Matt Damon fights to survive in The Martian. Courtesy Twentieth Century Fox via AP
Matt Damon fights to survive in The Martian. Courtesy Twentieth Century Fox via AP
Matt Damon fights to survive in The Martian. Courtesy Twentieth Century Fox via AP
Matt Damon fights to survive in The Martian. Courtesy Twentieth Century Fox via AP

Film review: The Martian is an incredible space film that unfolds in three settings


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The Martian

Director: Ridley Scott

Stars: Matt Damon, Jessica Chastain, Kristen Wiig, Jeff Daniels

Four stars

Without Matt Damon, the solitary fight for survival on Mars would be lonely indeed. Alone on screen for most of his scenes, as an astronaut stranded on the Red Planet, the Oscar-nominated actor is the winning heart of Ridley Scott's epic space adventure, The Martian.

With Damon’s charm taking centre stage, Scott has crafted an exciting, hopeful story about humanity at its best – the brightest minds working together for a common goal that bridges international borders and forges a feeling of unity.

Affable and intelligent, playful and determined, Damon’s Mark Watney is so endearing and entertaining as a narrator and subject, it is easy to see why the world would want to save him.

The story begins with Watney accidentally left behind during a Nasa mission to Mars. When a fierce storm forces an emergency evacuation from the planet, he disappears in the chaos and is presumed dead. As his fellow astronauts mourn him while they begin their months-long journey back to Earth, and Nasa officials struggle with how to explain his death to the public, Watney wakes up, injured and alone.

Incredibly optimistic and resilient, he treats his wounds with minor surgery and immediately goes about prolonging his survival, knowing it could be years before a manned spacecraft returns to Mars.

He puts his skills as a botanist and engineer to work, devising a way to grow crops in the arid soil and make water by burning hydrogen. He then sets about rewiring old equipment from a previous Mars mission in the hopes of getting a message to Nasa to let his colleagues know he is alive.

Watney is curious and talkative, keeping himself company by narrating his every move. He tracks his obstacles and progress in daily video logs. He chats to himself in footage from the helmet-cam in his spacesuit, cracking jokes he knows no one can hear.

Seeing his efforts through various camera perspectives – the helmet-cam, a bunk-cam inside his sleeping quarters, a dashboard camera inside his space rover and the video diaries in which he appears to talk directly to the audience – adds visual interest, though Damon would probably be just as magnetic talking to a hand-held camera in an empty room.

Meanwhile, Nasa director Teddy Sanders (Jeff Daniels at his most clinical) and Mars-mission chief Vincent Kapoor (Chiwetel Ejiofor) learn from satellite photos that Watney is alive. As Nasa spokeswoman Annie Montrose (a miscast Kristin Wiig) scrambles to protect the agency’s public image, the men try to figure out a way to bring the stranded astronaut home.

The Martian unfolds in three settings, all spectacularly realised by production designer Arthur Max. There's life on Earth, set inside Nasa's sterile Houston headquarters and the lively Jet Propulsion Laboratory; and life on Mars, a dusty, red, rocky expanse where nothing lives (the scenes for which were filmed in Jordan). Then there is life aboard the film's elegant spacecraft and vehicles — from the rugged rover Watney uses to explore Mars to the Enterprise-inspired ship that carries Watney's crewmates and their commander, Melissa Lewis (Jessica Chastain).

Unlike other recent big-screen space trips, the science here is presented simply enough that no suspension of disbelief or quantum leap through the time-space continuum is necessary.

It all seems plausible and based on existing science – and author Andy Weir, upon whose novel the film is based, insists it is, calling it “a technical book for technical people”.

“I had no idea mainstream readers would be interested at all,” he says.

With Scott at the helm and Damon leading the cast, The Martian is accessible and beautiful, cinematically and intellectually. Even though it is a big Hollywood production, Watney's survival really does seem in question – there is no guarantee of a happy ending – and audiences will want to join the international crowds on screen in cheering for his rescue.

* Sandy Cohen / AP