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Sunshine (2007)

Director: Danny Boyle

Average user rating
2 reviews

Synopsis

Fifty years in the future, a pack of sexy astronauts (including Cillian Murphy, Rose Byrne, Michelle Yeoh and Chris Evans) undertake a mission to save the human race by using a bomb to reignite a dying star. Danny Boyle and writer Alex Garland (The Beach) last collaborated on 28 Days Later…, so you can expect matters to be complicated by a few things that go bump in the night.

Movie review

From Time Out London

‘Anyone afraid of the dark?’ When it comes to suspense cinema, the instinctive answer should be ‘yes’, if the filmmakers have been doing their jobs right. The murky corner, the unlit path, the light switch that doesn’t work: these are the things to prickle the neck, while the chink of light should offer hope and relief. By the time the question is asked here, however, we’ve been led in a different direction. Light in ‘Sunshine’ is both hero and villain, an absolute necessity and an existential threat, as it is to the projected image itself. Too little of it and you’re on to a loser; too much and you’re bleached to nothing.

Danny Boyle and writer Alex Garland (‘The Beach’) last collaborated on ‘28 Days Later…’, which up-ended convention with the introduction of fast zombies. ‘Sunshine’, set in 2057, is comparably contrary: the set-up is a climate-change crisis in which not global warming but a big chill is jeopardising the earth, while the ticking-clock narrative demands a massive bomb be detonated, not defused. The sun is dying and eight sexy astronauts (including Cillian Murphy, Rose Byrne, Michelle Yeoh and Chris Evans) have been dispatched to the heart of the solar system to kickstart the sputtering star. Their ship is the Icarus II. Now, to launch one mission named after the embodiment of hubris might seem questionable; to send another after it once its wings have been singed is surely asking for trouble, and, sure enough, our heroes soon find themselves faced with a painful dilemma, fraying nerves and one or two things that go bump…

There’s plenty here that doesn’t quite satisfy: the characterisation and dialogue feel thin; the plot veers awkwardly into slasher territory two-thirds in; and the future sensibility, which aims to meld deep-space functionality with metaphysical anxiety, is palpably derivative of ‘Alien’, ‘Solaris’, ‘Dark Star’, ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’ et al. (There’s even a ‘Star Trek’ holodeck.) More impressive are the sound design and score, by Underworld’s Rick Smith and Karl Hyde with John Murphy, which conjure an aptly foreboding aural backdrop for some strikingly suspenseful ‘exterior’ action sequences – particular stand-outs are a suitless space-walk and a repair sortie on to the enormous curved golden shield that protects the ship from the sun’s rays. For these, Doyle and DoP Alvin Küchler potently alternate pitch dark and an overpowering light that constantly threatens destruction.

It’s in the relationship between the crew and the sun that ‘Sunshine’ really shines. The star is a siren here, perilously captivating; when we first see psych officer Searle (Cliff Curtis), it takes a minute to realise that his permatanned, panda-eyed complexion is the result of too many hours on the observation deck. The awesome CG solar designs (by the Moving Picture Company) make this compulsion quite understandable, forging a powerful link between them and us – we too sit gazing at the playing light, fascinated and at its mercy. Forget fantasies of global catastrophe or psycho killers: the realest violence a director can inflict on his audience is to flood the cinema with white.

Author: Ben Walters 2007-04-03 10:11:30

Time Out London Issue 1911: April 4-10 2007


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User reviews of this film

  • Huey Nhan said...
    Posted on May 02 2009 18:52 I just watched Sunshine on DVD and thought it was amazing. Not without it's flaws but thoroughly engrossing nevertheless. The power and devastation of a star like the sun is so beautifully captured. Never again will I see space as a quiet and serene frontier. Watching the version with Danny Boyle's commentary now...
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  • Leona Luk said...
    Posted on Sep 09 2007 17:31 This is so good, and there's not a whole lot more to the Time Out review that I could add, The cast is fantastic, couldn't really ask for more there at all. The writing and the whole feel of the ship is great. I really wanted to be lost in that world for the duration of the film, and I think that desire lead me to not stop and ask questions along the way, whereas I would have done that in a weaker film. Like most films by Danny Boyle, I was left wanting more - he never provides too much and I think that is what keeps audiences excited about his films.
    Awesome stuff.
    Report as inappropriate

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