Inspired by the
likes of Silent Running, Moon is a film that relies on a narrative
that won’t lead where you expect while also having exquisitely rendered special
effects. The debut feature from Duncan Jones who both wrote and directed it,
the 90 minute movie comes across in the manner of a serious indie offering
despite the surroundings. Instead of a dystopian future we’re in the midst of
what seems a boom as it has been discovered that helium 3 is abundant on the
Moon and can generate enough fuel to keep things ticking back on Earth. At
first you’re wondering why, if this is such an important resource, it’s been
left in the hands of a single man on a three year contract. Won’t he go a little
crazy?
Sam Bell is
that man and he’s played by Sam Rockwell, an actor who is capable of making you
believe most anything when it comes to characters chafing at their life. At
first it seems like Sam is going a bit crazy when a serious crash renders him
unconscious for quite a time. When he wakes up someone else is attending to his
work- someone who looks exactly like him and is called Sam Bell. The film
rather cleverly leaves you wandering for a while what sort of revelation will
explain this seemingly inexplicable phenomena allowing the two Sams to slowly
grow to accept each other. When the original Sam discovers something odd about
the cryogenic chamber supposed to send them back to Earth the true nature of
their situation unfolds. Somehow this reveal has managed not to find its way
into my orbit for the ten years since the film came out so in case there’s
anyone similarly unknowing I won’t spoiler it here.
If a movie that
largely features the same actor playing against himself sounds like it will be
a slow stretch Moon is actually a
surprisingly pacey film with frequent lunar excursions outside the white walled
white lit moon base environment. I’m not sure how these sequences played on the
big screen but on a tv they look fine. Bucking modern trends the various craft
are brought to life using models with just a little enhanced CGI and largely
look convincingly rendered. The only thing that lets the effects side down
slightly are the moon rock fragments shooting out of the miner which have a
computerised quality that would probably look even more so in a cinema.
The film relies
on Sam Rockwell to define the two identical yet different characters so we’re
not confused even though they are dressed differently. The latter Sam is stiff
and smart, relying on protocol and rules and showing a childish manner when it
comes to sharing. The original Sam is looser, more worried by what’s happening
therefore more likely to look for answers. The script never goes with the
obvious route of one of them trying to incarcerate, stop or even dispose of the other; instead
they are like work colleagues forced together who find a way to co-operate
despite their issues. They just look the same as each other!
Sam Rockwell
achieves this without showy grandstanding but by emphasising their down to
earth characteristics and eventual grudging respect. The narrative also refuses
to try and push the viewer into taking sides instead keeping the development
steady and sure so we also eventually find respect for both of them too. Its
not a movie with a hero / villain dynamic in that sense. At times it has the
tone of a stage play albeit one that would be impossible to stage.
To make this
believable the special effects used to have the same actor present twice are
superb with no sense of any stand ins or perhaps CGI touches (of which I’m sure
both must have been used) leading us to assume that Sam Rockwell is really two
people! For such a comparatively low budget production the results are
remarkable. In terms of its aesthetics, Moon
is as low key as its central characters with large wheeled buggies, white
walled rooms and large grey plateaus being the default depiction of the Moon in
many a production.
The results are
absorbing and always intriguing right till the end.
# The
first shot of the film includes the subtitle “where are we now?” which four
years later would be the title of Duncan Jones’ father David Bowie’s 2013 unexpected
comeback single.
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