Moon (2009)
The story tells of a man named Sam Bell, a space miner who is then extracted and sent to the Earth by the precious moon gas, which promises to reduce energy problems on Earth. Perhaps this man will make a controversial decision near the end of his three-year contract.
13 September 1981, London, England, UK
16 July 1968, Manchester, England, UK
2 May 1974, Bromham, Bedfordshire, England, UK
1970, Manchester, England, UK
26 July 1959, South Orange, New Jersey, USA
15 May 1948, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
3 May 1986, Dublin, Ireland
13 March 1992, Holloway, London, England, UK
5 November 1968, Daly City, California, USA
September 29, 2012
It's a film that won't fail to move or excite anyone who's ever cast their eye skywards and let themselves wonder.
March 28, 2011
Sam Rockwell should have been nominated for Best Actor at least twice.
June 05, 2013
Solaris and Blade Runner meet Silent Running. A movie with both a brain and a heart.
October 08, 2009
An eccentric sci-fi which cleverly deconstructs the mythology of the Star Treks and Star Wars which have colonised the future of our imaginations with their glamour, self-importance and operatic sound tracks.
May 09, 2015
A cue to the responsibility of filmmakers in a time when most seldom trust their audiences to think about answers, and asks questions that paralyze us in intricate fascination long after the final shot has left an imprint.
July 17, 2009
The film is not entirely logical, but it raises pleasing questions and looks beautiful.
December 16, 2009
A well-assembled sci-fi thriller.
November 08, 2012
Intriguing, imaginative, and thematically ambitious, Moon gives ample proof that Jones is a serious talent, pushing his concepts into intellectually and spiritually challenging territory.
December 16, 2009
Moon actually gets a little dull in the later reels, just when it should be peaking in mystery and tension.
July 10, 2009
Most contemporary sci-fi movies come on with all CGI-guns blazing, trying to blow the roof off the theater. Moon settles for trying to blow your mind instead.
July 06, 2010
Start calculating the costs to Lunar Industries of its singular form of devaluing, and Moon's central premise stops making sense.

