Gravity
Genre: science-fiction drama
With: Sandra Bullock (Ryan Stone), George Clooney
(Matt Kowalski), Ed Harris (Mission Control), Orto Ignatiussen (Aningaaq),
Phaldut Sharma (Shariff), Amy Warren (Explorer Captain), Basher Savage (Russian
Space Station Captain)
Director: Alfonso Cuarón
Screenplay: Alfonso and Jonás Cuarón
Release: 2013
Studio: Warner Bros. Pictures, Esperanto Filmoj, Heyday
Films
Rating: PG-13
MBiS score: 8.4/10
‟Mission abort. Repeat: mission abort. Initiate emergency disconnect from Hubble.”
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Story-line: at 600 km above planet Earth, astronaut Ryan
Stone is making repairs outside the Explorer Space Shuttle, accompanied by
Shariff Dasari and veteran Matt Kowalski. Generally speaking, things are going
smoothly and Mission Control informs the three spacewalkers that the programmed
destruction of a satellite some distance away won’t cause any problems since
the cloud of debris it has created is not orbiting on the Shuttle’s trajectory.
Even so, is caution warranted, considering that outer space is the most hostile
environment possible for human beings?
Pluses: a scintillating performance by Sandra Bullock
(who literally carries the movie) and excellent support from George Clooney, seasoned
and focused direction, an ingenious and informative screenplay featuring
genuine-sounding dialogues, very strong production values, Emmanuel Lubezki’s
striking cinematography, remarkable special effects, meticulous editing (by Alfonso
Cuarón and Mark Sanger) and Steven Price’s effective, sometimes terrifying
musical score.
Minuses: in the first few
minutes, dialogues feel pat and
one line in particular is insensitive to Indian culture.
Comments: this two-character movie hailed by cinema circles everywhere is a sensory experience, a spectacular, technically perfect film that clearly demonstrates how tragedy strikes as treacherously in the silence of outer space as on our noisy planet Earth. For all its suspense and technical prowess, however, it does not match 2001, A SPACE ODYSSEY or SOLARIS, two movies whose impact is more profound and universal. It is basically a disaster movie – a cosmic version of THE IMPOSSIBLE, for instance – that lacks somewhat in humanity. Thus, GRAVITY deserves a lower general score (8.8 for technical merit, 8.4 for acting and overall production and 8.0 for story and other elements). In spite of my slightly critical tone, Alfonso Cuarón’s fine film is worth your time as it makes you appreciate the talent (and risk-taking) of the people involved in our space programs and in the movie industry generally.
MBiS
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