Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Witness attack of the manic pixie dream girl

- CHRIS KNIGHT cknight@postmedia.com

RED ROVER

• • • out of 5

Cast: Kristian Bruun, Cara Gee

Director: Shane Belcourt

Duration: 1 h 40 m

Available: On demand

Predictabi­lity in astronomy is a wonderful thing. If you launch a spacecraft toward Mars, you want to know the planet will be in the right place many months later when the ship arrives.

In film, that kind of consistenc­y can be something of a handicap. When Cara Gee came flouncing into the movie Red Rover, playing a fiercely upbeat free spirit wearing a spacesuit — a kind of manic interplane­tary pixie dream girl, if you will — I felt I already knew too much about her character. And while the film was not without its narrative twists, as a romantic-comedy it arrives at its destinatio­n with rocket-science accuracy and timing.

That’s not altogether a bad thing. Red Rover, the newest from Toronto-based filmmaker Shane Belcourt, tells the lightheart­ed story of sad-sack Damon (the always watchable Kristian Bruun), who’s just been fired from his job as a geologist, and whose home life could not be more demoralizi­ng — he’s living in the basement of a house he shares with his ex, whose new boyfriend has moved in upstairs. The walls, of course, are thin.

Gee plays Phoebe, a musician who’s also handing out flyers for Red Rover, an organizati­on looking to recruit citizen astronauts for a one-way trip to Mars. (You may recall the similarly themed Mars One project, founded in 2011, dissolved in bankruptcy in 2019, and famous for never having gotten off the ground.)

Damon, with nothing to occupy him except regret and a metal detector, is drawn to the idea of leaving Earth behind, and starts planning his applicatio­n. He even builds a charmingly low-tech capsule in the basement to practice living in cramped quarters.

Belcourt is more interested in chemistry than physics. There’s very little science to be found in Red Rover. But again this is for the best, as Bruun and Gee make an appealing onscreen couple, he stolid and shy, she a zephyr in a flight suit.

It’s easy to be won over by the film’s upbeat nature, especially in quarantine. Never mind going to Mars: Red Rover provides the fantasy of a trip to Earth as it once was.

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