Gallagher’s
Forum
A
Tale of Two Survivals
By
Jon Gallagher
The
Martian (20th Century
Fox, 2015) – Director: Ridley Scott. Writers: Drew Goddard (s/p),
Andy Weir (book). Stars: Matt Damon, Jessica Chastain, Kristen Wiig,
Jeff Daniels, Michael Pena, Sean Bean, Kate Mara, Sebastian Stan,
Aksel Hennie, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Benedict Wong, Mackensie Davis,
Donald Glover, Nick Mohammed, & Chen Shu. Color, Rated PG-13, 144
minutes.
The
story of Ridley Scott’s The Martian is a tale of
survival and how a man left behind on the planet Mars has to fend for
himself and manage to survive on limited resources until help
arrives. Ironically, the theater in which I saw this movie is also in
its own battle for survival, so much so that this may be the last
movie shown on its screen for some time.
A
little background is called for here. I live in a town of about 2,000
people. The theater here is over 100 years old and was once a
vaudeville theater before becoming a movie house, complete with the
black and white silent movies before moving on to talkies, and
finally Technicolor and Dolby. The current owner has laid claim to
the place for more than 30 years; he’s seen it all, and it’s been
a nice little moneymaker for him over the years. From his humble
beginnings here in town, he has, over the years, owned or co-owned as
many as four theaters with more than 15 screens total.
He’s
been a survivor himself. While all the other small towns around us
have closed their theaters, ours has stayed open. If you don’t like
the movie playing here in town (it’s a single screen), then your
only other option is to rent something, or drive at least 30 miles to
the nearest theater.
When
I moved to town 13 years ago, you could get a seat in the theater for
just two bucks. You certainly couldn’t beat that! You couldn’t
even rent a movie that cheap, and the theater was running current
movies. We might not have gotten them on the release date, but we had
them within a couple weeks of their release. There was no pressure
from the big chains to keep our theater from getting first-run flicks
because they knew our little 400-seat theater wasn’t going to hurt
them a bit.
About
six years ago, the owner decided to step into the 21st century
and raise his prices a bit. They skyrocketed to $3 per seat, and, of
course, there were complaints from the town folk who complain about
everything.
Shortly
after raising his prices, however, an F-3 tornado came through town
and took direct aim at the theater. It ripped out a good portion of
the west wall and took off the roof, depositing it half inside the
theater and half on the building next door. Eighty people watching a
movie when the theater was hit were miraculously spared; there wasn’t
a single injury.
The
power to the theater had gone out and so, with no movie to watch,
everyone got up to file out. When the twister hit, all 80 people were
either in the lobby, or under the balcony and managed to avoid the
falling roof. Amazing!
Unfortunately,
the owner was underinsured. When the insurance company wrote him a
check for repairs, it didn’t even cover half of what needed to be
done. He was ready to pay off loans he had taken out, and close up
shop.
The
citizens of our town wouldn’t hear of it. They convinced him to
forge ahead. He asked for donations from the town folk, and they came
through, covering the rest of the repairs to his place. It took a
year, but the theater rose from the rubble and was once again
operating.
He
jacked ticket prices to $4. Still, that was a bargain compared to the
theaters in the big city some 30 miles away, so people griped about
it, but paid out their money anyway, even though they might have been
one of the donors.
While
he updated the theater, installing new seats and improved lighting,
he inexplicably failed to update his projector. He continued to
operate with a film projector while all the other bigger theaters in
the bigger towns converted to digital projectors.
Two
years after reopening, he came to the citizens of our town again. He
was going to have to close his doors because his equipment was
outdated. Most of the movie companies were distributing their films
on digital now, not on film. He cited the movie 42, the
story of Jackie Robinson, as a movie he would like to have shown but
couldn’t because it wasn’t available on film.
The
bottom line: He needed $50,000 to upgrade to a digital projection
system. Once again, he asked for donations.
Once
the projector was installed, prices went to $5 a seat. Once again his
way of saying “Thank you” to those who contributed.
Now
here it is a little over a year later. He’s supposedly defaulted on
some of his loans. The theater is up for sale. The rumor around town
last weekend was that this was the theater’s final week. The bank,
which held the notes on the place, was tired of waiting on its money,
and could come in and shut him down at any moment.
So
as the owner struggles to survive (he still lives in a luxurious home
in an exclusive neighborhood, drives new vehicles, and continues to
finance his wife’s singing career including her tour bus), the main
character in The
Martian deals
with a different kind of struggle to survive.
Matt
Damon is Mark Watney, an astronaut who’s part of a six-member crew
exploring the surface of Mars. A storm causes them to abort the
mission, but Watney is struck by flying debris and the crew leaves
him behind, assuming that he’s dead.
He’s
not, but no one knows that for about the first 20 to 30 minutes of
the movie. While a dejected crew heads for home, NASA officials
notice that things are moving around the red planet when they study
still photos of the surface. They discover that Watney is alive and
devise a way to communicate with him. After establishing contact,
they begin to work on a solution to bring him back to Earth.
Unless
there is conflict in a movie, it gets boring very fast. English
teachers (which I used to be) tell us that there are three kinds of
conflict: man vs. man, man vs. nature, and man vs. self. Obviously
the conflict here is man vs. nature, even though nature is Mars’
nature, not our own.
The
problem I had with this movie is that even though there is the
obvious conflict of how Watney is going to survive until we can send
him either provisions or help, director Scott doesn’t do a very
good job of creating urgency. It seems that Watney has enough food to
last him for a while, and he learns how to grow more in a
“greenhouse” that he constructs, so we never really feel that
there’s a chance he’ll starve to death.
Watney
is presented with a multitude of problems, yet I never got the
feeling of a rollercoaster ride like with most “disaster” movies.
The peaks and valleys of this particular ride are interesting, yet I
never felt the characters were in great danger until near the end of
the film.
A
good portion of the film is very geeky. I didn’t understand hardly
anything about the jet propulsion theories or how scripts were
rewritten to override computers. Instead of trying to understand, my
brain just switched off and put it in simple terms like, “Oh, he
fixed the chat window thing on his computer so he can talk now.” My
older brother went to the movie with me and he said that he didn’t
need to know all the particulars of “how” either. He was
satisfied with just knowing something either worked, or didn’t.
One
particularly strong point of the movie is the use of Watney’s video
blog. By using this device we get to see his inner thoughts and the
apprehension he feels (maybe it’s because he’s got such a
positive outlook that I didn’t feel the sense of urgency as
mentioned earlier). In the movie Castaway, Tom Hanks plays off
a volleyball (Wilson) with dialogue; the video blog by Damon works
every bit as well and was a major part of the movie.
There
were other things that bothered me. Throughout the movie we see
clouds in the sky. I always thought you needed water to create water
vapor which is what clouds are made out of, so when I got home, I did
some research and found out that clouds are possible on other planets
despite the absence of water. Had they explained, maybe in one of the
video blogs, about the clouds, maybe it wouldn’t have bothered me
as much. Then again, I may be the only person who cared about it.
Another
part of the movie that caused me to make my “yeah, sure” face is
during the attempted rescue. Crowds gathered in Times Square,
Tiananmen Square, and in London to watch the rescue live on TV.
Sorry,
Charlie, but I don’t think crowds gather in Times Square for
anything other than a ball dropping once a year. These people would
be more likely sitting at home or in their office, following the live
broadcast on their smart phones. Crowds like that haven’t gathered
since probably World War II.
There
is one scene in the movie that may be too intense for kids under
about 14. After Watney finds himself marooned, he also finds that
he’s been impaled by a satellite antennae. He removes it himself
and stitches up the wound, all without the use of anesthesia, and it
is pretty graphic. Those with weak stomachs may need to look away. On
the plus side, Damon gets to show off his acting chops as he reacts
to the pain that he’s putting himself through.
Jeff
Daniels plays the head of NASA, Teddy Sanders, and does a good job.
There are times when we’re not sure if he’s a good guy who’s
just trying to cover his own ass or if he’s a bad guy who is
purposefully sabotaging the mission, and I, for one, was left still
guessing as I left the theater.
Chiwetel
Ejiofor tackles the role of Vincent Kapoor, the astronauts’
advocate here on Earth. He did an outstanding job showing restrained
anger, an emotion that is very easy to overact. More emphasis on his
role might have added to the non-existent rollercoaster ride I keep
talking about.
I’ve
said a lot of negative things about the movie, so you might get the
impression that I didn’t like it. Not true. I enjoyed the film,
though at times, it dragged enough that it threatened to put me to
sleep. I thought the storyline was good, the performances were good,
and the ending was more than satisfying. There were just enough
little things that bugged me that when thrown together, it sounds
like a negative review.
Still,
I wanted that rollercoaster ride. I didn’t get it until the very
end of the movie (when I did move up to the edge of my seat). It was
a better than average movie, but it loses points for the slow parts.
All
in all, I’ll give it a B-.
I probably won’t rent it on DVD. I would recommend seeing it in the
theater if you have any interest because the small screen (even if
you’ve got a drive-in movie theater sized TV) just won’t do it
justice.
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