Genre: Sci-Fi, Adventure, Action
Original Language: English
Director: Roland Emmerich
Producer: Harald Kloser, Roland Emmerich
Writer: Roland Emmerich, Harald Kloser, Spenser Cohen
Release Date: Feb 4, 2024
Distributor: Lionsgate
Sound Mix: Dolby Atmos
STORY:
A mysterious force knocks the Moon out of its orbit around Earth, sending it hurtling into a collision with life as we know it in Moonfall. With the world on the verge of annihilation, NASA executive and former Jo Fowler believes she has the key to saving us all, but only one astronaut from her past, Brian Harper, and conspiracy theorists believe she is correct. K.C. Houseman believe her. These unlikely heroes will risk everything on a risky last-ditch mission into space, only to discover that our Moon is not what we thought it was.
REVIEWS:
- When the reason for the moon’s behavior is revealed, it becomes clear that the most bizarre of them all is the eccentric German director of this humorous space oddity. It’s well worth the wait.
- The plot is illogical, the dialogue is terrible, and the twists are amusing when they shouldn’t be. It could be one of those films that are so horrible it’s enjoyable for certain people. It’s just horrible for me.
- This is for those who enjoy seeing landscapes blew apart and enormous objects slammed against other large objects. That is the extent of the joys available.
- The basic storyline It’s ridiculous enough that the moon is slipping out of orbit. However, director Roland Emmerich throws in a slew of wacky hypotheses about ancient aliens and intelligent AIs that he plagiarised from earlier, better movies.
- Moonfall is horrible — the wrong kind of bad – because every element of the formula falls short of expectations. The special effects are jumbled, and the supporting cast is abysmal.
- Moonfall is the ticket to buy right now if you’re looking for a lovely, empty-brained evening at the movies. However, despite being the apocalypse blockbuster’s poet laureate throughout the 1990s and 2000s, Emmerich’s same old song has grown tiresome.
- It’s tough not to admire Emmerich’s work because it’s so ludicrous, wild, and obviously foolish. The entire review is in Spanish.
- Moonfall isn’t even close to being adequate.
- Emmerich knows how to blow up cities magnificently and cast highly appealing star names if there are two things he knows how to do well.
- Quite likely the dumbest thing ever made by humans, which is saying a lot given Roland Emmerich’s resume. The dialogue is a jumble of cliches plucked from better films, and the actors’ growls are believable.
- The ending of Moonfall sets up a sequel, which I hope never happens.