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Movie Review: 'The Martian'

By Bill Wine
KYW Newsradio 1060

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) -- The Martian is, literally and figuratively, out of this world.

Matt Damon stars in this science fiction drama as fictional NASA astronaut Mark Watney, a botanist and mechanical engineer who finds himself alone on the Red Planet when the crew of the Ares 3 mission, led by Jessica Chastain and including Kate Mara and Micheal Pena, evacuate their landing site after concluding – wrongly – that Watney has died during a severe dust storm.

Oh, he's alive, all right. But he's trapped.

There he is, alone, millions of miles from home, without any way of communicating with Earth, and with only enough food to last him for a few weeks.

And now he must use his skills to somehow produce food and water, to figure out a way of contacting his colleagues, and to survive.

Meanwhile, his crewmates have returned home and are unaware of his predicament, although NASA colleagues played by Jeff Daniels, Chiwetel Ejiofor, and Sean Bean struggle with whether or when to inform the other astronauts of Watney's plight.

 

4
(4 stars out of 4!)

 

For three-time Oscar-nominated director Ridley Scott (Black Hawk Down, Thelma & Louise, Gladiator), whose glittering resume includes its share of science fiction thrillers (Alien, Blade Runner, Prometheus), this visually commanding space misadventure is about as fine as anything the eclectic craftsman has directed.

And he provides a welcome return of the space program to the movie screen.

In Damon, with his everyman approachability and sly wit, he's got the right leading man, as inner-space grounded as the outer-space movie he's anchoring.

Drew Goddard's script, based on the best-selling book by Andy Weir, which sometimes recalls Apollo 13 and even more frequently suggests Cast Away, manages to include all the necessary exposition without becoming overly technical or overloading the emotional narrative with dry data.

But what the screenplay offers in abundance that gives this particular science fiction adventure distinction is a natural humor that grows out of situation and character. This movie is surprisingly, consistently, effectively funny.

There are suspenseful sequences, to be sure, but precious little action and a relaxed time frame that spans about two years. What are being celebrated here, in an admirably and appropriately thoughtful way, are intelligence, resourcefulness, expertise, and creative problem solving.

Science wonks, listen up.

Meanwhile, add this one to 2013's Gravity and 2014's Interstellar for a three-year trifecta of superbly realized cinematic sci-fi.

So we'll strand all 4 stars out of 4 for the exhilarating survival drama, The Martian, enthralling science fiction that plays like ingeniously informed science fact.

 

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