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Dir: Danny Boyle
Starring: Cillian Murphy, Chris
Evans, Rose Byrne, Benedict Wong
Shortly after receiving critical
acclaim for his debut feature, Shallow Grave, a young
director named Danny Boyle made Trainspotting, one of the
highest grossing British films in cinema history, making his
mark on the A-list. He continued to impress, making the
feel-good flick A Life Less Ordinary, teaming up for the
third time with Ewan McGregor.
Boyle continued to make low-profile
hits while McGregor went on to Hollywood…and a galaxy far, far
away with George Lucas. He returned to commerciality in 2001
working once again with producer Andrew McDonald on The Beach,
a film that upheld the theory that no director is perfect; after
all, if legends such as Brian De Palma could create stinkers
like Body Double, then a young director from the
backstreets of Manchester was allowed one mistake.
The Beach proved to be special
in another way, as it teamed Boyle and McDonald with author Alex
Garland, and the pair worked together to make 28 Days Later,
with Garland writing the screenplay. The new trio were joined on
28 Days Later by Cillian Murphy (Girl with the Pearl
Earring, Batman Begins, Red Eye), and the four of them have
united once again for his new film Sunshine.
In
2057, the sun is fading and on the brink of dying. An elite crew
of astronauts and scientists are sent into space on a mission to
reignite the sun with a nuclear weapon that was created using
all of the resources that the earth had to offer. The
spacecraft, the Icarus II is on the same voyage that was
responsible for the disappearance of the Icarus I seven years
ago. This mission is mankind’s last chance, and if the Icarus II
fails humans will face extinction. However, saving mankind has
never been an easy mission, and a terrible accident leaves the
crew separated and fighting for their lives, struggling to hold
on to their sanity, and striving to save the future of every
soul on earth.
A sci-fi in its own right, Sunshine
addresses theoretical issues that were present throughout
2001: A Space Odyssey, as well as using the gore and
visually stunning effects reminiscent of those utilised to
portray the graphically violent death of John Hurt in Ridley
Scott’s masterpiece, Alien.
Supporting the theory that nobody in
space can hear you scream, Sunshine creates dark and
impressive moments of claustrophobia in its attempt to show the
audience that the crew have no-one to turn to, and nobody to
save them. Philosophical questions of God and creation are
raised throughout the film depicted by the crew psychologist’s
obsession with the sun, and his desire to find out whether it is
indeed the face of a supreme being.
As he did in The Beach despite
the mediocrity of the movie itself, Boyle remarkably represents
the emotions of the crew with short periods of moving dialogue
that highlight the fact that this group of people that hold the
future of mankind in their hands are themselves only human. The
poignant score will not fail to pluck at your emotions at least
twice throughout the film.

Upon critical examination one would
notice an underlying romance between the two of the crew’s
members, but indeed science fiction movies that have come before
– with the exception of Star Wars – prove that love is
not viable in space, and the future of the earth or the
discovery of the protagonist’s destiny has usually always been
far more important. Therefore, on the surface level the romance
seems barely present, and Boyle correctly leaves it there,
deciding instead to pursue an intense atmosphere involving death
and strength of the human spirit..
Nevertheless, Sunshine will
indeed leave you feeling satisfied with a well-made
science-fiction movie laced with periods of philosophy and
moments of tension. And despite any comparisons made to Alien
and 2001, Boyle acknowledges the prestige of such movies,
and does well to fill the footsteps created by them.
Whether or not you believe the concept
of the movie, onset advisor Dr Brian Cox has ensured that all
the scientific aspects are sound and Garland’s script, clearly
showing signs of being written by a huge fan of sci-fi,
beautifully weaves together aspects of life, choice and hopes.
If all this is not enough, the
ensemble cast containing some of Hollywood’s finest, will prove
that Sunshine’s sparkle will grow into a blazing
blockbuster.
    
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