Soylent Green was a good movie for it's time, but like all such films, the pacing feels seriously slow by today's standards.
I saw V for Vendetta before I read it. I personally liked the movie more. The tone is very different, but the script was exceedingly well written, I thought. On the subject of graphic novels, I also have Maus. That is by far the most depressing thing I've ever read. It's a retelling of the German's treatment of jews, with the jews as mice and the germans as cats. The author's father (uncle? can't recall now) survived one of the camps and was the inspiration for the story.
I've read F 451 a few times, but not since high school. I remember liking it then. I read 1984 a few times in HS as well. Of all the dystopias I've read / watched, it felt more prescient than any other. And the more we let our government do stuff like Patriot Acts et al, the more prescient he seems. The biggest difference in my mind is that Newspeak isn't the removal of words from the language so much as the transfer from accepted words to politically correct phrases.
The Road was recently made into a movie, wasn't it?
I honestly don't think I've read any of Gibson's works? I need to add Neuromancer and Dream of Electric Sheep, at least, to my list. I also need to rent the latest director's reworking of Blade Runner to my Blockbuster queue.
I've read / tried to read a few Tad Williams works. But his writing just takes too long to plow through. He's worse than Jordon's wheel of time books as far as just getting too verbose to entertain after a while. Great ideas, but when each book is 800+ pages and the series tend to be 5 to 10 books each.... the man enjoys typing too much.
I honestly don't remember Soylent except the end. It may have sucked but the concept was original. You are probably correct that it does not belong in the list.
If I remember it correctly 1984 is mostly a bit of anti communist propaganda. We like to see the parallels in our modern society and I think it is a good warning but ultimately we are far from the state that is described in 1984. Even the old soviet block while closer was far from having the power of the state in 1984. Do we need to be vigilant? Sure. Is 1984 around the corner? I'd say no closer than Brave New World or The Turner Diaries. If you think a certain truth you start drawing the parallels.
If you ever want to read a bit of dystopian future that will completely p__s you off read the Turner Diaries. It was a favorite of Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols if I am not mistaken. The writing is pretty bad, but it is a really good example of writing for an audience in a way that will inflame and rally. It is certainly one of those books I would find online to avoid giving the author any royalties. Going back to my point, the racist and the over the top gun people can look at The Turner Diaries and say “wow that’s just what we are turning into we have to watch out” while someone without those beliefs is inclined to say yeah that’s not so much a realistic representation of the world. We draw our parallels because of what you already think is the world more than because those parallels are really necessarily there.
On the opposite side of politics I picked up The Army of the Republic in an airport of all places and found it to be quite interesting. To the best of my ability to tell it’s a call to armed conflict for the Greenpeace crowd. It is an interesting look into a theoretical very near future where the last of the protected forests have been logged (IE the redwoods are all but gone) and water is privatized. It makes a game of showing both sides while painting private industry as the enemy. I think some of the premises are a bit naïve. For example we won’t ever log the redwood forests. They are much more valuable for tourism even if they were privatized. If you have ever wondered how a decentralized domestic terrorist organization should/would/does work this seems a fairly reasonable representation. As I was reading it I did have the uncomfortable feeling of it reminding me of the Turner Diaries and they have certainly not been a positive influence. The only difference being I can kind of have some sympathy for the protagonists in this story even if they are misguided. Oh and the writing is much better.
You are correct The Road was made into a movie last year. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0898367/. Assuming the description of the book from the original article is correct I can’t see how that would make for much of a movie unless it has been heavily edited.