Ad Astra

The answers we seek are just outside our reach.

Sinopse

The near future, a time when both hope and hardships drive humanity to look to the stars and beyond. While a mysterious phenomenon menaces to destroy life on planet Earth, astronaut Roy McBride undertakes a mission across the immensity of space and its many perils to uncover the truth about a lost expedition that decades before boldly faced emptiness and silence in search of the unknown.

  • 6.1
  • 2019
  • Released
  • 2h 3m

Brad Pitt

Roy McBride

Tommy Lee Jones

H. Clifford McBride

Liv Tyler

Eve

Ruth Negga

Helen Lantos

Donald Sutherland

Thomas Pruitt

Kimberly Elise

Lorraine Deavers

Loren Dean

Donald Stanford

Donnie Keshawarz

Captain Lawrence Tanner

Sean Blakemore

Willie Levant

Bobby Nish

Franklin Yoshida

LisaGay Hamilton

Adjutant General Vogel

John Finn

Brigadier General Stroud

John Ortiz

Lieutenant General Rivas

Freda Foh Shen

Captain Lu

Ravi Kapoor

Arjun Dhariwal

Elisa Perry

Woman in White Pants/Shirt

Daniel Sauli

Sal

Kimmy Shields

Sergeant Romano

Kunal Dudheker

Technician One

Greg Bryk

Chip Garnes

Alyson Reed

Janice Collins

Sasha Compère

Female Team Member

Justin Dray

Male Team Member

Alexandria Rousset

Woman on Screen

Natasha Lyonne

Tanya Pincus

Zoro Saro Manuel Daghlian

SPACECOM Employee

Jacob Sandler

Young Roy

Robert J. Yowell

Lunar Base Technician (uncredited)

Nicholas Walker

Lunar Medic (uncredited)

Brynn Route

Shunga Hologram (uncredited)

Valeri Ross

Moon TV Guest #1 (uncredited)

Rochelle Rose

BBC News Reporter (uncredited)

Eloy Perez

Lt. Nash (uncredited)

Melvin Payne Jr.

Russian Astronaut (uncredited)

Jean-Pierre Mouzon

American Astronaut (uncredited)

Jen Morillo

Hologram Dancer (uncredited)

Noelle Messier

Capt. Devries (uncredited)

Anne McDaniels

Shunga Hologram (uncredited)

Kento Matsunami

Hip Japanese Traveler (uncredited)

Mallory Low

Spacecom Employee (uncredited)

Sheila M. Lockhart

Drug Addict (uncredited)

Donna Lee

Hip Japanese Traveler (uncredited)

Halszka Kuza

Dancer (uncredited)

Bayani Ison

Asian Male Host (uncredited)

Danny Hamouie

Rory Flynn (uncredited)

Georgia James Gray

Evelyn McBride (uncredited)

Eleanor Goodall

Ship Med Tech (uncredited)

Luis Richard Gomez

Jim (uncredited)

Eliza Gerontakis

The Singing Face (uncredited)

Vivian Fleming-Alvarez

Mars Officer Daniels (uncredited)

Lawrence Dex

Robert (uncredited)

Bayardo De Murguia

Hector Bustamante (uncredited)

Rodney Damon Collins

Mechanic (uncredited)
Status

Released

Original Language

en

Budget

$87,500,000.00

Revenue

$127,461,872.00

Keywords
  • #moon
  • #planet mars
  • #loss of loved one
  • #astronaut
  • #moon colony
  • #solar system
  • #solitude
  • #spacewalk
  • #father son relationship
  • #near future
  • #planet neptune
  • #space walk

Reviews

GenerationofSwine
@GenerationofSwinealmost 3 years ago

I should have stayed away when I heard some of the interviews about it... but I didn't. If they had dropped the budget and not taken it so seriously, it actually would have been a fun albeit ridiculous space adventure. It really had all the makings for campy Science Fiction fun. The potential was there. But, instead, the film took itself too seriously... so seriously that kind of lost the fu

Geronimo1967
@Geronimo1967over 3 years ago

It is hard to write anything positive about Ad Astra but I shall try.: it does look great; the visual effects are unique in their brilliance and application, except, perhaps, for Star Trek, Star Wars, Mars, Starship Troopers, Battlestar Gallactica (you name it! ). The film moves along with the pace of a an elephant trudging through fudge (or something of a similar colour) and by about half an hour

R
@RustyBoiover 5 years ago

One of the most emotionally impacting films I've ever seen. With its amazing cinematography and great performances it won me over.

I
@itsogsover 5 years ago

This movie had some decent actors, sadly the story was disappointing and quite slow. This would be a good option for those nights when you just can't fall asleep.

S
@screenzealotsover 5 years ago

“Ad Astra” is one of the most cerebral sci-fi films I’ve ever seen. The original story from writer / director James Gray gives an intimate look at the emotional toll that comes from being just one man lost among the stars in the vastness of space. It’s like a more existential version of Terrence Malik’s “Tree of Life,” but set in the outer reaches of our galaxy. Roy McBride (Brad Pitt), an astr

M
@mcsamuelover 5 years ago

I really did like some moments in this movie. Some of the action was intense. The pacing went from quiet movements focusing on the protagonist internal struggle to intense chaotic external action. This repeated several times throughout the movie. These undulating beats made the movie predictable and unsurprising. While visually stunning this movie left me feeling disapointed.

MatthewL.Brady
@MatthewL.Bradyalmost 6 years ago

“Work hard, play later.” Once a year ever since ‘Gravity’ was released, we seem to get new stories about the voyage of space where certain characters “do not go gentle into that good night.” I wasn’t wowed over the trailers for Ad Astra, because when you work at a cinema and spent most of your day watching trailers, well trust me when I say this didn’t stand out from the rest. I originally t

materialism
@materialismalmost 6 years ago

* Meh.

themoviediorama
@themoviedioramaalmost 6 years ago

Ad Astra galactically depicts sorrow, proving that no one can hear you cry in space. For the past few years, dramas set in the expansive dangers of space have been my bread and butter. Devouring them during my annual breakfast as I purposefully starve myself for the taste of space traversal. Every year, the likes 'Arrival', 'Blade Runner 2049', 'First Man', 'Interstellar' and my all-time favourite

Ruuz
@Ruuzalmost 6 years ago

I like quiet moments in big action/sci-fi type movies. The family sitdown at Avengers Tower in _Age of Ultron_ is probably the best part of that movie. The contemplative moments of John Wick are what make that character who he is. What is a little more odd, however, is when a quiet, reflective drama, is broken up by moments of big action/sci-fi type sequences. _Ad Astra_ is certainly the latter. T

Bertaut
@Bertautabout 6 years ago

**_Despite some utterly absurd diversions (chase scene! horror scene! shoot-out scene!), this is a quality science-fiction narrative, suggesting the answers we seek in the stars are actually found within_** >_macte nova virtute, puer, sic itur ad astra, dis genite et geniture deos._ - Publius Vergilius Maro; _Aeneis_ (29-19 BC) >_N = R∗ · fp · ne · fl · fi · fc · L_ >_where:_ >_N =

M
@msbreviewsabout 6 years ago

If you enjoy reading my Spoiler-Free reviews, please follow my blog :) I love sci-fi space movies, especially when these depict the cosmos in such a visually stunning manner as Ad Astra does. It’s one of those films where the visuals elevate whatever narrative is being told. If you don’t get goosebumps or get excited with the opening sequence of this movie, then it might not be the film you’re

maketheSWITCH
@maketheSWITCHabout 6 years ago

‘Ad Astra’ is about as art house as Hollywood cinema gets; disguising a metaphysical drama as an action-packed sci-fi adventure is a clever move for James Gray. While not perfect, it’s consistently entertaining whilst offering an introspective investigation on how parents influence their children. While a journey to the outer realms of our solar system, ‘Ad Astra’ is also an exploration of the hum

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