
Frankly, it is a film awash with gooey sentimentalism and Stallone is out-acted by a child, yet these 93. With today's pandemic shuttering restaurants across the world and hushing once vibrant cities, Demolition Man's setting is more chilling than quirky. Over the Top Warner Bros./YouTube I recommend 'Over the Top' with some major caveats. In fact, one dining spot that remains standing – depending where you watched the film – is either Tex-Mex joint Taco Bell (for US viewers) or Pizza Hut.

In the film, a massive earthquake in 2010 unleashes an endless stream of diseases and viruses that renders the streets empty and destroys the restaurant industry. Set in the fictional metropolis of San Angeles in the year 2032, the film depicts a society recovering from an environmental catastrophe. Here are five ways Demolition Man got it right.

The Marco Brambilla-directed film, in which cryogenically frozen cop John Spartan (Stallone) wakes up in a future world he can't fathom, joins the likes of other sci-fis such as 2011's Contagion and 1994's The Stand in making eerily accurate observations about the world we live in today.
