this post was submitted on 02 Jul 2023
7 points (100.0% liked)

Science Fiction

27 readers
2 users here now

This magazine is aimed at fans and creators of sci-fi and related media of all kinds. It includes all content related to the sci-fi genre and only content related to the sci-fi genre. The goal is to build a community for everyone who enjoys science fiction and related topics. This includes the obvious books, movies, and TV shows, but also original writing, the discussion of writing SF, futuristic art and designs, and the science and technologies that inspire the sci-fi genre. **Team Top 20**

founded 1 year ago
 

Spoilers follow…

.

.

.

.

I watched it on a plane, so I won’t comment on it as a spectacle, but it’s an odd, very small movie. It’s basically using sci-fi (and NOT time travel, oddly enough) as set dressing to tell an intimate story (four speaking parts not including the computer) about grief and connection, as well as letting Adam Driver do a cut-rate Revenant imitation.

The acting is solid (I’m no John Oliver, but I’ve never seen Driver turn in a a bad performance), and Greenblatt does really, really well with a limited part, stealing several scenes, to the extent you can do when only sharing it with one other actor.

Then, the storytelling is lean, but almost to a fault. There’s just not a lot of there there, and in particular there’s nothing about the story that has to be sci-fi. It’s not mindless like the latest JP entries, but it’s not really a dinosaur movie either.

It’s a sweet little meditation that also happens to involve blowing up a velociraptor with half a dozen thermal detonators.

I will give it credit for being the first time I’ve needed to type the phrase, “Checkov’s poison-berry dinosaur bone.”

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Great review - now I’m going to have to watch it.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

After I wrote down my thoughts, I checked out rotten tomatoes and found I agreed with several critics who said it was slight, but worth the 90 minute run time.

Don’t expect deep lore or, frankly, a scenario that really makes all that much sense. The setting is there to allow for interesting tools and obstacles, not to thematically explore a 65 million year old civilization or consider human impact on nature or anything like that.