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Film

Film review: Lucy in the Sky

This ambitious drama leaves our critic underwhelmed

December 4, 2019 14:07
Natalie Portman in Lucy in the Sky
1 min read

In Lucy In The Sky, Natalie Portman stars as Lucy Cola, an astronaut struggling to come to terms with her return to earth after a lengthy space mission. Directed by Noah Hawley, this ambitious, but flawed drama is loosely based on an infamous incident which saw real-life astronaut Lisa Nawak arrested after the attempted kidnapping of a love rival in 2007.

When we first meet Lucy (Portman) she is about to complete her very first space mission for NASA. Back on Earth, the young woman finds it increasingly difficult to reacclimatise to her normal life, and feels detached from her loved ones, including her doting husband Drew (Downton Abbey’s Dan Stevens in terrific form) and straight-talking grandmother (Ellen Burstyn)

Things are further complicated when Lucy is pursued and seduced by Mark Goodwin (Jon Hamm at his smarmy best) a handsome and recently separated fellow astronaut. After failing to make the cut for the next space mission, Lucy who by now has fallen head-over-heels for Mark, is further infuriated by her lover’s seemingly blossoming relationship with younger female astronaut Erin (a beautifully understated turn by Zazie Beetz).

Noah Hawley, known to most for his stellar work as showrunner on Fargo (the hugely popular TV adaptation of the Coen brother’s iconic 1996 film), presents an interesting take on the transformative nature of space travel and its effects on those who experience it. Sadly though, there isn’t enough here in the way of a plot, or much else really, to warrant the film’s excessive two hour running time.