Sam Bell (Sam Rockwell) is nearing the completion of his 3-year-long contract with Lunar Industries, mining Earth’s primary source of energy on the dark side of the moon. Alone with only the base’s vigilant computer Gerty (voiced by Oscar-Winner Kevin Spacey, 1999 Best Actor, American Beauty) as his sole companion, Bell’s extended isolation has taken its toll. His only link to the outside world comes from satellite messages from his wife and young daughter. He longs to return home, but a terrible accident on the lunar surface leads to a disturbing discovery that contributes to his growing sense of paranoia and dislocation so many miles away from home. Moon is an engrossing, intelligent sci-fi thriller that ranks with genre classics like 2001: A Space Odyssey.Science fiction can encompass many genres–suspense, horror, action-adventure, romance, even comedy–but director Duncan Jones’s Moon doesn’t fit neatly into any of them. This smart, provocative film has no aliens or cool spaceships, and the effects (mostly consisting of model vehicles lumbering across the lunar surface) aren’t all that special; instead, the material is character- and story-driven, centering on an excellent, multilayered performance by Sam Rockwell. The scene is some undetermined point in the future. Rockwell plays Sam Bell, an employee of Lunar Industries, the company responsible for mining a fusion energy source called Helium-3, which is vital to Earth’s efforts to reverse a serious energy crisis and can only be found on the far side of the Moon. Sam is all by himself, and as he nears the end of his three-year contract, the solitude is starting to get to him (“Three years is a long haul,” he says. “Way, way, way too long. I’m talking to myself on a regular basis”); his only contact with his wife and daughter back home comes through the occasional video messages he exchanges with them, while his sole interaction on the Moon is with GERTY 3000, a computer voiced by Kevin Spacey (and an obvious parallel to 2001: A Space Odyssey‘s HAL 9000). Things start to go seriously sideways when Sam crashes his vehicle while out inspecting one of the giant Helium-3 harvesters. He comes to in the base infirmary, seemingly none the worse for the wear; but an unnerving surprise awaits him when he goes back to check out the accident site, and the resulting complications occupy the rest of the movie. Fans of 2001, Solaris, and other cerebral sci-fi will enjoy figuring out what’s going on; others will find it slow-moving and tedious. Either way, Moon, which was made quickly and on a relatively low budget, is well worth a look. –Sam Graham
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January 19, 2006
#1
I seriously can’t believe the reviews I’m reading here. I never walk out of a movie, but when I saw Moon in the theater I came closer than I ever have before. The plot is tedious and predictable, with several aspects that make absolutely no sense and are never even attempted to be explained (ghostly lady walking around on the surface of the moon?) Also, I understand that this was an independent film, but the production values and set pieces are laughable. This movie is so bad that I actually told people to go see it as a practical joke. Anyone with a sense of what makes good sci-fi, or a good story in general, will have nothing but contempt for this steaming pile of excrement on celluloid (or blu-ray, in this case).
January 19, 2006
#2
There really is no engaging plot or appealing story line. Hardcore Science Fiction fans with a brain, won’t know what will happen next or why it is happening, nor will they care.
MOON (2009) might have been an engaging if (unintentionally) short series but as a stand alone Science Fiction story it was underdeveloped and repulsively tiresome but not really entrancing enough to watch for that reason. The movie reminded me of Silent Running (1971) if Sam Rockwell had been a drugged out Moon-naut, so that makes it kind of worth watching for alluring, repellent Science Fiction comedy. Was this really made in 2009? The clothes would point more towards 1988, the production lacks much science and technology credibility.
To be honest, I had to double-check to make sure that this film wasn’t just some movie add-on to a larger loathsome Sci-Fi series, but to no avail. Moon (not sure why its called that since it takes place on Jupiter) seems like a bunch of independent Twilight Zone scenes put together to hopefully form a cohesive story, but fails at it.
Not something I would suggest to watch.
January 19, 2006
#3
My only question. No multi-lunar corporation would send one dude up there by himself. The premise is absurd. Better a film about the isolation we feel here now on this planet. Called WEB.
January 19, 2006
#4
Moon is an exercise in meditation and claustrophobia. You’d better have a mad crush on Sam Rockwell because that’s all you get: Sam Rockwell wandering around his ugly spaceship talking to his computer (voiced by the ever annoying Kevin Spacey). The mise en scène is as boring as the plot. Three years up there and the guy doesn’t hang up a poster or a picture of his kids? I wasn’t expecting throw pillows, but some sign of human touch would have been nice. Sam Rockwell’s character is not interesting enough to carry the film, and watching him try to figure out what’s happening is low on the intrigue scale. When ground control is down, and someone that looks just like you appears in your spaceship, and your only friend is a computer, you’re screwed. Does it really take 97 minutes to figure that out? I enjoy slow, cerebral films, but Moon was just slow. If you aren’t a big science fiction fan, this film isn’t doing the genre any favors, and will doubtfully win you over. If you like your films slow and spaceshippy you might fall in love. Two Yawning Stars.
January 19, 2006
#5
This movie didn’t really do anything for me. It was just a variation of the theme of a person isolated from other people. It didn’t even bring anything new about the theme to the table. This type of situation has been done so many times before (Castaway, Robinson Crusoe, I Am Legend, etc.)in ways that I thought were more interesting. Copying HAL from 2001 didn’t help in the originality department, either. I have to admit I couldn’t get into the movie from the beginning because I couldn’t believe they would send ONE person into space for three years- ONE person! After that, I just couldn’t get into it (so I probably missed/forgot some things). I also think that a clone of someone wouldn’t have such a different personality from the original person if that clone had only been in that kind environment. If they can clone him, why don’t they just have a bunch of clones up there? They’d get things done in a lot shorter time than three years. Also, why did it take him almost three years to go nearly insane? I probably would have lost it after three days.
This movie was directed by David Bowie’s son.