 
  Review by
        Eric Hillis
  Directed by: George Clooney
  Starring: George Clooney, Felicity Jones, David Oyelowo, Caoilinn Springall, Kyle Chandler, Demián Bichir, Tiffany
      Boone
 
    
  Recently, movies about space exploration have been obsessed with issues of
    the Daddy (Ad Astra;
    First Man;
    Interstellar) and Mommy (Proxima;
    Gravity) variety. With The Midnight Sky, his adaptation of Lily Brooks-Dalton's sci-fi novel 'Good Morning,
    Midnight', George Clooney delivers a double whammy of both Mommy and
    Daddy issues set against the greater backdrop of the looming end of
    humanity.
  The Daddy issues come courtesy of Clooney himself as Augustine, a
    terminally ill scientist (we know this because he coughs every once in a
    while and eats pills like Smarties) who discovered a distant planet,
    labelled 'K-23', which appears suitable for human habitation. A mission set
    off to check out the planet a few years ago, but it was too late, as Earth
    is currently being ravaged by an apocalyptic event that is quickly making
    our planet uninhabitable. As is usually the case, a select few important
    folk have retreated to underground bunkers, but Augustine has decided to
    stay put at his research station in the Arctic, as it will be the last place
    on Earth to feel the effects of the oncoming catastrophe. Augustine believes
    he's been left alone, so he's shocked to find a mute girl, whom he comes to
    call Iris (Caoilinn Springall), has stayed behind with him.

  Recalling in flashbacks (where the young Augustine is played by Clooney
    lookalike Ethan Peck) how he refused to acknowledge his own daughter,
    Augustine resolves to look after Iris for as long as is possible in the
    circumstances. It's odd that the film deems it necessary to give Augustine a
    history of paternal neglect for him to care about the child - wouldn't any
    non-psychopath look after her regardless of their own background?
  The Mommy issues arise in the pregnant form of astronaut Sully (Felicity Jones), the leader of the crew of the spaceship sent to investigate K-23.
    They're all full of joy, having determined that the planet can indeed
    support human life, but as they've been out of range of contact with Earth
    for so long, they have no idea of what's happened back home. Augustine and
    Iris set off on a dangerous trek North to a giant antenna that will allow
    him to contact Sully and warn her crew not to return.

  As a basic setup, The Midnight Sky has the makings of a great
    episode of some Outer Limits-esque sci-fi anthology series, but it struggles to pad out its two hour
    running time. The story is too reliant on the old cliché of the scientist
    who becomes so obsessed with his work that he neglects his family, and the
    flashbacks that spell this out are so crudely written and performed that
    you'd be forgiven for thinking Clooney had edited scenes from a daytime soap
    opera into his film. Iris exists to get Augustine thinking about his own
    regrets, but she's mainly a cheap storytelling prop that gives him someone
    to explain the plot to along with the audience. The pair's trek across the
    treacherous tundra promises much danger, with hazardous conditions and
    hungry wolves on the prowl, but it ends up being a relative walk in the
    park, and even Augustine's terminal health condition doesn't seem to slow
    him down all that much.
  Up in space, the drama is just as inert. Sully and her crew, including her
    child's father, scientist Tom (David Oyelowo), are a poorly sketched
    lot. There's little in the way of suspense when it comes to their subplot
    either, and at one point that most tired of sci-fi clichés rears its head -
    yes, the astronauts are forced to take a spacewalk to repair the outside of
    their craft.

  The baby in Sully's belly is meant to represent hope for humanity, a
    possible future, but once you start thinking about how it's going to require
    incest for our species to survive - well, the mood is somewhat
    spoiled.
  It's unclear what message Clooney wants us to take from what is ultimately
    a surprisingly pessimistic vision of the future. His Augustine is scolded by
    the film for neglecting his daughter, but after all, he was devoting his
    time to, you know, TRYING TO SAVE THE HUMAN RACE. It's not like he spent her
    childhood down the boozer with his mates. If the price of our collective
    survival is one little girl growing up without a Dad, it's a small fee in
    the grand scheme.
 
    
      The Midnight Sky is in UK/ROI
        cinemas now and on Netflix from December 23rd.
    
     
