Moon

Moon(2009)

R
06/12/2009 (US)Science Fiction, Drama1h 37m
7.6

"250,000 miles from home, the hardest thing to face...is yourself."

Overview

With only three weeks left in his three-year contract, Sam Bell is eager to return to Earth. Stationed alone at a Moon-based facility with his computer assistant GERTY, an unexpected accident sets off a series of unsettling events that shake his isolation.

Duncan Jones

Director

Nathan Parker

Screenplay

Duncan Jones

Story

Where to Watch

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Part of the Moon Collection

Moon and its follow-up, Mute. A third instalment was released as a graphic novel.

Media

🎥 MOON (2009) | Movie Trailer | Full HD | 1080p

🎥 MOON (2009) | Movie Trailer | Full HD | 1080p

Trailer

Moon - Trailer

Moon - Trailer

Trailer

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J
A review by John Chard
9.0

Written on December 27, 2018

Gerty, we're not programmed. We're people, do you understand?

Directed by Duncan Jones and starring Sam Rockwell, Moon finds Rockwell as Sam Bell who is coming to the end of his three year contract on a lunar station working for Lunar Industries. His only companion is an intelligent computer named GERTY (voiced by Kevin Spacey). When Sam has an accident he awakens to find he is now not alone and all he thought and believed in is just not as it seems.

Forget any fears about a low budget and any plot similarity to 2001: A Space Odyssey, for this is a cracker jack of a science fiction picture. Film quickly fills us in on Sam Bell the man and his function up there on the lunar station. His relationship with GERTY the computer grabs our interest whilst the production design has a sort of medicinal sheen to it. Once Sam's solitude is established, the minimal contact with Earth explained, the pic then spins into another dimension, dragging both Sam and us viewers into the vortex.

To say more would be churlish, but this is adult science fiction, clever in existential whiles and scathing with observations on corporate shenanigans. Narratively it's evocative in its telling, even haunting and philosophical, where a brilliant Rockwell nails every inch of Bell's search for being, and crucially, the truth. It's all building towards a finale of some devilish substance, no cop outs or easy fed answers, just a pertinent question asked of the viewers. Moon comes highly recommended to sci-fi fans who are after a bit more than mere sparkly fluff and robotic chaos. 9/10