The Martian (2015)
PG-13
3.5 Stars out of 5
Director Ridley ScottWriter Drew Goddard, Andy Weir (book)
Cinematography Dariusz Wolski
Music Harry Gregson-Williams
Matt Damon Mark Watney
Jessica Chastain Melissa Lewis
Kristen Wiig Annie Montrose
Jeff Daniels Teddy Sanders
Michael Pena Rick Martinez
Sean Bean Mitch Henderson
Kate Mara Beth Johanssen
Chiwetel Ejiofor Vincent Kapoor
Like similar tales that have come before (“Gravity” – 2013, “Cast
Away” - 2000, “Apollo 13” - 1995, even “Robinson Crusoe on Mars” – 1964, and
many more), Hollywood loves a good survival story. What could be more
compelling than a resilient hero pushed to his or her limits fighting the
environment and their own personal demons in order to survive? Combine this
cinematic trope with some spectacular cinematography illustrating Martian landscapes,
sprinkle in some reasonable acting from Matt Damon and the under-used Jessica
Chastain; borrow some scenes from “Apollo 13” and “Gravity” (apparently when
all else fails in space, you simply have to jump really, really hard in order
to save yourself), and some (let’s say) irritating music from the Disco era,
and you have the recipe for “The Martian”. That being said, it was a fairly
entertaining film.
Mark Watney (Matt Damon) is on a mission to Mars with his disco
music loving commander Melissa Lewis (Jessica Chastain) when a very nasty storm
rolls in. Are such storms even possible in Mars’ thin atmosphere, and if they
are what’s NASA’s plan for their escape module to avoid falling over in such a
wind? These questions and more may run through your mind as you watch Mark get
left behind by Melissa and the rest of her crew, Beth Johanssen (Kate Mara),
Mark’s wisecracking buddy Rick Martinez (Michael Pena), and a couple others too
insignificant to list here. Commander Melissa is led to believe by events that Mark
is dead and as such leaves Mars with a heavy heart before her escape pod falls
over and they are all stranded. Mark, of course (spoiler alert) is not dead.
The bulk of the movie depicts how he is going to “science the heck out Mars” in
order to survive. Needless to say, he has a few setbacks, but where there is a
will, there is a way (at least in Hollywood).
To the movie’s and the writers’ credit, there is
considerable time spent watching the team at NASA in Houston and JPL in
Pasadena work with Mark to help him help himself. This movie borrows the scene
from “Apollo 13” wherein some tape and a bunch of stuff on the table must be
used in order to create a jury-rigged oxygen generator. “Apollo 13” had the
benefit of being based on actual events; “The Martian” does not. Instead, we are
asked to believe that Mark can solve a leaking space suit helmet with duct tape
(it’s silvery, so maybe it’s NASA duct tape) and then shortly thereafter seal
up his compromised habitat with the same tape and some plastic sheeting –
remember, this is the same planet that had winds which just about toppled the
escape pod. Oh well, its “science” fiction; emphasis on the fiction.
This type of movie follows such a set formula, you can
almost set your watch to the events on screen: Mark solves a problem, next
problem coming up in 3, 2, 1 seconds – bingo, go solve another one Mark. The
writers do address this scenario in the very end during a lecture to new
astronauts: they must be prepared to do just that, solve one problem, then
another. So, maybe, this really is the way space travel is and will be
conducted; or maybe, it just some kind of cinematic alarm clock that must be
adhered to. However, formula or not, “The Martian” as directed by Ridley Scott
and written by Drew Goddard based on a book by Andy Weir is exciting. You know
problems are coming, you know solutions will always be there, so don’t worry
about the predictability, just sit back and enjoy the ride. And it is an
entertaining ride, a ride made the more enjoyable by the remarkable sceneries
created to stand in for Mars coupled with some very poetic cinematography by
Dariusz Wolski.
The technical tools used to make this movie, the build –up and
release of tension and the frequently wry comments made by Mark as he addresses
his seemingly hopeless situation help make this a fun movie. It quite probably
would have been a better candidate for the summer blockbuster season, but
considering how well it has done in the market place, it would seem the studio
knew what it was doing when it released “The Martian” during the roll up to the
Oscar-contending film release season. One other curious note about the movie is
the use of large amounts of Disco music in the soundtrack. The screenplay has Mark
complain fairly non-stop about Melissa’s musical choice, and I presume the
viewers must assume she is the only one to have brought any music to Mars, but
what was Ridley Scott and Drew Goddard thinking? Is there some musical or
thematic reason to use this musical genre? Are they trying to drive the
audience that much closer to the edge of their seats with musical anxiety? In
any event, “The Martian” can fall into my guilty pleasures category. There are
no surprises, no deep currents running in this movie, but it was a fun and
thrilling ride to spend a rainy afternoon watching.
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