Gravity was worth seeing in 3D, this one not so much. I found Sandra Bullock's character to be a bit too whiny and unprofessional for my tastes so the Martian wins. They did gloss over radiation exposure and the effects of zero G on the return journey without having the gym but exposition about such things would only have dragged on the pacing I guess. And it was nice to see that you can include a relatively effective love story without making it anywhere near the focus of the plot.
Andy Weir did say that in reality, Watney would have gotten cancer but he let that slide to tell the story.It's true they didn't even mention the effects of solar radiation whether on Mars or even for those in the spacecraft. We could probably argue the spacecraft had shielding for solar radiation. I even remember once seeing a "mockumentary" on a manned trip to Mars saying a spacecraft would have a heavily shielded area everyone would have to seek shelter in in the case of extra high solar radiation that couldn't be dealt with by the crew naturally or by any minimal radiation shielding on the craft itself.
In the movie, I believe the writer -and this may in the book- says that the spacesuits, habitats and vehicles had shielding on them for the radiation. Realistically any such radiation shielding would be quite thick and cumbersome but, feh, we'll say "future technology." Hell, the habitat, vehicles and spacesuit generate an electrical field that acts as a radiation shield. Some lip service for this would have been nice, though.
I've been rethinking that too. I thought it was less than a year but maybe it was longer.I'm unclear how much time passes between Matt's rescue and the "Day 1" sequence on Earth. It seems "suggested" not much time has passed, but the NASA PR woman had a very different look -that made her look older- and even Matt Damon looked a bit older than he did in most of the movie, grayer hair and glasses. So did the epilogue take place weeks or even months after the ship returned or years?
I saw it in 3D, which I seldom do, and I didn't really feel like that added much. I don't really bother with 3D much though.
So, am I the only one to be annoyed by the changes they made to the ending? (Although I'm guessing, judging by the comments in the thread, that not many had read the book before seeing the film.)
I mean, I get that it's an adaptation, and that things will (and have to) be changed to fit the different medium, but this didn't make any sense. Up until that point, I had absolutely loved the film (a few quibbles about things like the rovers aside), but it completely ruined it for me.By having Lewis leave her post and impulsively decide to go after Watney herself; instead of resolving the crisis of confidence in her command abilities - by trusting her crew to do their jobs, and trusting herself in relying on them - she learns entirely the wrong lesson for a leader (that she should do everything herself).
Furthermore, Beck, whose job is EVA specialist (you know, the guy who is supposed to be best placed to handle spacewalks) is robbed of all agency and purpose. All he gets to do is climb around the ship and back again.
And Watney, who up to this point has survived by planning and thinking things through carefully, decides to get out of his seat with two broken ribs, dangle out of a spinning spacecraft, and then fly out of it! The whole purpose of the 'Iron Man' conversation was to trigger the idea to blow the VAL, not to have it actually happen. It makes no narrative sense other than to artificially add 'drama' to what is, in the book, already a very tense sequence.
And why does the MAV start spinning wildly after jettisoning the second stage anyway? Where does the angular momentum come from? There's no way it's how it normally works, since you'd never be able to dock with Hermes.
So, am I the only one to be annoyed by the changes they made to the ending? (Although I'm guessing, judging by the comments in the thread, that not many had read the book before seeing the film.)
I mean, I get that it's an adaptation, and that things will (and have to) be changed to fit the different medium, but this didn't make any sense. Up until that point, I had absolutely loved the film (a few quibbles about things like the rovers aside), but it completely ruined it for me.By having Lewis leave her post and impulsively decide to go after Watney herself; instead of resolving the crisis of confidence in her command abilities - by trusting her crew to do their jobs, and trusting herself in relying on them - she learns entirely the wrong lesson for a leader (that she should do everything herself).
Furthermore, Beck, whose job is EVA specialist (you know, the guy who is supposed to be best placed to handle spacewalks) is robbed of all agency and purpose. All he gets to do is climb around the ship and back again.
And Watney, who up to this point has survived by planning and thinking things through carefully, decides to get out of his seat with two broken ribs, dangle out of a spinning spacecraft, and then fly out of it! The whole purpose of the 'Iron Man' conversation was to trigger the idea to blow the VAL, not to have it actually happen. It makes no narrative sense other than to artificially add 'drama' to what is, in the book, already a very tense sequence.
And why does the MAV start spinning wildly after jettisoning the second stage anyway? Where does the angular momentum come from? There's no way it's how it normally works, since you'd never be able to dock with Hermes.
^Well, a complete adaptation of a 400-page book would probably be a 4- or 5-hour movie at least. Films based on novels always have to trim some things out.
The movie left things out from the book that'd make it an even bigger challenge.
While modifying the rover Watney shorts out the Pathfinder lander and loses communication with NASA until he reaches the MAV. He also runs into a dust storm that cuts his battery charging. Also, when he's just about to get to the MAV he descends into a crater and drives across soft powder - the rover flips on its side.
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