2015 (88th) Academy Awards Best Picture Nominee
In real life, space travel is a very dangerous undertaking, but
more often than not everything goes as planned. In movies, however, when
characters venture into outer space, disaster is inevitable. I can’t think of
any movies set in space where something does not go wrong. The Martian is no different in that respect, but in many other ways
it is quite exceptional.
In the first moments of the film, the crew of Ares 3 must make
an emergency evacuation from Mars as a dangerous storm heads toward their
mission site. In the midst of the storm, astronaut Mark Watney (Matt Damon) is struck
by flying debris and thrown far from the escape vehicle. Presuming Watney to be
dead, the rest of the crew launches and begins their trip back to Earth; Watney
awakes to find himself injured and alone on Mars. He makes his way back to the
mission’s living habitat and immediately starts figuring out how he is going to
survive on a lifeless planet with very limited supplies until the next Ares
mission arrives or a rescue mission can be sent, either of which would not be possible
for at least three or four years.
Though Damon is all alone for the scenes on Mars, The Martian is not entirely a one man show
like the survival films Cast Away or All is Lost. Once Watney is able to
reestablish communications with NASA and let them know he is alive, we see the scientists
and administrators at NASA and Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) rally to find
solutions to keep Watney alive and get him home. The team on Earth is made up
of a great ensemble of familiar and lesser known actors including Jeff Daniels,
Chiwetel Ejiofor, Sean Bean, Kristen Wiig, Mackenzie Davis, and Benedict Wong. We
also check in with the other five members of the Ares 3 crew: Kate Mara,
Sebastian Stan, Aksel Hennie, Michael Peña, and Jessica Chastain. Jeff Daniels,
as the head of NASA, and Jessica Chastain, as Ares 3’s commander, are both stand-outs
playing competent, pragmatic, and decisive leaders. Between his performances in
The Martian and in Steve Jobs as Apple president John
Sculley (for which he should’ve received a Supporting Actor nomination), Daniels
had a pretty good 2015. Chastain, no stranger to playing strong, badass
characters, might be a bit young to be a mission commander, but she is
completely believable as a good leader with natural authority. I know that if I
were going to Mars, I’d feel secure with her as my mission commander.
What sets The Martian
apart from other science fiction movies is its heavy emphasis on science. It is
based on a novel by Andy Weir which began as a blog in which Weir would present
a problem facing an astronaut stranded on Mars, then research and post a
solution. If one of his readers noticed something was incorrect or just seemed amiss,
he would go back and fix the inaccuracy. The film adaptation’s scientific
accuracy has received the approval of NASA’s director of planetary science, Jim Green, and for science enthusiasts (a.k.a. geeks) like myself, this is very
exciting. However, whether or not everything in the film is 100% accurate is
not as important as how problem solving and the scientific method are
portrayed. Each life-threatening problem that Watney faces on Mars is entirely
likely and the solutions are plausible. There’s no moment where a character
just tries something dangerous and hopes for the best—all the dangerous
behavior in The Martian is backed up
by meticulous calculations. I’ve never heard so many lines in a movie about how
the math “checks out.”
Perhaps most important of all, and most accurate to real
scientific problem solving, is how Watney’s rescue is a team effort. Science is
about solving a problem in the best and most efficient way possible, and the
characters in The Martian know that
means putting several minds to work and accepting help. Watney solves the
problems of living on Mars with the help of the people at NASA and JPL and uses
the things left behind by his fellow crew members to help him survive (like the
wood from a crucifix to start a fire). In an act of international cooperation
between scientists—not governments—the head of the Chinese Space Agency
volunteers their rocket booster to help send Watney a delivery of food and
supplies. And it is a young, eccentric scientist working in Astrodynamics for another
NASA mission (Donald Glover) who comes up with the daring plan to get Watney
home.
The Martian
presents science fiction in a way we rarely see done successfully: as a
non-esoteric, engaging blend of real science and entertainment. I loved the
pro-science message of The Martian
and I hope it does get people more interested in science and the universe. I
enjoyed The Martian when I saw it in
theaters, but when I watched it again recently…I loved it. I wish this movie were
a stronger contender for Best Picture and I think I’ll always be surprised that
Ridley Scott did not receive a nomination for Best Director. Every shot of The Martian brims with serious, honest
effort and execution and at the helm is Ridley Scott. Damon managed to snag an
Oscar nomination for Best Actor which he is unfortunately unlikely to win, but
which he completely deserves.
In Interstellar,
my favorite movie of 2014, Damon played an astronaut whom others believed to
represent “the best of us;” however, when put to the test, he demonstrated the
worst sides of human nature. The characters in The Martian, are truly the best of us because they are able to put aside
selfish impulses and rise to the occasion when a fellow human is in need. It is
an ideal vision of NASA, but an immensely satisfying one. Everyone snaps into
action, puts their brains to work, and sets aside self-interests—even if it means
accepting help from other countries--and works together. If there ever is a
manned mission to Mars, I imagine that it will bear many similarities to the
expedition presented in The Martian; and
hopefully, unlike the fictional mission, the real mission will be
disaster-free. However, if you were stuck on Mars, you’d want people like the
characters in The Martian working to
keep you alive and get you home.
Nominees: Simon Kinberg, Ridley Scott, Michael Schaefer,
Mark Huffam, Producers
Director: Ridley Scott
Screenplay: Drew Goddard, based on the novel by Andy Weir
Cast: Matt Damon, Jessica Chastain, Jeff Daniels
Production Companies: Scott Free Productions, Kinberg Genre,
TSG Entertainment
Distributor: 20th Century Fox
Release Date: October 2nd, 2015
Total Nominations: 7, including Best Picture
Other Nominations: Actor-Matt Damon, Adapted Screenplay-Drew
Goddard, Production Design-Arthur Max, Celia Bobak, Sound Mixing-Paul Massey,
Mark Taylor, Mac Ruth, Sound Editing-Oliver Tarney, Visual Effects-Richard
Stammers, Anders Langlands, Chris Lawrence, Steven Warner
No comments:
Post a Comment