Remember the great scene in Ron Howard’s Apollo 13 where, desperate to find a way
to save stranded astronauts in a failing spaceship, NASA engineers are
presented with a box of spare parts and told to figure out how those fit
together as a makeshift solution? The
Martian is that scene for over two hours. In its opening sequence the first
astronauts on Mars evacuate the planet during a sandstorm that knocks one of
their crewmates off the medical signals and into the deadly dusty darkness.
They think he’s dead and leave him behind, where he wakes up alone and afraid
with a desolate lifeless planet all to himself. He has to find a way to make 60
days worth of supplies last up to four years, the time it could take to get
someone back to pick him up. And that’s only if he can make contact with Earth sooner
rather than later.
It’s a surprisingly absorbing experience to watch one man
think his way through complicated story problems. Sure, it’s the sort of
mystery that’s impossible to think through faster than the characters on
screen. But there’s a certain convincing popcorn logic to the whole string of
science thought experiments presented for our Robinson Crusoe on Mars in a
relatively hard sci-fi premise. No alien twists or sudden water-filled oasis on
the horizon, he can only stay in the pressurized makeshift lab or wander out
with his spacesuit to scavenge whatever mechanical bits he can to make his
unexpected extended stay survivable. Though it wouldn’t be hard to root for
anyone’s survival in that situation, it helps that he’s played by Matt Damon, a
likable enough presence on screen, equivalent to stranding peak James Stewart
or Tom Hanks. He’s corn-fed Americana aw-shucks smart, putting one foot in
front of the other.
We watch as he tries to power his life support systems, grow
crops, and phone home. Back on Earth his NASA colleagues (Jeff Daniels, Kristen
Wiig, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Mackenzie Davis, Sean Bean, Donald Glover) quickly
notice movement in satellite photos and start working on ways to get in touch,
and get him back. In between are his traveling crewmates (Jessica Chastain,
Michael Peña, Kate Mara, Sebastian Stan, Aksel Hennie), unaware the man they’re
mourning is alive and might be calling on them to help, too. All those actors
are great, believable in their competence and drive, with great
timing delivering complicated dialogue. It’s one of those big Hollywood
ensembles where the characters are the sum total of their job descriptions
(their titles pop up on screen at each intro) and the recognizable faces are
meant to fill in the unspoken rest. No one has time for backstory, personal
problems, or emotional appeals. There’s not even a token villain. It’s all can-do
cooperation and high-stakes business.
I’m sure the armchair rocket scientists in the crowd could
still quibble with the results, but at least the filmmakers have a nuts and
bolts commitment to showing their work. The characters walk through each new option
or development with lots of technobabble patter and math lab/science center
jargon, talking through variables, calculations, and equations, triangulating
timetables and press releases while weighing the needs of the many with the
needs of the few. This could be dull, especially in the relentless exposition
and talky narration cutting down on potential poetry of space flight and lonely
unearthly vistas of red-tinted desert. But what makes it work is the crisp tick
tock editing, cutting for suspense and propulsion between people crowding
around computers and white boards and the lonely plight of the one man they’re
mobilizing brainpower to save.
Drew Goddard (Cabin in
the Woods) has adapted Andy Weir’s book into a screenplay balancing
determined problem solving, often clever and surprising, with a mild but
charming wit cutting through the heavy material. It’s not glib banter. It’s the
light needling and gallows humor of serious smart people who are good at their
jobs, but feeling the pressure. It plays into director Ridley Scott’s interest
in world building, process, data displays, and men on missions, allowing him to
turn this Cast Away meets Gravity by way of Randall Munroe's What If? into something
his own, an easily tense space survival story, even if the end is not once in
doubt. The Martian has some visual
overlap with his Alien/Prometheus world in cinematographer Dariusz
Wolski’s unfussy 3D views of production designer Arthur Max’s functional
worn-down tech and austere sand-swept Mars terrain. But Scott also has relaxed fun
with it, making amusing tension out of, say, Damon struggling to duct tape a
depressurizing suit shut, or finding room for a fun disco soundtrack. It’s an efficient
and entertaining workmanlike brainteaser of a movie.
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