Sunday, April 26, 2026
News Health
  • Health News
  • Hair Products
  • Nutrition
    • Weight Loss
  • Sexual Health
  • Skin Care
  • Women’s Health
    • Men’s Health
No Result
View All Result
  • Health News
  • Hair Products
  • Nutrition
    • Weight Loss
  • Sexual Health
  • Skin Care
  • Women’s Health
    • Men’s Health
No Result
View All Result
HealthNews
No Result
View All Result
Home Health News

Project Hail Mary is a spiritual sibling to The Martian – and it’s fab

March 10, 2026
in Health News
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


New Scientist. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

Ryan Gosling as Ryland Grace in Project Hail Mary

Jonathan Olley/Sony Pictures

Project Hail Mary
In cinemas from 19 March

There is so much fun and fascinating stuff in Project Hail Mary, Andy Weir’s novel about a last-ditch attempt to stop our sun from dying, that I felt guilty for abandoning it nary 100 pages in. I couldn’t get past Ryland Grace, a molecular biologist turned teacher turned astronaut who wakes up on a spacecraft light years from home without a clue who he is or why he is there.

I hated Ryland. I hated his immature, sardonic personality. I hated that such a great premise was filtered through the eyes of a person who calls their penis their “gentleman’s equipment”. The questions the book hinted at – like why an interstellar mission would be needed to save our sun – weren’t quite intriguing enough to tempt me to stay inside Ryland’s head for 500 pages. So I stopped reading.

More fool me. Had I pushed through, I would have found a heartwarming, science-filled story – one that the new film adaptation of Project Hail Mary has thankfully revealed to me.

I breathed a sigh of relief in its very first scene, in which Ryland (Ryan Gosling), after spending years in a coma aboard the ship, has his breathing tube and other vital life-support systems removed by a robotic arm. In the book, it is a protracted moment full of flippant asides; in the film, stripped of that god-awful interiority, it is as gnarly as you would expect and over in seconds. Cut to a bearded, dazed Ryland prowling around the ship like a Gen X Tarzan and we’re off, instantly invested.

The scene is representative of this adaptation’s greatest strength: it doesn’t overexplain, trusting that the cast will convey what is needed without heaps of exposition. As Ryland, Gosling makes a smart-aleck loner, cast out of academia for questioning the orthodoxy on what alien life could look like, feel like a genuine everyman – and he’s actually funny.

We slowly learn that Ryland was recruited by the icily competent Eva Stratt (Sandra Hüller). She sets out the stakes: the sun is projected to dim by up to 5 per cent over the next 20 years. If the trend continues, Earth will plunge into climatic chaos and humanity will slowly starve to death. Hüller takes what could have been a one-note role and fills it with tightly controlled emotion – between her, Gosling and James Ortiz in a role that I won’t spoil, Project Hail Mary is full of performances that will make you laugh and break your heart in equal measure.

And the science – my god, the science! – is everything you could have hoped for from writer Drew Goddard, who also adapted The Martian, another Weir book. Like its spiritual sibling, Project Hail Mary is a film about a lone genius battling to survive in space and how the scientific process might save him, although it is less concerned with the minutiae of that survival than it is with big, bold ideas in physics and biology.

Nevertheless, Ryland is forced to put his considerable brain to work when he realises the team’s pilot and engineer have both died on the journey, leaving him alone in space and ill-equipped to finish his mission. With nothing but time on his side, Ryland is able to come up with some canny solutions to his situation that will please hard sci-fi fans, even if not everything is explicitly spelled out.

Without revealing the twists and turns this story takes, I’ll just say the question of what life is and what makes it matter is central to Project Hail Mary. Not everything in the film is effective: like its source material, it can overindulge in Ryland’s goofier side and lurch into corniness on occasion. But perfect is the enemy of good, and while he still wouldn’t be my choice of guide to the stars beyond our own, I was astonished how much I cared about Ryland’s fate by the end of the film.

Project Hail Mary is a beautifully shot, utterly charming adventure – and for me, a lesson in pushing through your initial misgivings. I may even take a second crack at finishing the book.

Topics:



Source link : https://www.newscientist.com/article/2518652-project-hail-mary-is-a-spiritual-sibling-to-the-martian-and-its-fab/?utm_campaign=RSS%7CNSNS&utm_source=NSNS&utm_medium=RSS&utm_content=home

Author :

Publish date : 2026-03-10 13:00:00

Copyright for syndicated content belongs to the linked Source.

Previous Post

Opioids Offer Limited Relief for Many Acute Pain Conditions

Next Post

Maternity inquiry chair named in government U-turn

Related Posts

Health News

We’re Doctors, Not Martyrs | MedPage Today

April 26, 2026
Health News

Can Gabapentin Improve Brain Injury Outcomes?

April 26, 2026
Health News

‘I paid for a private hysterectomy’

April 26, 2026
Health News

Olympic Track and Field Star Allyson Felix Talks Rest and Recovery

April 26, 2026
Health News

Quiz Time: Is Paxlovid Still Reducing COVID Hospitalizations?

April 25, 2026
Health News

Continued Insulin Pump Use in the Hospital Improves Outcomes

April 25, 2026
Load More

We’re Doctors, Not Martyrs | MedPage Today

April 26, 2026

Can Gabapentin Improve Brain Injury Outcomes?

April 26, 2026

‘I paid for a private hysterectomy’

April 26, 2026

Olympic Track and Field Star Allyson Felix Talks Rest and Recovery

April 26, 2026

Quiz Time: Is Paxlovid Still Reducing COVID Hospitalizations?

April 25, 2026

Continued Insulin Pump Use in the Hospital Improves Outcomes

April 25, 2026

Controlling Hypertension After Intracerebral Hemorrhage; Treating Acute Sinusitis

April 25, 2026

Symptom-Based Dosing Gets Infants With Opioid Withdrawal Out of the Hospital Faster

April 25, 2026
Load More

Categories

Archives

April 2026
M T W T F S S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930  
« Mar    

© 2022 NewsHealth.

No Result
View All Result
  • Health News
  • Hair Products
  • Nutrition
    • Weight Loss
  • Sexual Health
  • Skin Care
  • Women’s Health
    • Men’s Health

© 2022 NewsHealth.

Go to mobile version