
It's a couple of decades into the future and the world energy crisis has been solved through the mining of helium-3 on the dark side of moon. Sam Bell is the man currently responsible for maintaining the mining operation, and is approaching the end of his solitary 3-year contract. Unfortunately the time spent in isolation with only an AI computer/robot with the voice of Kevin Spacey for company and no direct contact with Earth is starting to take its toll, and he begins to see some very odd things...
Moon is one of those films that is much better experienced knowing as little as possible about the plot. Even though the plot's twists and turns and actually quite subtly presented rather than playing up to potential shock value, none-the-less I feel that your appreciation will be higher when you discover them for yourself rather than having a trailer or review spoil them for you. As such this review is going to be quite short, but what I will say is that Moon is very a much the kind of intelligent, thoughtful science-fiction that is quite rare in today's age of CGI aliens and gigantic robots.
The effective use of miniatures for the visual effects and the retro-feel of the set design harkens back to sci-fi classics such as 2001: A Space Odyssey, Soylent Green and (I'm told) Silent Running. Combine some stylish direction (from the son of David Bowie, no less), a great Clint Mansell score and an absolute tour-de-force performance from Sam Rockwell (this is essentially a one-man show and he certainly delivers), this is a highly enjoyable and rewarding film. While perhaps not quite as original as it could have been - most of the plot elements can ultimately be recognised in other films - this is undoubtedly amongst the best films of the year so far and deserving of the Audience Award it won at the Edinburgh Film Festival.
VERDICT: Well worth seeing. Just a pity I didn't post this review when it was still in cinemas. Ahem.
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