Five Futuristic Movie Cooking Tools We Wish Were Real

Cooking Thanksgiving dinner is tough enough without a food replicator. Since the birth of the science fiction genre, movie-technology has inspired creative invention in the real world. So, scientists and think tanks, let's put the Star Wars Strategic Defense-enhancements down for a second, and get cranking on some of these...
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Cooking Thanksgiving dinner is tough enough without a food replicator. Since the birth of the science fiction genre, movie-technology has inspired creative invention in the real world. So, scientists and think tanks, let’s put the Star Wars Strategic Defense-enhancements down for a second, and get cranking on some of these futuristic movies’ ideas for food. It’ll make the holidays, and cooking for drunk family members, much easier.

1. The Replicator – Star Trek

Aside from the making Thanksgiving cooking easier, it would end a few problems worldwide — like that “hunger” issue.

2. Hydrator – Back to the Future Part II (1989)
You remember the scene? It’s dinner at the futuristic house in Hill Valley, and Mom McFly opens a tiny foil bag and drops a (product placement!) Pizza Hut pizza small enough to fit in your palm on a plate. She drops it in a Black & Decker (more product placement!) “Hydrator,” says “Hydrate level four please!” and, after a few seconds, it comes out regular sized-and piping hot. Sure microwaves do roughly the same thing, but we humans have a love of devices that make small things really, really big.

3. Bread Slicer / Toaster- Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy (2005)
It’s simple: it’s a bread knife that toasts bread as you slice it. Bad. Ass.

4. An iRobot – iRobot (2004)
Will Smith’s reservations be damned, iRobots’ extraordinary speed, agility and strength allows them to slice carrots at Iron Chef America speed.

5. The Flying Food Cart – The Fifth Element (1997)

For high-rise office workers and second-floor & above apartment dwellers, this is a dream come true. Imagine propping open your 17th-floor window, and seeing a Chinese food cart puttering towards you in mid-air. It’s how Bruce Willis ate a meal after being fired from his Flying Taxi job.

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