Phil Lord and Christopher Miller turn Bay Area author Andy Weir's novel "Project Hail Mary" into a terrific science fiction popcorn movie.
Ryan Gosling plays a man stranded on a spaceship in the new film “Project Hail Mary,” opening in theaters on March 20.
Phil Lord and Chris Miller nail their adaptation of The Martian author Andy Weir's novel, in theaters March 20th.
Phil Lord and Christopher Miller's lone-astronaut saga wants to be "Interstellar" meets "E.T.," but it's too long and too cutely formulaic.
Project Hail Mary' is a smart piece of sci-fi filmmaking anchored by a reliably charismatic Ryan Gosling becoming best buds with an alien spider-rock.
Part buddy comedy, part hard sci-fi epic, and it somehow works. Have you ever wondered what Arrival would be like if it was also a goofy buddy comedy? Me neither. And yet the strange combination ...
Anticipation has been high for Amazon MGM's big-budget space movie Project Hail Mary, starring Ryan Gosling. The early reviews are strong.
The science is accessible and Ryan Gosling is a superb Everyman in the excellent space adventure "Project Hail Mary," based on Andy Weir's novel.
When I read Project Hail Mary back in 2021, no one knew anything about it. There was no Wikipedia plot summary. No YouTube breakdowns. No spoilers at all. It was just me, the book, and my imagination.
Project Hail Mary kicks off with an intriguing premise: A man wakes up on a spaceship with no memory of who he is or how he got there. But as his memories gradually become untangled, he is suddenly ...
John Morrissey’s evocative speculative fiction recalls the genre’s best writers, yet it is uniquely Australian.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results