Project Hail Mary

Ryland Grace awakens on the spaceship Hail Mary far, from Earth, and attempts to piece together how he got there and what his mission may be, realizing how much really lies in his hands.

A space epic as urgent in its stakes as Interstellar, Project Hail Mary is a stunning experience that makes use of every minute to move you. Ryan Gosling proves on an even larger scale his charming leading man skills, imbuing Ryland Grace with a deep cowardice, yet a purity and longing that coexists within his apparent weakness is what makes this one of his most lovable performances yet. He is not the only magic at the center of the film — the puppeteering behind Grace’s alien companion Rocky is magnificent and creates a beautiful connection between the creature and the audience. Sandra Hüller is excellent as well and her presence as the authoritative and calculated Eva Stratt, in charge of Project Hail Mary, a global effort to send an expedition to a solar system beyond ours to save Earth from impending extinction, gives the film so much. Hüller takes on something so unexpected yet essential by stripping Stratt of the coldness felt from the character in the novel, which here feels like a necessity rather than a foundation to her being, making the character not just a figure of control but of empathy.

The visual effects, cinematography, and production design are spellbinding and maintain grand scale while conveying the character’s sense of isolation and his dire circumstances. The film also has a loose and unpredictable sense of humor while maintaining its serious through line of stakes and objectives throughout its epic runtime. Despite the seriousness and tension at the center, there’s something life-affirming that Project Hail Mary discovers was always at its heart: from fear and uncertainty come the most powerful and beautiful forces in the galaxy. The film hits all the right notes, whether the buddy humor, sweeping space journey, or effortless direction from Phil Lord and Christopher Miller, who create something universal (no pun intended), hopeful, and impossible to miss on the big screen: one of the most resonant, wondrous, and flat out perfect blockbusters of the last few years that you might not want to end.

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