this post was submitted on 07 Jul 2026
58 points (90.3% liked)

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Summary: 9/10: thrilling, funny, emotionally resonant sci-fi that uses its high concept to ask essential questions about cooperation, sacrifice, and whether we can save ourselves before it's too late.

I hadn't read Andy Weir's award-winning novel before seeing the film, so I wouldn't be disappointed by the adaptation. And I wasn't. The Lord-Miller team, Phil Lord and Christopher Miller, made this an exciting and rewarding sci-fi film that captures Weir's science-heavy problem-solving while never losing sight of its emotional core.

Ryan Gosling totally nailed the sardonic scientist, insisting on playing someone not good at being in space, someone who flips out and feels clumsy in zero gravity. His character arc, from isolated problem-solver to someone capable of profound emotional connection with Rocky, a sentient rock-shaped alien, is beautifully rendered. Gosling brings vulnerability and humor to a role that could have been purely cerebral, making Grace's transformation genuinely moving.

The premise of the film carries urgent relevance: we humans can survive only within a rather narrow temperature range. Project Hail Mary presents a cooling scenario, but the existential threat is the same whether we cool or overheat through global warming. The astrophage consuming the sun's energy becomes a metaphor for the forces draining our planet's capacity to sustain life.

According to a study published in Nature, almost two-thirds of global warming is caused by the wealthiest 10% of the world. Our time is running out, and this film functions as a call to action: we need many heroes like Grace and Rocky to step up and wrestle our future from the wealthy capitalists, monopolists, "kings," dictators, and other "astrophages" consuming resources without regard for collective survival.

Lord and Miller, working from Drew Goddard's screenplay, balance the novel's technical problem-solving with genuine humor and heart. The film understands that science fiction at its best isn't just about solving equations; it's about what we're willing to risk, who we're willing to become, to save each other.

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[–] Cybersec@piefed.social 4 points 1 day ago

I’m surprised it’s not a lot, lot more than that. Most poorer people, especially in developing countries, are living very low impact lives. (Consuming and traveling very little)