The Columbus Dispatch

The astronauts on ‘Moonbase 8’ have the wrong stuff

- Bill Keveney

NASA, you have a problem: Some would-be astronauts with not quite the right stuff.

Fortunatel­y, this trio is stationed at “Moonbase 8,” a six-episode Showtime comedy (premiering Sunday, 11 EST/ PST), not in the real-world space program.

“Moonbase” tracks the three aspiring astronauts – team leader Cap (John C. Reilly), Skip (Fred Armisen) and Rook (Tim Heidecker) – isolated together at an Arizona desert camp that’s meant to simulate being stationed on the moon.

Cap is a bit of a sad sack, constantly fretting about his car being booted in Hawaii, while Rook leans more toward bureaucrat than astronaut, obsessing over environmen­tal impact reports. Skip, who lives in the shadow of his celebrated astronaut father, has at least one great talent: He’s a master of passive-aggressive behavior.

Based on their dented skill sets, it doesn’t look like this group will be getting off the ground anytime soon.

The three actors, friends in real life, are fans of NASA and its space programs, but they saw the inherent comic contrast between the heroic, romantic image of astronauts and three guys who, while not total failures, aren’t quite up to the job.

“Tim, Fred and I all end up playing dreamers a lot, or people who have funny notions about the way the world really is, kind of deluded people,” says Reilly (“Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story”).

“With ambitions beyond our capacity,” Heidecker (“Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job!”) adds.

“The space program was the perfect foil or someone like that, someone who thinks they’re more qualified than they are,” Reilly says. “When you take something as sober, as serious and as life and death as training for space, putting in guys who are kind of unreliable and a little crazy was just a great formula for comedy.”

Despite being “sub-par astronauts,” as Armisen (“Saturday Night Live,” “Portlandia”) calls them, the trio would be worthy of NASA’S research, but not in a way they’d appreciate.

“These characters are the type of people that they would study as a lesson in how you don’t get to go to the outer space: by having petty arguments, by bragging, by talking in circles, (by being) wasteful. They were really wasteful with food,” says Armisen. .

They get the occasional visitor, such as Super Bowl champ Travis Kelce as a fellow astronaut in the premiere, but they’re mostly alone.

What Skip and his colleagues lack in ability, they make up for in relatabili­ty.

“It was really easy (to play Skip), because I honestly feel like I could never accomplish what an astronaut (does). I have a fear of even going up in the elevator. If you go into the (space) shuttle, there’s this elevator you go up and I think I’d be even scared going into one of those. I’m just afraid of heights,” he says. “I think I’m even afraid of adventure.”

Reilly, who produced and wrote “Moonbase” with his co-stars and “Baskets” executive producer Jonathan Krisel, likens it to his 2006 comedy, “Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby.”

“We were worried at first – ‘Are all the (auto-racing) fans going to think we’re just making fun of NASCAR?’ – but it was a way to kind of put NASCAR on the cultural map. It made it fun to talk about. So, I think they’ll like it,” he says of those involved with the space program.

Here on Earth, the actors are surprised at how much three men in isolation eerily reflects many people’s experience­s in the age of COVID-19.

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