One's enjoyment of the Phil Lord and Christopher Miller space thriller Project Hail Mary will depend on one's appetite for (1) existential threats to planetary survival told as an intergalactic road movie and for (2) everybody's favorite Ken doll, Ryan Gosling. I'm pretty much a sucker for both.
Gosling stars as a Dr. Ryland Grace, a molecular biologist teaching middle school, who is "recruited" by an enigmatic scientist, Eva Stratt (Sandra Hüller), to be part of a project team to find out the cause of a celestial anomaly, called the Petrova line, that is robbing the sun of its energy.
The audience meets Grace as he awakens from a years-long coma, deep in space and approaching an unfamiliar star. Grace's story is revealed in flashback, as his memory returns, and he puts together the nature of his mission and what he must do to deliver vital information to the Earth, light-years away.
As he nears his destination, Grace encounters a gigantic spaceship being piloted by an alien being with far superior knowledge and capabilities, despite looking like a stone crab. Using human inqenuity, they learn to communicate. Grace names the alien Rocky, for obvious reasons, and they begin to pool their knowledge to chart a course to gather data and, as Rocky (voiced by James Ortiz) says, "save the stars."
Much of Project Hail Mary, which is based on the novel by Andy Weir, is about the mystery of the matter called "astrophage," star eater. The rest is about how having a common purpose binds spirits together, levels differences and puts a face on a universal concept called "love."


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