Directed by: Phil Lord and Christopher Miller
Starring: Ryan Gosling, Sandra Huller, Lionel Boyce, voice of James Ortiz
If Project Hail Mary feels eerily like The Martian (2015), it is because both are Andy Weir novels adapted by Drew Goddard. The Martian is more upbeat even though its protagonist is stranded on Mars alone and has to come up with ways to communicate with NASA and pray for a timely rescue. Project Hail Mary despite giving its hero Dr. Ryland Grace (Gosling) an alien lifeform to play off of, threatens to collapse under its own heavy atmosphere. It reminded me of Interstellar (2014), which wasn't exactly a picnic either despite its outstanding technical achievements. Project Hail Mary is a bloated downer of a movie with even some of the visuals looking chintzy.
Dr. Grace is a middle school teacher with a PhD in molecular biology but personal issues have forced him to work at the school. If you think about it, being a teacher isn't bad. You get weekends and holidays off and sometimes all summer if you play your cards right. But, Ryland is approached by Eva Stratt (Huller) with an offer to use his skills to determine if bacteria is eating the sun. I kid you not. Dr. Grace determines that there is and if the bacteria isn't destroyed, life on Earth will cease in about thirty years. The catch: Dr. Grace and two other astronauts will have to man a shuttle to a destination light years away to perform the mission with no hope of returning home alive. Dr. Grace has reservations about participating in a suicide mission, but his hand is soon forced.
The beginning of the movie has Dr. Grace awakening with the other two crew members already dead, so he has to figure out not only his mission but how he even got there. Dr. Grace then meets an alien life form shaped like a walking, talking rock. Dr. Grace is able to use a special translator to translate the language he affectionately calls Rocky speaks into English and the two we learn are on the same mission to save their respective planets.
Gosling does all he can to give Dr. Grace dimensions, but it's quite a load to carry. Rocky is lovable...for a rock, but the movie itself becomes a 2 1/2 hour slog to get through, not to mention how depressing it is. You could see where such material could be fun in a schlocky sci-fi way, but Project Hail Mary is so solemn and deadly serious that fun seems to be the furthest thing from its mind. It makes Interstellar appear cheerful by comparison.