ODEON Magazine 112 Sept/Oct | Page 17

here are so many reasons to be excited about James Gray’s long- awaited science-fiction drama, Ad Astra, that you’d need to be a rocket scientist just to compute them all. You might be rubbing your hands over the cutting-edge special effects, with the gleaming rockets and face- rippling G-force of the trailer all living up to the director’s bold ambition to give us “the most realistic depiction of space travel that’s ever been put in a movie”. As Gray (who also helmed We Own the Night and The Lost City of Z, both fantastic) told shot astronaut who watched his beloved father (Tommy Lee Jones) vanish into deep space 15 years earlier during a mysterious mission called the Lima Project, and still longs to know the truth. “I’ve been very lucky because Brad and I are very, very aligned creatively,” says Gray of their working partnership. “And I don’t think I would have entered into this if that weren’t the case.” But perhaps the most tantalising thing about Ad Astra is that this movie INTELLIGENT LIFE Three more sci-fi films packing brains as well as brawn... 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY (1968) The daddy of smart sci-fi, Kubrick’s cosmic mind- trip is one of the most influential films ever. “I’ve tried to shake up the genre a little bit...” inhabits not one, not two but three cinematic spaces as a white-knuckle actioner, an emotive family drama and a celestial mystery – with McBride discovering that his ‘hero’ dad could still be alive out there and plotting the annihilation of humanity. All told, it’s shaping up as anything but your average space movie. “What I’ve tried to do,” explains Gray, “is shake up the genre a little bit… The weird thing is the movie has become quite personal for me, which I think is always where you want to go if you want to do work that matters.” Houston, we have a problem, and it’s that 18 September can’t come soon enough. See Ad Astra in cinemas from Wednesday 18 September BLADE RUNNER (1982) It’s been 37 years since Ridley Scott’s neo-noir classic hit screens – and we still have questions! ARRIVAL (2016) This Amy Adams head- scratcher lends itself to multiple viewings, each more rewarding. odeon.co.uk 17 ENTERTAINMENT the Hollywood Reporter, “There’s a lot of spacewalk stuff. The word ‘acrobatic’ doesn’t really apply, but some very complicated rig work and that stuff is going to look amazing. And there’s also a lunar rover sequence, which is also basically CG-built, which is going to look terrific, I think. But to make it look perfect doesn’t happen overnight.” Or you might be intrigued by the indisputably A-list cast. Look out for stellar support from Donald Sutherland and Liv Tyler. But top of the bill is Brad Pitt as Roy McBride, a hot-