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Film

Film review: Ad Astra

This film set in outer space shines as bright as its star, Brad Pitt, says Linda Marric

September 17, 2019 12:58
Brad Pitt in Ad Astra
1 min read

In Ad Astra, James Gray’s spellbinding first foray into the science-fiction genre, Brad Pitt stars as an astronaut who undergoes a mission across the solar system to uncover the truth behind the disappearance of his father (a fantastically taciturn Tommy Lee Jones) three decades earlier. The film’s title is taken from the latin phrase “Per aspera ad astra”, meaning "through hardships to the stars”, a motto used by countless organisations.

The action takes place in the near future. When a series of deadly power surges emanating from space threaten the future of the solar system, astronaut Roy McBride (Pitt) is summoned by his superiors to help them solve the mystery. McBride discovers that he has been lured into the meeting under a false pretence when the subject of his long-lost father Clifford, a former astronaut, is suddenly broached.

Charged with a mission to pass on a message to his father, who appears to be linked to the power surges, Roy is sent to a now inhabited Moon which has been turned into a costly tourist destination thanks to commercial travel. From there, McBride must embark on a lengthy voyage to Mars to hopefully uncover the truth.

James Gray (We Own the Night, The Lost City of Z) presents a handsomely made space odyssey which reads more like an existential mythological adventure than the average film about space exploration. With a mixture of high-brow philosophical ideas and thrilling action set pieces, the film often feels like an elaborate waking-dream in which our hero has to undergo a series of unfathomably complicated trials.