Fly Me to the Moon - South Sydney Herald
Saturday, December 21, 2024
HomeCultureFilmFly Me to the Moon

Fly Me to the Moon

Fly Me to the Moon
Director: Greg Berlanti
Starring: Scarlett Johansson, Channing Tatum, Woody Harrelson
Genre: Space, sometimes not a frontier

The irony of a romantic comedy not being comic or romantic is when it’s based upon an untrue moment capitalising upon a true event.

In the supposed romantic comedy Fly Me to the Moon, the developing relationship between (not real) marketing maven Kelly Jones (Scarlett Johansson) and (kind of real) Apollo mission launch director Cole Davis (Channing Tatum) was as unfunny as it was uninspiring.

The film was based around the scheduled NASA Apollo moon landing in 1969 and a fake landing it was creating to ensure its reputation stayed strong if the landing failed. Conspiracy theorists claim that’s a thing. When you’re a bit of a scientific nerd like I am, the difficulty in suspending your disbelief of the underlying plotline makes the whole film problematic.

An actual thing though is how good an actress Scarlett Johansson is. This was magnified by the poor and rather emotionless and unconvincing performance of Channing Tatum. Credit also goes to Woody Harrelson who nailed his role as the “government agent” Moe who commissioned the fake landing. Mind you, his rough, rude and funny character is pretty much the same as many of his movie and TV roles, so this film probably wasn’t a great challenge to him.

What all the above boils down to overall is dullness. The unromantic, only occasionally amusing comedy resulted in a lack of interest and me falling asleep towards the end. Apparently, I didn’t miss anything!

Rating: 1 Scarlet

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

spot_img
- Advertisment -spot_img
- Advertisment -spot_img

Peace Prize awarded to the Movement

The International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement (the Movement) has been selected as the recipient of the 2024 Sydney Peace Prize, for courageous and highly regarded humanitarian work that serves our common humanity.

Learning to use AI responsibly and productively

A new online resource, co-designed by students and staff at the University of Sydney, shows how generative AI can be used productively and responsibly in assessment and learning.

Volunteers’ News – December 2024

Volunteers’ News – December 2024.

The Birdman of Glebe

GLEBE: Outside Le Petit Tarte Café and Patisserie, most days of the week, is Jethro and his lorikeet, Rosie.

Transforming a Redfern car park into affordable aged care

REDFERN: The City of Sydney is calling for expressions of interest to redevelop a council car park into a not-for-profit aged care facility for at least 50 older people.

Ambour Hardware – end of an era

It’s the end of an era for Redfern. After 55 years of serving the community, Joe and Marie Ambour, longtime owners of Ambour Hardware, are closing the doors.