy, i don't have to answer to you or anyone else as to my choice.
Are you really that childish, birch? If you aren't able or are unwilling to defend your position, don't post it in the first place. Quite simple, really. The fact that I asked you why you thought Sunshine important to the genre is because, as already explained, I am genuinely interested in what it is about Sunshine that you think has influenced subsequent films. All you have don't, though, is repeatedly stated what you like about the film, as if you liking something means that it is important to the genre.
so, get to it. just to let everyone know, that's going to be difficult for some of them and it's going to be debatable also. the classics are not under debate by me. that is not the point
If you want to ask them about those films, do so. You have the freedom to do so, just as they have the right to question what you post. Anything else, such as you are trying to do, is to troll.
in other words, don't fuking question my choice unless you are going to question them all.
Other than the unnecessary language, this is a childish and pathetic attempt at evasion. And no, you don't get to tell other people which suggestions they get to question and challenge. You also don't get to hide behind their lack of questioning of other suggestions. You posted a suggestion so you have to defend it when challenged. It's really that simple.
besides, if anyone has a clue, it's obvious that subsequent films that have that lone and sympathetic struggle for survival has been a type of theme after this release. even if sunshine wasn't the first, it was a revival of that type of theme with a bleaker and visceral tone where it became a modern trend in the last decade. films are there to inspire subsequent ones, not to be exactly alike.
So which films in particular did Sunshine's relatively bleak tone inspire?
And on what basis are you claiming it to be a revival? You don't think films like Solaris, Dark City, AI, Children of Men etc are sufficiently bleak? The tradition of bleak sci-if has been going on for decades. Furthermore, the British have a history of rather bleak and non-Hollywood endings in all genres. Danny Boyle is merely continuing this fine tradition.
you can't prove it doesn't have importance or a legacy or not because, literally, it can't always be proven.
Yet more evasion, now with the "well, you can't provide it doesn't" approach. You made the claim (that Sunshine is an important film to the sci-if genre) so the onus is on you to support it when challenged.