Skip to main content

Ad Astra Review: Brad Pitt, Lost in Space


Seek out the nearest jumbo screen and let filmmaker James Gray, a renegade visionary with a big reach and a knack for sneaky mischief, sweep you off ad astra (thats to the stars in Latin). Getting lost in the space conjured up by the writer-director and the brilliant Dutch-Swedish cinematographer Hoyte Van Hoytema (Interstellar, Dunkirk) to screw with your head and throw off your equilibrium is part of the fun. Plus youll have Brad Pitt for company, which is good since hes giving one of his best implosive performances as Major Roy McBride, an astronaut on a mission both profound and personal.

In essence, Ad Astra is a father-son story told on a cosmic scale. Its not just Roys cool-under-pressure reputation that gets him picked for a top-secret mission to Neptune. Its the fact that his famous-astronaut father, Clifford McBride (Tommy Lee Jones) went missing there three decades ago after heading the Lima Project on a search for intelligent life in the universe. But heres the thing: Daddy might not be dead. He might, in fact, be somewhere on that remote planet playing Zeus by aiming power surges at Earth in an effort to destroy us. Clifford needs to be stopped and who better to do it than his son, setting up an Apocalypse Now in space as junior attempts to save or destroy his nutjob old man.

This Is the End: James Gray on 'Apocalypse Now'The Top 40 Sci-Fi Movies of the 21st CenturyTop 30 Stephen King Movies, RankedPerforming With Missy Elliott, 17 Years Later

Its a familiar plot, going back to Joseph Conrads Heart of Darkness, but Gray and co-writer Ethan Gross keep the action humming, at least in the beginning. An early scene shows Roy working on a space antenna that shoots up from the ground like a limitless beanstalk. Then, boom, one of those power surges sends workers plummeting to their death. Roy barely escapes by parachute. But the danger is established and Grays filmmaking is tremendously exciting.

The mission heats up when Roy, ordered by SpaceCom not to call attention to himself, flies commercial to the moon. Its the near future where people do that kind of thing. And the sight of the moon littered with mall-like shops packs a wicked sting. Traveling by rover across the lunar surface, Roy is attacked by space pirates in a scene bursting with energy and suspense. Ditto a moment of zero-gravity, hand-to-hand combat. Then its off to Mars, where Natasha Lyonne shows up barking orders and Roy suits up for his space shot to Neptune, interrupted by the rescue of a space capsule now occupied by something scary that spoiler etiquette should keep out of reviews.

Its here that the film leans in on solemnity. In voiceover, Roy expresses emotions we cant see on his placid surface (What happened to my dad? What did he find out there? Did it break him? Or was he always broken?). In flashbacks, Liv Tyler shows up as Roys estranged wife, bemoaning his emotional coldness. References abound to other films about the loneliness and alienation that come with space travel, from Stanley Kubricks masterful 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) and Andrei Tarkovskys mindbending Solaris (1972) to Alfonso Cuarons Oscar-winning Gravity (2013) and Christopher Nolans hypnotic Interstellar (2014).

At times, these references weigh down the film. But Gray ultimately stamps Ad Astra with a touch that is uniquely his own. In The Lost City of Z, the film Gray made before he ventured into the cosmic void, the exploration into the unknown took place not in space but in the Amazonian jungle. Yet the sense of man against the elements persists. From Little Odessa, The Yards, We Own the Night, Two Lovers and The Immigrant all dramas about countries, families, friends and lovers separated by outside forces Gray holds focus on what makes us human.

He needed an actor of stellar skills to keep us in orbit, which he gets in Pitt, whose portrayal is a marvel of nuanced feeling. Playing a spacebound stoic who refuses to wear his emotions on his sleeve can keep an audience at a distance see Ryan Gosling as Neil Armstrong in First Man but Pitt avoids that trap. His scenes with Jones, who can do more with a squint that most actors with pages of dialogue, never push for effect but achieve a wrenching power. The 55-year-old actor is at the top of his game (see his work Quentin Tarantinos Once Upon a Time . . . in Hollywood) and in Ad Astra, he digs deep into a character who finally sees past his duty to the job to his obligation to himself. Yes, youve heard this tale before. But Gray tells it with a grand scope and intimate sense of empathy that is nothing less than enthralling.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Power of Appreciation

Is there anything more mysterious in theworld than the formula to having a successful romantic relationship? Asa divorced woman, I now marvel at those who are able to createpassionate, loving, long-term relationships. From my studies with booksand the school of hard knocks, I believe that one of the most importantingredients in relationships, of all kinds, is appreciation. What is Appreciation? Appreciation is likea much-needed rainfall to a farmer's crops that have been withering ina drought. Just as the crops start to shrivel and die without water,human relationships also start to feel brittle without a steadyapplication of the nourishing, even life-giving, impacts ofappreciation. The dictionary defines appreciation as "a favorablecritical estimate," "sensitive awareness" and "an expression ofadmiration, approval or gratitude." When you appreciate someone, youare tuned into a positive quality of another human being and expressyour gratitude for it. ...

Corporate ERP on Dynamics AX Deployment with Hub and Spokes Architecture

In certain business development scenarios you, as IT director of mid-market company have to respect existing structure and plan the evolution. This is especially true when your company expands in the way of acquisitions. Additional complication might be attributed to international business model, where you are acquiring established enterprise in the foreign country. In this small paper we would like to come through some popular theories and recommendations, where we suppose that you have Dynamics AX or formerly known as Axapta in your headquarters. If you are in Corporate ERP selection mode, we recommend you to consider AX in the case, when your policy is leaning toward Microsoft Dynamics products and technologies: 1.Why AX? First of all this ERP and MRP platform is recommended by Microsoft for the implementations in such industries as meat, fish and sea products, poultry, mining and oil drilling, distribution and logistics and with new version 2012 in public sector (GL fund managemen...

Attic Fans

Attic and roof ventilation allows excess heat and moisture to escape at home to reduce summer cooling costs, pre-mature deterioration of roofing materials and condensation can lead to costly repairs. Effective attic ventilation relies on natural convection to pull air from the top to the bottom position, often in the open in Sofia, and the exhaust hot air from the ceiling vent in a higher position, such as through a gable, or open. Many new and existing homes are not ceilings, and its architecture can not afford soffits perforations for ventilation. While most households are conscious on the convenience brought by nicely ventilated homes, many tend to overlook the attic as one of the areas to be considered. No one finds it comfortable staying for long hours in the closed attic because of the overwhelming heat that builds up in it. For this reason, it is necessary for everyone to consider installing attic ventilation fans in order to cool down the attic's heat. This can have amazin...