Start Your 2010 Hugo Watches
Jul. 13th, 2009 11:56 amWell, I guess I will have to buy a supporting membership in Aussiecon4, so as to be sure to nominate for the Hugos. Because if Moon does not win a long-form Hugo for best dramatic presentation next year, it will not be my fault. Damn. What you have here is that rarest of combinations: good story telling, excellent performances, and genuine science-y science fiction, in a movie. Boggles the mind. Word of warning to space opera fans: what you will not find in Moon: ray guns, interstellar dreadnoughts, dogfights in space, car chases, brass bikinis, or explosions. And, despite being a story about an employee of a mining company in space, there are no chest-exploding aliens, and no High Noon in Space either. It's not SciFi (or even SyFy), in other words.
Sam Rockwell won the Best Actor title at SIFF recently, and deserved every bit of it. He delivers two different stages of a lonely, taciturn man with an anger-control problem, and the script gives him enough room to bring touches of sweetness and profound vulnerability to the performance.
The film has been described as having a pre-Star Wars look and feel, and I think there is some truth to that. Living in a mining station on the dark side of the Moon is a lot more austere and less fantastical than racing land speeders on Tatooine, though, so it fits. And, as in so much of the film, the look and feel deliberately echoes back to the classics of the genre. The director cites Silent Running as an influence, and the spoor of 2001 is everywhere. Some of the finest story-telling is found in observed details of the background: the smiley face hash marks in the latrine, counting days of Sam's contract, the names of the remote mining rovers on their monitors (they're named after the four Evangelists, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, only one name has been crossed out in marker and re-labeled "Judas"), and the "Kick me" post it on the back of the primary remote for the station's robotic caretaker, Gerty.
Kevin Spacey plays the lipid-neutrality of Gerty's voice with just the right near-lilt to remind us of HAL 9000 in 2001, and the script plays off that resemblance in clever ways. I particularly liked the way the invoked ghost of HAL in our minds is a foil for telling a very different story. They tell me this film is a bit hard to find, but if you are a fan of actual science fiction, I recommend going the extra mile to see it.
Sam Rockwell won the Best Actor title at SIFF recently, and deserved every bit of it. He delivers two different stages of a lonely, taciturn man with an anger-control problem, and the script gives him enough room to bring touches of sweetness and profound vulnerability to the performance.
The film has been described as having a pre-Star Wars look and feel, and I think there is some truth to that. Living in a mining station on the dark side of the Moon is a lot more austere and less fantastical than racing land speeders on Tatooine, though, so it fits. And, as in so much of the film, the look and feel deliberately echoes back to the classics of the genre. The director cites Silent Running as an influence, and the spoor of 2001 is everywhere. Some of the finest story-telling is found in observed details of the background: the smiley face hash marks in the latrine, counting days of Sam's contract, the names of the remote mining rovers on their monitors (they're named after the four Evangelists, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, only one name has been crossed out in marker and re-labeled "Judas"), and the "Kick me" post it on the back of the primary remote for the station's robotic caretaker, Gerty.
Kevin Spacey plays the lipid-neutrality of Gerty's voice with just the right near-lilt to remind us of HAL 9000 in 2001, and the script plays off that resemblance in clever ways. I particularly liked the way the invoked ghost of HAL in our minds is a foil for telling a very different story. They tell me this film is a bit hard to find, but if you are a fan of actual science fiction, I recommend going the extra mile to see it.
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Date: 2009-07-13 08:05 pm (UTC)Note to Seattlites: Moon is playing at the Harvard Exit. DO NOT MISS IT!
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Date: 2009-07-13 08:54 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-07-13 09:06 pm (UTC)Moon is his directorial debut.
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Date: 2009-07-13 11:42 pm (UTC)And I'm sure you're right that the new Star Trek will be a heavily vetted favorite, but at least I can do my bit by making my pitch. I liked the Trek movie just fine, and all, but it's Just Another Space Opera.
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Date: 2009-07-14 12:27 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-07-14 01:39 am (UTC)There's another in-joke with the names of the plants: Ridley, Douglas...
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Date: 2009-07-14 01:43 am (UTC)Rockwell's performances are key to the film's believability, though. One of the best I've seen this year (and I've seen quite a few).
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Date: 2009-07-14 01:45 am (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2009-07-18 01:25 am (UTC)I'm sorry to say we were all disappointed. I won't go too far in speaking for the others, but I think it's safe to say we all thought it was well made and well acted and very stupidly written. We did have some fun afterward comparing our count of the plot holes.
It's a shame really, since the director's statement of his intentions for the film (available on the movie's website) are highly honorable. I just wish he'd had a knowledgeable SF editor look over the script before he filmed it.
The protagonist's predicament is truly tragic and affecting, but it's so artificially set up or 'forced' for that very purpose by the illogical situation that the emotional impact is much diminished.
For me, the annoying dumbness of the whole thing can be summed up by the fact that after stressing repeatedly that the base is isolated on the far side of the moon (not "dark side," Ulrika, there is no dark side), the protagonist only has to go for a short drive to see the Earth hanging in the sky.
There's no way I would nominate this film for a Hugo.