The old European dream of exploration is often tied to individuals who have failed to find professional or personal success in their home countries. In new, strange lands, perhaps they meet a person or people who are awed by them. This has given birth, over the centuries, to many of the standard narratives of adventure fiction, and we find it again in 2026's Project Hail Mary. Phil Lord and Christopher Miller direct the film from a screenplay by Drew Goddard, based on a book by Andy Weir. Weir also wrote The Martian, which was also adapted to film with a screenplay by Drew Goddard. But while The Martian's director, Ridley Scott, was interested in the "man versus nature" conflict, Lord and Miller take a grain of that to deliver a more traditional Hollywood adventure story about masculine self-fulfillment. It's a less ambitious film but it's enjoyable.
Ryan Gosling plays a character with a name oddly similar to his own, Ryland Grace, a junior high school science teacher who was once a molecular biologist. The story's set in a future in which a strange, alien, microscopic lifeform is devouring stars, including Earth's sun. Grace is drafted into a desperate programme to study the thing and is then pressed into an interstellar voyage to find a way to eradicate the threat. He wakes up after being kept in stasis to find the other two crewmembers have died and that he's alone. Fortunately, he encounters a cute, diminutive alien life form he dubs "Rocky" who's on a mission similar to Grace's. Rocky essentially becomes Grace's devoted servant as the two attempt to save the universe.
I found myself thinking primarily of Robinson Crusoe and Breaking Bad. Rocky is basically Friday, the quintessential manservant, only cuter, while Grace's story, like Walter White's, is of a man who distinguished himself in a scientific field only to be exiled to the public school system. But while Walter White's motivation becomes revenge on the whole world, Ryland Grace exhibits more, well, grace.
One of the strangest things to come out of the film's promotion is that the book's author, Andy Weir, did an interview with The Critical Drinker, who, among right wing YouTube wanks, is probably the biggest knucklehead. I haven't watched the interview myself, nor have I watched or read the numerous reactions to it but I find it intriguing that this happened for a film that seeks to recontextualise the kind of story that, in the past, was used to assuage a young man's sense of resentment and inferiority.
Nevertheless, I found myself thinking a little bit of Lars and the Real Girl, a movie in which Gosling plays an infantilised man who is cared for by a community of sagacious women. Gosling has said that he based his performance in Project Hail Mary on Charlie Chaplin and there is a lot of slapstick as he bumbles around the ship. The only prominent female character in the film is the director of the project who sends Grace off on his destiny, Eva, played by Sandra Huller, the lead from Tony Erdmann, another movie that subverts a male power fantasy, in that case the power of male comedy.
I guess what I'm saying is that Project Hail Mary kind of seems like a conceptual retreat and advance in the ongoing project of trying to deal with the male ego. Grace is still infantilised, he's no Captain Kirk, but this is a story that caters to a man's need for validation through achievement, or recognition of achievement. It seems to have worked, given its positive reviews and box office.
As usual, the film borrows a lot of its sound and visuals from 2001: A Space Odyssey but the starfields are notably bright, reminiscent of Star Wars, for the film's aim of appealing to a larger demographic. It's ironic that Lord and Miller were famously fired from a Star Wars movie. Meanwhile, Ryan Gosling is going to star in the next one, assuming the failure of The Mandalorian and Grogu doesn't cause it to be shelved for a tax refund.