Red Planet
Taking no heed from NASA's failures, the rocket scientists of Hollywood persist
in their effort to make a successful Mars movie. Although not as embarrassing
as Brian De Palma's Mission to Mars, first-timer Antony Hoffman's The
Red Planet should have been aborted before liftoff. Let's just say that any
film with "algae" as a key plot word is in serious trouble. That's what
environmentally desperate earthlings of the mid 21st century are trying to coat
Mars with in an attempt to oxygenate the planet for possible colonization. When
the algae disappears, as if from a cosmic dose of Desenex, the inevitable
melting-pot crew of space cadets is sent in.
At first it seems the mission will be dominated by the old
science-versus-faith debate, what with spiritually minded science officer Bud
Chantilas (Terence Stamp) swapping clichés with materialistic geneticist
Dr. Burchenal (Tom Sizemore). Then there's the requisite sexual tension between
Mission Commander Kate Bowman (Carrie-Anne Moss, sporting Sigourney Weaver's
T-shirt from Alien) and lowly mechanic Gallagher (Val Kilmer), and the
bogus rivalry between hotshot pilot Ted Santen (Benjamin Bratt) and upstart
genius Chip Pettengil (Simon Baker). Ultimately, though, the movie comes down
to the usual bad dialogue, implausible plotting, startling special effects (a
robot named AMEE puts in the film's best performance), and feeble ripoffs of
better movies. As Gallagher so eloquently puts it, "Fuck this planet!" At
the Campus, Flagship, Hoyts Providence Place 16, Showcase, Starcase, and
Tri-Boro cinemas.
-- Peter Keough
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