Total Film

The Martian

Matt Damon proves his universal appeal…

- Jamie Graham

Four-and-a-half billion years, nobody here,” muses astronaut Mark Watney (Matt Damon) as he stands on Mars scanning the desolate desertscap­e. “And now? Me.”

It’s a miracle all right, and the magnitude of the achievemen­t is set up by the very first image of The Martian, Ridley’s Scott’s fourth foray into science fiction: a rotating shot of space, immense, infinite, with the red rim of planet Mars blazing danger even as it acts as a beacon to human endeavour. Only it’s a miracle that Watney would gladly trade in for a Big Mac or even one more sachet of ketchup when his supply runs out. A botanist gathering soil samples as part of NASA’s Ares 3 team, Watney is literally blown away when a sandstorm of Mad Max proportion­s sweeps in.

Reading that his biosuit has been breached, Captain Melissa Lewis ( Jessica Chastain) reports “Mark Watney is dead” as the Mars Ascent Vehicle climbs above miles of swirling dust, a message that is in turn conveyed to a dismayed public by the Director of NASA ( Jeff Daniels, effectivel­y reprising his anchor from The Newsroom). Watney’s not dead, of course – Damon would hardly sign up for another cameo on a far-flung planet so soon after Interstell­ar – but sewing shut the ragged hole in his stomach is just the start of his problems.

There will be spuds

How to get a message back to Houston? How to survive for four years with just 300 days’ worth of rations until the next Ares mission lands on Mars? And how not to go insane when the only music you have is Captain Lewis’ disco playlist? All of which are nothing to the dilemma facing Scott and screenwrit­er Drew Goddard ( World War Z): how to make a movie that tingles spines when its USP is sticking to hard science as one man sets out to grow some potatoes?

To a large degree, the answer to all of the above is: with good humour. Laughing in

the red face of death, Watney, far from undergoing an existentia­l breakdown, knuckles down to “science the shit” out of his predicamen­t, extracting frozen faeces from the Habitat’s vacuum-suction toilet and making himself some good ol’ H20 in order to rustle up 400 potato plants. He logs all of his actions, thoughts and moods into a GoPro camera for future scientists to learn from (it sure beats drawing a face on a volleyball to allow your lonesome protagonis­t to talk to cinemagoer­s) and chills like The Fonz to episodes of Happy Days.

Scott, meanwhile, cuts purposeful­ly between Mars, the crew of the Ares 3, the Johnson Space Center in Houston and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California to maintain momentum, marshallin­g crisp turns from a stellar support cast (Kate Mara, Sebastian Stan, Aksel Hennie, Michael Peña, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Kristen Wiig, Sean Bean) as he steers the drama towards Apollo 13- levels of lung-busting excitement. The wily director also knows just when we’re gonna need a montage to rattle things along in the pause before the big finale, and choreograp­hs it, exquisitel­y, to David Bowie’s ‘Starman’.

Shoot happens

Based on Andy Weir’s novel, which itself went on an incredible voyage from his website to a Kindle download to a New York Times bestseller published by Crown, The Martian is a savvy blend of the technical and the personal, of outer and inner journeys, and of teamwork and isolated glory. One man’s refusal to fold acts as an ode to the unquenchab­le human spirit, with science and Scott always on hand to quell any cheap sentiment. Here, all is meticulous and measured, as befits a film signed off by NASA, whether piloting fist-pumping set-pieces or nurturing muffled moments of triumph (“Hey there,” murmurs Watney as he cups the first green shoot to poke from the red soil). Even the timely interventi­on of the Chinese space program – handy for boosting appeal in a crucial box-office territory – fits the story of humankind united by a singular plight.

Is it this year’s Gravity? Not quite, but then it never tries to be, despite sharing some of its narrative thrust and themes. More robust in story, less dazzling/ ostentatio­us (delete as applicable) in its effects and camerawork, it does share, however, in being a brainy blockbuste­r engineered to soar at multiplexe­s and land with the Academy. There will be tech noms, certainly, but maybe also a third acting nod for Damon in a grounded, hugely likeable role that fits his screen persona as snugly as Janty Yates’ slim-line spacesuits fit the actors. Heck, he deserves an award just for his dancing to Donna Summer’s ‘Hot Stuff’… THE VERDICT It’s not iconic sci-fi to match Alien or Blade Runner but it is a topical, supremely crafted, intelligen­t, heartfelt spectacle with gallows humour to die for. Strap yourself in. › Certificat­e TBC Director Ridley Scott Starring Matt Damon, Jessica Chastain, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Kate Mara, Jeff Daniels Screenplay Drew Goddard Distributo­r Twentieth Century Fox Running time 130 mins

‘A brainy blockbuste­r engineered to soar at the multiplexe­s’

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