Ad Astra Comments

  • Michelle 2022-03-23 09:01:37

    Gray is indeed a literary director in commercial films. The grand universe once again shows the blurred, boundless, and lost temperament like Amazon. I really like it. If Gray continues to shoot like this, he will become the next...

  • Madisyn 2022-03-23 09:01:37

    Dad Loves Me Again - outer space chapter. Is it because the earth can no longer satisfy the theme of self-salvation, so you have to move to outer space! In addition to the beautiful Neptune, there is nothing to see. Oh, and that stupid captain, I've seen one who cheated on his teammates, but never one who killed himself by the way?...

  • Roselyn 2022-03-23 09:01:37

    Gray is a very romantic and even old-fashioned director. To a certain extent, his works over the past ten or twenty years have great similarities, that is, no matter which era or space the movie is set in, it must be the same. It's about blood, human roots, emotional redemption, and so on. Affectionate but not promiscuous, I admit that I was devoured by this pure artistic expression. As far as this film is concerned, there are some loopholes in the plot setting. It can only be said that science...

  • Wilfrid 2022-03-23 09:01:37

    The more interesting thing is that those conversations that take place in space are basically like whispering mirrors. Similar to poor signal, poor connection, mixed with low-frequency noise. There are also space suit helmets that show the changes in the light and shade of half the face and the shape of the light spots, otherwise it reflects the scene of the entire universe. As for natural NASA fans, it also seems easy to be moved by the state of space travel. Of course there are many bugs in...

  • Daija 2022-03-22 09:01:33

    The best hunch of the year in all respects. In terms of tonality, it is connected with "Blade Runner 2049": the delicate and meaningful sadness on Pete's face, as well as the loneliness that can hardly be carried on his shoulders, are very similar to the high commander who fell in the vast snow, without roots. A cosmic orphan, yearning for a belonging all his life. In terms of the motif, it is connected with "Gravity": when the feet re-step on the solid ground of the parent star after a long...

  • Violet 2022-03-22 09:01:33

    The film is like one of the lines says: beautiful but empty. Also, the title should be "How to Get to Neptune without spending a...

  • Deanna 2021-11-22 18:54:14

    Film-noir monologues are inevitably superfluous, but they also invisibly lay the engine that drives the entire film. As a "traumatic detective", Pete calms the contradiction between existence and annihilation in the search for the vast sea of ​​stars, and ends the troubles. After his own "obsession case", he finally completed self-healing. Celestial bases and space stations are both clue locations, carrying types of entertainment functions, just like western gold rush stories or hard-core...

  • Taya 2021-11-22 18:54:14

    I beg the directors who like to make the author's film to get a qualified...

  • Monroe 2021-11-22 18:54:14

    The pseudo-science fiction of Interstellar Crossing gave birth to purely commercial and pseudo-literary science fiction films such as Advent and Interstellar Exploration. Its characteristic is that it magnifies human feelings larger than the universe, lacks basic awe, and uses CG to create a universe without mystery, human emotions everywhere, without imagination, and without science fiction; its remarkable It is characterized by a mysterious atmosphere soundtrack from beginning to end, which...

  • Antonio 2021-11-22 18:54:14

    Still relatively...

Extended Reading

Ad Astra quotes

  • Roy McBride: Why go on? Why keep trying?

  • Roy McBride: Goddamn it, they are using me!