Airdrie & Coatbridge Advertiser

Liberty-taking story fails to take flight

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Felicity Jones and Eddie Redmayne made for a dynamic duo in 2014’s The Theory of Everything.

Whether the pair could recapture the magic was one of the main selling points for this supposedly biographic­al drama.

Redmayne’s scientist James Glaisher and Jones’ pilot Amelia Rennes find themselves facing a fight for survival while travelling in a gas balloon. Londoner Tom Harper has a varied CV behind the camera – flicks Wild Rose and The Woman in Black 2 and episodes of TV shows Misfits and Peaky Blinders. here, And really he gives capturing it his the best dizzying shot heights and claustroph­obia of his lead duo’s environmen­t; although as someone with mild vertigo, it was a bit of a struggle to sit through at times! Jones and Redmayne are in fine form too – not Theory of Everything great but very charming and endearing. These positives cannot make up for the fact that The Aeronauts is generic, twee and surprising­ly dull.

Based on details found in Richard Holmes’ book Falling Upwards: How We Took to the Air, Harper and Jack Thorne’s ( Wonder, TV’s Skins) story has caused controvers­y over its settings and Jones’ fictional character replacing aeronaut Henry Coxwell.

While the latter has clearly been done to introduce a female protagonis­t – and romantic elements – it makes light of Coxwell and Glaisher’s combined achievemen­ts and adds nothing but predictabl­e plot developmen­ts. Other than padding out the running time, I’m not sure why we needed so many flashbacks either; the only time the film grips is when there’s urgency and jeopardy so the last thing we need is constant time-outs that break up the flow. Despite impressive visuals and Jones and Redmayne’s best efforts, The Aeronauts is a tedious tale that fails to take flight.

 ??  ?? Sky high Eddie Redmayne takes cover
Sky high Eddie Redmayne takes cover

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