Moonfall Movierulz

Image credit: Lionsgate

Moonfall Movierulz: A mysterious force knocks the Moon out of its orbit, sending it into a direct collision with Earth at full speed. A few weeks before impact with the world on the brink of annihilation, NASA executive and former astronaut Jo Fowler (Halle Berry) is convinced she holds the key to saving our planet. 

But only astronaut Brian Harper (Patrick Wilson) and conspiracy theorist KC Houseman (John Bradley) believe her. These unlikely heroes will mount an impossible mission into space, leaving everyone they love behind, to land on the lunar surface and try to save humanity, facing a mystery of cosmic proportions.

No not like that. Let’s see, in the world of destruction or natural disaster movies, Roland Emmerich is one of the greats. Director of films such as ‘Godzilla‘, ‘Independence Day, ‘The Day After Tomorrow’ or ‘2012’ knows perfectly well how to make the world’s largest skyscrapers a spectacle of destruction within a film and how to make protagonists run like crazy looking for solutions and survival.

‘Moonfall’ as a possibility.

Something barbaric you could expect from ‘Moonfall‘ considering the mere direction. In addition to the impressive synopsis that, in summary, the moon is coming towards Earth… what could go wrong? Well, it seems that the problem is that almost everything fails. From the beginning created by the tape in which we are warned very soon that it does not have the quality that was assumed until an end taken from the sleeve without much reason.

Very little of everything.

The way ‘Moonfall’ could believe in itself is dissipated by an overdose of effects with no empathy for human nature. This, a source of inexhaustible praise for Roland Emmerich in other of his titles, is a disastrous resource that does not work and that feeds the disappointment of the public, since the impressive images that we expect from an appointment with his signature are not found in this one, remaining orphan of an amazing photograph, being rather a moderately correct exercise with slight hints of what ‘Moonfall’ could have been, but no.

From the moment one seems not to take oneself seriously, and it becomes a succession of scenes taken out of context or too embellished with special effects that do not finish filling the plot. A witty story with a good ability to amaze is dwarfed at the mercy of being saved by something, such as performances. 

Nothing could be further from the truth; from Patrick Wilson with the face of believing in a series B instead of a blockbuster and with a Halle Berry who does not finish marrying the character, the only moderately remarkable thing in the section would be John Bradley-West and a Charlie Plummer who called me enough attention.


Definitely.

In short, ‘Moonfall’ is a failed science fiction film that fails to dazzle and seems not to take itself seriously. A tape loaded with special effects that, in brief moments, amaze, but full of many failures that make it impossible to connect with it. Neither for the spatial section, nor for the visual spectacle, nor for a plot that makes water… ‘Moonfall’ is one of Roland Emmerich’s worst films.

Review of 'Underwater', the aquatic horror film that you can already see on Disney +

Image credit: 20th Century Fox

Make no mistake, the Underwater subgenre of science fiction and horror belongs to the same family as the space terrors derived from Alien, the eighth passenger. Yes, in one of those movies they are in orbit and play with gravity, but in the abyss of the earth, there is an even more unknown space, because we have it below and we still don’t know much about it. 

However, their rules in the movies are still something more or less similar and if in Prometheus they go from one ship to another in special breathing suits, in Underwater they come out with diving suits designed like armor from the Star Crusade board game. or Bioshock.

But it is acceptable to credit underwater films with their own aroma of saltwater and their decompression rules and floodgates that must be closed so as not to be swept away by the threatening and uncontrolled water pressure. 

And this is what happens in the first minutes of the film by William Eubank, who offers here his most popcorn film, beginning with a declaration of principles in the form of a tribute to Jungle Glass that sets the film in motion without waiting for the classic scenes of a team of scientists and mechanics having breakfast while throwing pujas and we can guess who is involved with whom. No, here it starts with a bang and saves yourself, we’ll get to know them as they appear here and there.

Eliminating everything we already know is one of Underwater’s tricks to present us with the same old thing in a more or less fresh way. A group of members of an underwater base finds themselves in a disaster situation that leads to a kind of Poseidon adventure in the deep and, of course, with monsters. 

Wait a minute, isn’t that the same premise as Deep Rising or Deep Blue Sea? Well yes, basically, and we already anticipated that it does not come close to that pair, which does not mean that it is not something interesting and very entertaining. The problem is that sometimes we know where and when certain things are going to happen since there are a good number of clichés that the script does not try to turn around.

In fact, there are times when it seems that we are seeing a remake of Depth Six, Leviathan, or, above all, The Rift, which already had some inspiration from the H. P. Lovecraft story The Temple. And although Pocholo is missing here, here we have one, increasingly divine, Kristen Stewart also blonde, albeit dyed, who plays an orthodox character chiseled from Ripley, with more than one visual homage with excessive moments in underwear included. 

Eubank poses everything so well that when the time for the odyssey arrives, he falls a bit short in dealing with tension, not taking advantage of the dark water spaces with which films like 47 Meters Away (2017) manage to cut through the fear it generates.

Nor does it improve the use of CGI in all the aquatic exteriors that with 80 million dollars ask for a more dignified finish, especially when the creatures appear. The unlit cloudy water filter creates a vague haze which is no excuse and is probably the most disappointing considering the good visual finish of all interiors and the return of some dirt to the production design normally absent in this kind of slightly pasteurized blockbuster for the 13-year-old audience. 

This makes its intermediate zone suffer from the initial impulse, although the final stretch recovers some muscle and gives way to a few minutes that are pure conceptual astonishment, taking the story beyond its small conception of a vehicle for its protagonist, thanks to a fantastic factor that will leave any lover of the genre speechless.


Best: Kristen Stewart as a living anime character, her willingness to have fun from minute one, and her ghastly conclusion.

The worst: she cries out for more blood, the CGI, and the diluted suspense of the central section of her.

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