THE MARTIAN... is a comedy?? - MOVIE REACTION - FIRST TIME WATCHING

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 27 лис 2022
  • Today we are watching The Martian! Enjoy!
    Subscribe for weekly reaction videos! Leave a comment for what movies or shows you want to see next.
    MY PATREON (polls, full length reactions, and more!): / addiecounts
    MY INSTAGRAM: addie_counts
    Check out my gear!
    (As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases from using the links below.)
    My Sony ZV-1 Camera: amzn.to/3VHR3eq
    My Sony ZV-1 Camera + Vlogger Accessory Kit: amzn.to/3CdJFR5
    My JBL Live 660NC Headphones: amzn.to/3Z8kLME
    My Blue Yeti Nano Microphone: amzn.to/3X2sOIX
    My Sunpak Tripod: amzn.to/3i2krP7
    My Lighting Set-up: amzn.to/3ImGElt
    My Neon Sign: amzn.to/3Gwxv8H
    My LED Color Changing Light Bulb: amzn.to/3VKYKR3
    A HUGE THANK YOU to my top tier Patreon members! This would not be possible without you:
    Aaron Chandler, Akadin, Alex Tan, Atomos, Ben, Brandon Tracy-Hurst, Brian, Calvin Coderre, Chip MC, Chris Gronau, Clayton D. Salisbury, Colin Sullivan, Danny Miller, David Bennett, Demitrius Stone, deskmerc, Edmund Dantes, Gary Davidson, Gcvftw, hapomwak, hmongboi47, Isaiah Mesa, Jake Malone, Jake Skellington, Jason Schuler, Jeremy Ford, Jim Schmitz, Jon Johns, Josh Phillips, Josiah Anderson, Justin, Kirk Andrew Uhl II, Krzysztof Rozycki, Lana Gorgeous, Lorenzo Baxter, Lorni23, Mark Dahlen, Martin Björling, Michael Turpin, Michael Wilson, Nathan Swapp, Nicolas, Nick, Noby, Philipp, Randee Carreno, Richard Ryan, Ron McGuirk, Ryan Bosch, Shahzaib Ahmed, Skyefriday, Skywalker, Sondre Stokka, Sonny Smith, Stephen Fagan, Stokes King of the Monsters, The Inedible Mattman!, Thexx, Thomas, Thomas Amann, tmazon, Todd the Evil Overlord, Tony Rossell, Tony Sanson, Torrence Chrisman, Vidal (BillyG!) Gomez Jr., and William Jenkins!
    *Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT INTENDED. All rights belong to their respective owners.
    I have no intent on claiming this footage as my own. I am simply providing commentary and constructive feedback.
  • Розваги

КОМЕНТАРІ • 540

  • @Linerunner99
    @Linerunner99 Рік тому +148

    The fact that Sean Bean explains that "Elrond" means it is a secret meeting is perfect, seeing as he was AT that meeting. lol

    • @dinhnguyen2110
      @dinhnguyen2110 Рік тому +22

      Sean Bean still metaphorically fell on his sword though. He got fired. Even when he lives, he dies.

    • @hamzah5643
      @hamzah5643 Рік тому +8

      Imagine at the end of the film, before Mark takes off, he suddenly turns around, and disengages the fuel line and says with an evil smirk "Mars is mine"

    • @adamskeans2515
      @adamskeans2515 Рік тому +4

      @@dinhnguyen2110 his career died, lol

    • @aerthreepwood8021
      @aerthreepwood8021 6 місяців тому

      ​@@dinhnguyen2110still not as bad as Ronin.

    • @MWSin1
      @MWSin1 6 місяців тому +4

      Once does not simply walk into Arcadia Planitia.

  • @dsembr
    @dsembr Рік тому +415

    This film adaptation isn't something we get very often. A well made, well written, and well acted science fiction movie with hard science, zero deaths, and an overall light-hearted tone. Glad you liked it.

    • @Cbcw76
      @Cbcw76 Рік тому +11

      I've never thought of this as a 'light hearted' film. Drama with occasional and much needed stress-relief moments. But how can I deny the feel-good ending? "A good balance" of life-n-death drama paired with stress-relieving "light-heartedness"? Hmmm

    • @jgreen2015
      @jgreen2015 Рік тому +10

      Not really hard science. The atmosphere in mars is too thin for such powerful storms

    • @philshorten3221
      @philshorten3221 Рік тому +4

      Ridiculous science.... An asthmatic hamster could blow harder! There's No Wind on Mars strong enough to move anything except dust!

    • @callnight1441
      @callnight1441 Рік тому +14

      @@jgreen2015 but thats like the only unscientific part. the film is other than that filled with hard science

    • @jgreen2015
      @jgreen2015 Рік тому +3

      @@callnight1441 okay...
      So when mark Wotney swears and they remind him the conversation is being broadcast live...
      A round trip communication with mars would take an hour and a half
      So...they live broadcast them typing message and wait an hour and a half of dead air time for a response?!

  • @RedKytten
    @RedKytten Рік тому +207

    So my favourate thing about the movie/book, wasn't even in the movie/book. In an interview, Weir talks about speaking with people from JPL (Jet Propulsion Labs... part of NASA basically). So, one of the calculations that Weir had to make constantly while writing the book is power usage. His character was having to do it a lot as well, so he invented a unit of measurement to make it easier. Instead of "One kilowatt hour per sol" he uses "1 pirate-ninja". As it turns out, the people at JPL need to make that calculation all the time as well, and both the engineers, and managers started to use it as well. "Pirate-Ninja" is a term being used in actual science and design now. I love that. (yea, I know... I was rambly, sorry)

    • @sonar357
      @sonar357 Рік тому +9

      That's f***ing awesome

  • @zombiepicnic9683
    @zombiepicnic9683 Рік тому +264

    The book by Andy Weir has all the humor and charm of the movie, with extra science (and stronger language). It's a really great read. This is one of those rare cases where both the movie and book are good.

    • @scottalynch
      @scottalynch Рік тому +16

      The audiobook of “Project Hail Mary” by Weir is great too!

    • @erinhaury5773
      @erinhaury5773 Рік тому +6

      @@scottalynch I'm seconding both of these suggestions. The audiobooks are fantastic.

    • @j9lorna
      @j9lorna Рік тому +1

      @@scottalynch currently reading the book, seems good so far

    • @ParagonMage
      @ParagonMage Рік тому +3

      I had heard multiple times about the book being great so I got the audiobook to listen to on long hikes. While I agree the book itself is good I found it a little too dry and the extra science is a bit wordy. I really think the movie did an amazing job at translating the book to a different medium and is one of the rare occasions the movie is better than the book.

    • @j9lorna
      @j9lorna Рік тому +3

      @@ParagonMage I polished off the book in less than a day. Didn't mind the dry science bit cos that's my jam anyway.

  • @SquiresIsle
    @SquiresIsle Рік тому +173

    The moment when Matt Damon hears their voices for the first time, the script said he should break down. He and the director took it out because they weren't feeling it. But in the moment, after spending so much of filming isolated, he realized how Mark would feel hearing the voices of his friends (or ANY voices) for the first time in two years, knowing what they sacrificed to come save him, and he actually broke down. His tears in that moment are real.

    • @Hiraghm
      @Hiraghm Рік тому +14

      As were mine.

    • @VeteranGaming_GamingUnited
      @VeteranGaming_GamingUnited Рік тому +7

      @@Hiraghm funny thing is, that was mostly real emotion. By that point, the other actors and actresses had already wrapped up their portions of of on screen time. The voices Matt Damon hears then is just pre-recorded lines. The emotions kinda got to Matt in that moment as he put himself in Mark's shoes.

    • @Myles720
      @Myles720 Рік тому +8

      One of my favorite parts of the movie. If they didn’t have that it would be fake to me. Everything he’d been through, hearing their voices, being so close to getting rescued…. It makes perfect sense that he would get emotional.

  • @maximillianosaben
    @maximillianosaben Рік тому +121

    Nobody expected this light-hearted of a movie from Ridley Scott, but it's really uplifting and makes you feel good.

    • @GuardIAN4546B
      @GuardIAN4546B 5 днів тому

      Other than facehugging parasites pretty great

  • @bobogus7559
    @bobogus7559 11 місяців тому +2

    A fact that often gets forgotten is that because of how far away Mars is from Earth, it takes radio signals up 20 minutes to go from one place to the other (depending on how close the two are in their orbits). So every time Mark (or Mission Control) said something, it would take up to 40 minutes to get the response.

  • @adamplace1414
    @adamplace1414 Рік тому +110

    I have a soft spot for movies/shows like this that can be dramatic without a villain. I think it takes some extra skill to craft a story like that, and this movie (and the book it's based on) does so wonderfully.

    • @jasonmest87
      @jasonmest87 Рік тому +2

      I bet you love Interstellar, that too...in the grand scheme of things did not have a villain. Don't you think?

    • @adamplace1414
      @adamplace1414 Рік тому

      @@jasonmest87 a bit trippy at the end but yes, I enjoyed it. My prototype movie of that kind is Star Trek IV. I wonder if it's a Sci - fi thing?

    • @cliveklg7739
      @cliveklg7739 Рік тому +2

      Technically the environment and space could be called the villains.

    • @adamplace1414
      @adamplace1414 Рік тому +1

      @@cliveklg7739 Technically, a villain is "a cruelly malicious *person* who is involved in or devoted to wickedness or crime; scoundrel; or a *character* in a play, novel, or the like, who constitutes an important evil agency in the plot."
      Also technically, "technically" is "according to the facts or the *exact meaning* of something."
      The words you were looking for were either "figuratively" or "obstacles."

    • @cliveklg7739
      @cliveklg7739 Рік тому +2

      @@adamplace1414 no I wasn't looking for those, I was looking for a simpler description rather than going into a full literary rant unlike you.

  • @DukeDarkshadow
    @DukeDarkshadow Рік тому +10

    I don't care what anyone says. The Sean Bean/Project Elrond joke is hands down the greatest in-film nerd joke there will ever be in the history of cinema. No matter how many times I watch this movie, it makes me crack up every time. I'm so glad Addie picked up on it.

    • @nikolatesla5553
      @nikolatesla5553 5 місяців тому

      It's very good. But I wouldn't go that far.

    • @nero5971
      @nero5971 3 місяці тому

      @@nikolatesla5553but they said they didn’t care what anyone says 😑

    • @racernatorde5318
      @racernatorde5318 18 днів тому

      @@nikolatesla5553 Then what's the competition?! Give us answers!

  • @robdom91
    @robdom91 Рік тому +4

    12:34 That's... actually a really good point! If the entire crew would have stayed on Mars to wait out the storm, their ship could have been damaged beyond repair and the crew would not have been able to survive on the planet for months waiting to be rescued! Mark was only able to survive because he was using all the equipment that was meant for an entire team of people all by himself.

    • @ckelcro
      @ckelcro Рік тому

      The MAV would have tipped over and they'd have died there. Remember that was how Martinez was introduced, that his whole thing was reporting that the MAV was still upright.

  • @RyoHazuki224
    @RyoHazuki224 Рік тому +2

    Definitely one of my favorite, feel-good movies over the last few years. One of the best things I love about it is that there are no villains. Well, Mars is the "villain" but there's no antagonist. There's no nefarious evil-doer looking to make a profit off an astronaut's death or looking to screw the mission for his own gain. Its just a pure, grounded movie showing humanity at its best, coming together to solve a problem and save a life. Showing that we can work together for a common good.

  • @gerstelb
    @gerstelb Рік тому +6

    When the message comes from the Ares crew saying “Rich Parnell is a steely-eyed missile man,” that’s a real (very high) compliment they use at NASA. Although I’ve been told it didn’t originate with him, the story I first heard it associated with was John Aaron saving the Apollo 12 mission when the craft was struck by lightning just after launch. (He was also involved with the Apollo 13 mission, and is portrayed in the “Apollo 13” movie with Tom Hanks).

  • @robincraft4682
    @robincraft4682 Рік тому +39

    Fantastic movie... great cast, great acting, inspirational and the comedy was the icing on the cake. Yes... Sean Bean lives! 😄

  • @Hiraghm
    @Hiraghm Рік тому +3

    What I really liked was that it was Sean Bean who got to explain the Council of Elrond reference.
    "One does not simply walk to Mars..."

  • @DavidGarcia-kw4sf
    @DavidGarcia-kw4sf Рік тому +4

    Sean Bean referencing the council of Elrond was just hilarious.😎

  • @mikeaninger7388
    @mikeaninger7388 Рік тому +16

    Showing Martinez in the next Aries mission was really significant, because there was a high chance of him getting court marshaled and never going to space again.

    • @anthonybernacchi2732
      @anthonybernacchi2732 Рік тому +2

      Sadly, I think it also implies that his marriage has ended (in the book, his wife seemed unhappy about the Hermes crew going back for Mark). Note that Martinez is, of course, the commander of Ares V due to the seniority he now has, and that a Chinese astronaut is also aboard pursuant to the earlier agreement with CNSA.

    •  Рік тому

      *martialed

    • @DerekHartley
      @DerekHartley Рік тому

      @ Martialled is absolutely fine.

  • @kschneyer
    @kschneyer Рік тому +36

    I've watched this movie so many times! I've read the book at least three times too. I think one reason it resonates so strongly with me, and with many people at this moment in history, is that it's about many highly competent people of goodwill working together for a compassionate goal, at the same time a single, highly competent person of good humor and iron resolution, is working to outwit fate. It stands for the proposition that we are smart, we are good, we care about each other and will do what we have to to protect each other. We badly want it to be true.

    • @Hiraghm
      @Hiraghm Рік тому +2

      This message wins the internet... 😢

    • @kumanight
      @kumanight Рік тому +2

      Perfectly said

    • @EmonEconomist
      @EmonEconomist Рік тому +1

      100%. This is what I love about both The Martian and The Mars Trilogy (by Kim Stanley Robinson) - both very different (despite sharing a setting), but both beautiful uplifting hopeful stories about what humanity can accomplish by working together.

  • @paulfeist
    @paulfeist Рік тому +16

    She got it! The first reactor I've seen that GOT THE LORD OF THE RINGS joke! 🤣 Best "in-joke" in a movie, maybe ever! Brilliant movie... A very worthy adaptation of the very excellent book. I highly recommend reading the book. It flows very nicely and is an easy read that also explains everything as it goes along...

    • @EmonEconomist
      @EmonEconomist Рік тому +6

      The best part is that the Council of Elrond is also in the book, although Andy Weir couldn't have known Sean Bean would be there someday! 🤣

    • @CrippledMerc
      @CrippledMerc 9 місяців тому +1

      If I’m not mistaken, there’s also a thing like that right when the Iron Man idea is mentioned where the camera then immediately cuts to Sebastian Stan who obviously played Bucky in the Marvel movies.

  • @antarfodoh
    @antarfodoh Рік тому +26

    I love that your non-MCU movie this week is just FILLED with Marvel actors 🤣😊

    • @scottalynch
      @scottalynch Рік тому +1

      10 total!

    • @christopherbowers7236
      @christopherbowers7236 Рік тому

      cant find that many, help me out, all i got is Wong, Ejiofor, Pena, and Damon (but only as comic relief)

    • @christopherbowers7236
      @christopherbowers7236 Рік тому

      oh and sebastian stan

    • @ckelcro
      @ckelcro Рік тому

      @@christopherbowers7236Donald Glover, Kate Mara, and if X-Men movies become tied to the MCU somehow Jessica Chastain

  • @SeanBlader
    @SeanBlader 4 місяці тому +1

    Matt Damon actually owned this role, I cried for him several times.

  • @michaelsova7349
    @michaelsova7349 Рік тому +13

    It is one of the best movies ever put on film. The sheer motivation you feel when you watch ‘Mark’ survive by using his brains is inspiring by itself. And then all the other characters doing everything to rescue this man is truly profound.

    • @Nyx_2142
      @Nyx_2142 10 місяців тому

      The term for that is "competence porn"

  • @Cherokeelion
    @Cherokeelion Рік тому +33

    The book is really, really good! The story of how it got published is worth learning as well.

    • @fallyoverguy
      @fallyoverguy Рік тому +1

      I agree, the book is simply superb! I've read it multiple times.

    • @Draugo
      @Draugo Рік тому +1

      Also how the movie got made is interesting as well.

  • @sorrowschism
    @sorrowschism Рік тому +2

    the thing that hit Watney during the storm was the communication antenna

  • @sirjohnmara
    @sirjohnmara Рік тому +7

    17:03 Haha. Fun to see Addie get a reference that she maybe wouldn't have, before starting the channel. The "giddy" sound is priceless. Please watch "The Right Stuff" (1983).

  • @myitbos1335
    @myitbos1335 7 місяців тому +1

    Love Addie's reaction to Watney's breakdown in the rover after the decompression incident 14:00. She actually empathizes with Watney and rubs the heel of her hand as if it hurts.

  • @Riddler0603
    @Riddler0603 Рік тому +9

    What I really liked about this movie is, that it has no villain. Well, I guess you could see the NASA director as one, but even he wanted to get Mark back. Everyone was trying to rescue him without questions. And that's very wholesome.

    • @zhorenlogg
      @zhorenlogg Рік тому +4

      Mars is the villain

    • @valaport
      @valaport Рік тому +1

      Nah, not really...Mars is just there. Everything they go through is just a consequence of exploration and taking risks. Sometimes things go wrong and it's how to react to it that decides your fate.
      I love this book and movie so much.

  • @mycroft16
    @mycroft16 Рік тому +6

    That end scene is the essence of the entire manned space program. You solve one problem at a time. You solve enough, you come home. That's spaceflight. And this movie does an excellent job of showing how that works. It also shows why astronauts cross train in so many things. You gotta know a lot of things because, as Watney says, you may have to science the shit out of things. There's a lot of "hacking" and DIY involved sometimes.

  • @jean-paulaudette9246
    @jean-paulaudette9246 Рік тому +5

    Another great sci-fi film is "Moon" (2009). Unexpectedly thoughtful piece.

  • @benlongstreth
    @benlongstreth 7 місяців тому

    I love how the opening scene is a nod to Alien when Dallas, Lambert, and Kane go outside on LV-426. Plus the part where he's rocking out to Donna Summer despite hating disco cracks me up.

  • @Coldsnap500
    @Coldsnap500 8 місяців тому

    That giggle as Sean Bean says "Because it's a secret meeting"... my reaction exactly!

  • @danh8804
    @danh8804 Рік тому +1

    Gen X space nerds got goosebumps when they dug up Pathfinder
    Matt Damon is so funny and charming in this but the best scenes are when he lets out the emotion a little, like when he gets to read the first text message from NASA or when he thanks the crew for coming back for him

  • @robertcampomizzi7988
    @robertcampomizzi7988 Рік тому +1

    An astronaut met the writer and told him he didn't like aspects of the book. The writer was an engineer and he asked if the book seemed too implausible. The astronaut told him something along the lines of 'no it was too much like work. I found myself double checking your calculations and it wasn't an escape that I sought'

  • @poolhall9632
    @poolhall9632 Рік тому +3

    Sean Bean giving the context for the name of the mission is 👌🏻

  • @roFloFlo
    @roFloFlo Рік тому +9

    One of my favorite movies, really shows that there is no need to un-alive protagonists to create a great cinematic experience

    • @chadjenkins4876
      @chadjenkins4876 Рік тому +1

      Also no need for a love story, as much as I like those, it's not always needed

  • @apatternedhorizon
    @apatternedhorizon Рік тому +3

    One of my favorite movies. Really well made.
    The communication antenna is what broke and hit Mark. He had no way to communicate with Nasa after that.

  • @blakewalker84120
    @blakewalker84120 10 місяців тому +1

    5:05 "Crap. I really thought the computer would be able to send a message to NASA."
    Absolutely.
    They use communication equipment in the habitat, cameras, microphones, keyboards, computers, etc.
    Their message is transmitted up to a satellite in stationary orbit above Mars which relays the signal to Earth.
    They talk to Earth all the time.
    Easy.
    Except that they use a large satellite antenna (dish) to send and receive signals.
    That dish blew away in the giant wind storm, but not before it slammed into Mark and knocked him down and punctured his suit.
    Without that antenna, there is no communication at all.

  • @gregorykenfield3134
    @gregorykenfield3134 Рік тому +1

    FYI, the "steely eyed missile man" reference comes from the movie "Apollo 13."

  • @SorchaSublime
    @SorchaSublime Рік тому

    Mark Watneys little "i colonised Mars. In your face Neil Armstrong" is actually very meaningful because the book begins with Mark self deprecating himself as basically the least important member of the third mars mission. Not a figure of any significance or accomplishment, no one remembers the 9th person to step on the moon. But in managing to survive on Mars the way he did he earned a position of actual prominence in the history of space travel.

  • @rbrtck
    @rbrtck Рік тому +1

    It's interesting how things have changed since 2015. These days, the Falcon 9 rocket, an incredibly reliable workhorse and still the only reusable rocket in the world, launches about once a week (a record), hasn't had an accident in years, and SpaceX always has several reusable cores available for extra launches in a pinch. Three cores can be assembled into the massive Falcon Heavy, which can get payloads to Mars in a hurry, and for a relatively low price (not that price matters much in a life or death situation). Back in 2015, though, the Falcon 9 was still new and unproven, and the Falcon Heavy was still several years away. Nowadays, getting things into space has finally almost become routine.

  • @TheBigN-04
    @TheBigN-04 11 днів тому +1

    6:28 Priceless Reaction!

  • @RJALEXANDER777
    @RJALEXANDER777 Рік тому +5

    17:04 the last thing every LOTR fan expected from the movie. Easily one of the funniest references I've ever seen in a film.

    • @anthonybernacchi2732
      @anthonybernacchi2732 Рік тому +1

      Yeah, except I'd read Andy Weir's book before seeing the movie, so I knew that moment was coming. (I was just hoping they wouldn't decide to drop the reference to avoid the metafictional humor created by Sean Bean's casting, but fortunately they leaned into it instead.)

  • @goatkiller666
    @goatkiller666 10 днів тому

    Vandenberg AFB, just north of Santa Barbara, CA is used to test rocket launches. Every few months, they do another test launch at an island in the Pacific. They also launch satellites. And Space-X did their early launches from there, too. Once I saw 1/4 of the country’s annual intelligence budget blow up in the air.

  • @sebastianesparza6277
    @sebastianesparza6277 5 місяців тому

    I love the way you went full geek when you heard about the "Project Elrond" being a "secret meeting". That was adorable.

  • @znail4675
    @znail4675 Рік тому +1

    I think the great thing about this movie is that it's about an actual smart guy doing smart things to solve the issues nature put up against him, unlike most movies where it's all about people causing issues by being stupid and then having to solve the problems they caused.

  • @daddynitro199
    @daddynitro199 Рік тому +10

    I’ve been sick for most of a week, and this reaction was exactly what I needed today. Thank you Addie.

  • @rickardroach9075
    @rickardroach9075 Рік тому +1

    17:05 One does not simply walk into a secret meeting.

  • @TennSeven
    @TennSeven Рік тому +1

    To answer your concern that the nose cone of the module that Watney was lifting must be really heavy, don't forget that the pull of gravity on Mars is only 38% as strong as on Earth, so everything on Mars weighs about 60% less than it would on Earth!

  • @timw483
    @timw483 Рік тому

    17:07 I always wondered what Sean Bean's reaction was when he read about "Project Elrond" in the script. It goes to his acting talent that he was able to do the scene with a straight face

  • @Soundtracks92
    @Soundtracks92 Рік тому +2

    The Martian is one of my favorite space movies! For me it’s right up there with Apollo 13 and Interstellar 😍

  • @dragonstryk7280
    @dragonstryk7280 16 днів тому

    Okay, so on the science end: NASA couldn't really contact Watney. It's like trying to call a house where the phone was taken out by a land mine. Really doesn't matter what you're doing from your end, the house doesn't have a phone or connection to call.
    Teddy gets kind of a bad wrap because he's taking the stance against the satellite time initially, and going against the Rich Purnell Maneuver, but he's actually got a really solid point. Every time there's an accident, NASA's funding gets cratered. If the crew dies attempting this, then they'll most likely not only lose funding, have the crew's deaths on their shoulders, but also there won't BE any further Mars missions to speak of.
    Chemists, past the basics, are rigorously trained in how NOT to make a bomb, which inversely teaches how TO make a bomb from a variety of chemicals.
    NASA has acknowledged the book and movie as being the most scientifically accurate sci-fi in history.
    Watney couldn't restart the potato farm, because the bacteria was destroyed, and he'd already used up the mass of fertilizer he'd had when he started, and with the reduced rations he was on, he wasn't exactly restocking fast enough.

  • @krisdoorga6558
    @krisdoorga6558 Рік тому +12

    Such a good space flick! Matt's really good in this. He's funnier than I thought he'd be.

    • @blechtic
      @blechtic Рік тому

      Have you read the book? It's the writing. And the book is even better! (because they had to leave stuff out)

  • @dansegelov305
    @dansegelov305 Рік тому

    I love that so many people get the LOTR reference with Sean Bean in the room, but they also reference Iron Man with Sebastian Stan and Michael Pena there too.

  • @KN-op3et
    @KN-op3et Рік тому

    The big lesson is that anything can be tackled with that engineer-mindset. You start somewhere, a small aspect of the problem, and you just keep at it until the bigger problem is solved. It's a mantra for life.

  • @visvivalaw
    @visvivalaw Рік тому +1

    The thing that hit him in the storm was the base communications dish.

  • @JustWasted3HoursHere
    @JustWasted3HoursHere Рік тому

    As a Marvel fan, you eventually start to realize that a lot of the cast in this has been in a Marvel movie.* Really good movie. The book is written as sort of the perspective of Watney taken from his journal, but I like how they updated that for the movie.
    * Matt Damon (Mark Watney) was in Ragnarok, playing "Loki" in the stage play at the beginning
    Jessica Chastain (Commander Lewis) was "Vuk" in X-Men Dark Phoenix
    Chiwetel Ejiofor (Vincent Kapoor) played Mordo in Doctor Strange 1 and 2
    Michael Peña (Martinez) played Luis in Antman 1 and 2
    Sebastian Stan (Beck) played The Winter Soldier in several MCU movies
    Benedict Wong (Bruce Ng) played Wong in Doctor Strange 1 and 2 and several other MCU movies
    Donald Glover (Rich Purnell) played the small-time prowler in Spider-Man Homecoming
    and just for completeness, Kristen Wiig (NASA's PR person) played Cheatah in Wonder Woman 1984 (DC)

  • @DaleKingProfile
    @DaleKingProfile Рік тому +1

    While they didn't physically kill off the Sean Bean character, they did kill the character's career as he was forced to resign, symbolized by him playing golf at the end during the launch

  • @DenverStarkey
    @DenverStarkey 2 місяці тому +1

    there's two major factors of reality that bust this movie. one factor was aknown thing before the movie was made , the other was a factor discovered after the movie was made.
    The known factor , is that Mars , with an atmospheric pressure of only 2% that of earth's would never have a storm so bad that it could blow people away. the martian air would have to be traveling several 1000's of miles per hour to carry that much force ...that's many times faster than wind speeds on jupiter even which usually see's windspeeds between 500-800 miles per hour. so not possible to get a storm on mars that could blow some one away.
    as for the factor discovered after the movie : Mars' soil has high alkaline content , it would be toxic as hell to plant life , so couldn't grow potatoes in martian soil unless you had some means to leech off the alkalines.

  • @alextan1478
    @alextan1478 Рік тому +25

    Another great reaction, Addie. You're absolutely right, it's got everything in it, minus the scary Xenomorph from Alien. It's another well done space movie from Ridley Scott. And Mars has some beautiful scenery, thanks to the cinematography of Dariusz Wolski, ASC. BTW, nice shacket.

    • @alextan1478
      @alextan1478 Рік тому

      Speaking of Jessica Chastain, please react to The Help (2011), Zero Dark Thirty (2012), Interstellar (2014), Crimson Peak (2015), Molly's Game (2017), Ava (2020), & The 355 (2022).

  • @HAYAOLEONE
    @HAYAOLEONE Рік тому

    'Matchstick Men' is excellent and light hearted too.

  • @MRxMADHATTER
    @MRxMADHATTER Рік тому

    "Operation Elrond"...the secret meeting....says the guy who played Boramir...who was at the secret meeting.

  • @erikbjelke4411
    @erikbjelke4411 4 місяці тому

    Would absolutely recommend reading the book. Even if you're not a big reader, it flows very well, is a light, breezy read, due mostly to Mark's irrepressible sense of humor.
    Love this movie, and especially the book. It's great, "hard science fiction," so hard you can walk on it. Some of the tech is more efficient than our current best designs, and Mark's potato math is extremely optimistic, but on the whole, it's all stuff we could do right now. And most of the problems are the result of a solution to a previous problem. It's just amazing.

  • @darth856
    @darth856 Рік тому

    This is a great movie. The one big liberty they took with the plot is the sand storm at the beginning. Mars has a super thin atmosphere, and the winds are not that powerful. But they needed an excuse for him to get left behind.

  • @bennoteboom5574
    @bennoteboom5574 Рік тому +3

    I would highly recommend reading the book. I saw this movie and loved it, so I read the book afterward, and it’s now one of my favorite books of all time. The book has a lot more problem-solving in it. Mark explains all the problems and his solutions to them at every step, and it’s fascinating.

  • @SilentBob731
    @SilentBob731 Рік тому +3

    Such an excellent movie. Matt Damon is one of the greats, and the cast in general is brilliant in this one.
    Awesome reaction, especially the "Council of Elrond" moment. 😃🤣
    Welcome to Winter. 🙂🌨❄

  • @blackeyeole
    @blackeyeole Рік тому +4

    This movie is really really good. The book is on another level because of its capability to have more details of course . I would recommend reading it even if you already saw the movie. I loved that movie ,one of the best adaptations of a book i think.

  • @SebastianWeinberg
    @SebastianWeinberg Рік тому

    5:00 - *“Oh, there is no way to contact NASA.”*
    Unfortunately, the radio dish that the computer used to communicate with the orbiting satellites (and thus with NASA) was the very thing that ripped loose in the storm and almost killed Mark, when this all started. Even if Mark could find it again, and it was relatively undamaged, he would have no way to replace the fine-control motor that keeps the dish aligned with the orbiting satellites.
    6:05 - *“This whole process is really inspiring.”*
    You just summed up this movie in six words. 😁

  • @vianneyb.8776
    @vianneyb.8776 Рік тому

    If you want more of Mark Watney, the movie creators made really cool extra scenes, like for example interviews of the astronauts after they spent months in isolation to test them.
    Look up The Martian - The Right Stuff, for example. Or the scene "Farewell", the last social media vlog posted by the astronauts before they left Earth.

  • @Dave3Dguy
    @Dave3Dguy Рік тому +4

    The book is even better Addie! One of my all-time favorite reads.
    Great reaction!

  • @markfreckmann2366
    @markfreckmann2366 Рік тому +4

    Great reaction.
    Another movie that involves space with a similar feel to it is Apolo 13 with Tom Hanks.
    Actually Apolo 13 is based on a true story.
    If you haven't seen it. I would definitely recommend.

    • @sirjohnmara
      @sirjohnmara Рік тому +1

      Yes. Also "The Right Stuff" (1983) or the newer TV-series with the same name.

    • @anthonybernacchi2732
      @anthonybernacchi2732 Рік тому +1

      @@sirjohnmara I liked the Disney+ "Right Stuff" series, but it wasn't very popular. It's somewhat unsatisfying because it was canceled after only one season, and, because it was taking a "slow burn" approach to its storytelling similar to that of "The Rings of Power", it ends at a much earlier point in the story than the book or the 1983 movie. I would have loved to see it go on indefinitely and tell the entire story of the U.S. space program with the same actors in the same roles throughout, something that's never really been done.

    • @sirjohnmara
      @sirjohnmara Рік тому +1

      @@anthonybernacchi2732 Yes. I agree. I have not seen, Rings of Power. The movie "The Right Stuff" follows Tom Wolfes book almost to the letter. The only thing I miss in the movie is: In the book it's explained that they had NO clue of what to test the becoming Astronauts for, that's why they made up every conceivable test at the Lovelace Clinic.

    • @billlupin8345
      @billlupin8345 6 місяців тому

      I met Fred Haise. He says they didn't actually pull off their bio monitors.

  • @Buchertn
    @Buchertn Рік тому

    This is one of my favorite science fiction books and this adaptation knocked it out of the park.

  • @bubba988
    @bubba988 Рік тому

    The reason why Mark was not able to initially send some type of a message to NASA was because the object that hit him during the storm was the communications antenna for the hab. That’s why they ended up having to use other means to get communication going.

  • @chasingbirds3073
    @chasingbirds3073 Рік тому +1

    Rich Purnell is the low-key hero of this movie.

  • @evanflynn4680
    @evanflynn4680 Рік тому

    There was a hole in the space pirate idea. They could very easily tell him to go and take something, it was NASA property, he works for NASA.
    In the book he lost communications with Earth before they told him to go and take anything, they just told him to science the shit out of the rover and get to the launch site, so in the book he was a space pirate because he did so without permission. The movie shows him still able to communicate while on the journey to the launch site.

  • @NekoUrabe
    @NekoUrabe Рік тому +3

    I am so happy you love the little references in this movie! The iron man one feels pretty special knowing you are still going through then marvel movies c:

  • @thomashiggins9320
    @thomashiggins9320 Рік тому

    Sooo, the Martian atmosphere is so thin that even a 200 mph gale would just feel like a light breeze, even though it would blind everybody and everything with fine, red dust.
    The author of the book, Andy Weir, forthrightly acknowledged that a storm wouldn't threaten any of the man-made infrastructure, much less topple the rocket, but he had to get Watney stranded *somehow* .
    The rest of the book relies on solid science, and that qualifies it as "hard science-fiction."
    The movie takes some liberties with the "Iron Man" scene at the end, which doesn't appear in the book -- although the possibility is discussed, by the characters.
    But, yeah. It was a fantastic film.
    Fun Fact: Andy Weir became friends with The Expanse authors, Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck. The three authors have an informal agreement that the events of The Martian are canon in The Expanse, and the TV series has a shout-out to Watney, in one of the episodes in a later season.
    IIRC, they have a botanical garden, on Mars, named after him. :)

  • @vinnycordeiro
    @vinnycordeiro Рік тому +2

    In the book Watney have way more troubles, the poor guy. And the final scenes, when he's back on Earth, were created for the movie. I remember people recommending this book to me, and when I started reading it I just cracked up laughing in the very first sentence.
    Nice reaction as always, Addie.

  • @krashd
    @krashd Рік тому

    8:20 That's the thing with Mars, it's almost the size of Earth, and if Mark's rover vehicle has a maximum range of 35 kilometers/14 miles then that is the equivalent of his expedition landing on Hawaii and then expecting the next expedition to also land on Hawaii. It's the literal needle in a haystack scenario. Mars is only slightly smaller than Earth.

  • @randalthor741
    @randalthor741 Рік тому +3

    This is such a good film adaptation. Obviously not everything is exactly the same as the book, but they really didn't change a lot, and the screenwriters and actors did such a good job of conveying the tone of the book. I also love that this movie is so full of tension and suspense even though there really isn't an antagonist at all: everyone wants to get him back safely, the only difference is how much people are or aren't willing to risk to do it. It's very rare for a movie without any antagonists to work well. Man vs. nature movies are just about the only ones where that's possible, and I guess that's what this movie is, but most of them just don't end up working nearly as well as The Martian.

  • @kumanight
    @kumanight Рік тому +1

    I love this movie! I've seen it probably around 6 times now. I always love the theme of humanity coming together to save one of our own

  • @Harani66
    @Harani66 Рік тому

    you really should read the book too. it's got even more "situations" in it that Watney has to figure his way out of, including one MASSIVE one that is entirely missed out of the movie

  • @BoldExtraordinaryYou
    @BoldExtraordinaryYou Рік тому

    Your reaction to "Project Elrond" was *chef's kiss* 😊

  • @Buskieboy
    @Buskieboy Рік тому +1

    You wouldn't think a movie about a man growing potatoes could be so entertaining, but there you go! 😆
    When I first watched this, the whole Lord of the Rings references made me blow my Coke Zero out my nose! 😂

  • @timbrom
    @timbrom Рік тому

    I've seen a fair few reactions to this movie and I have to say that your selection of scenes was the best. Your emotional responses were wonderful to see. Bravo!

  • @Jessica_Roth
    @Jessica_Roth Рік тому

    "That's not very Iron Man of him!" Oh, Addie…how soon you forget! Tony was flopping around all over the place in the first half of "Iron Man", remember? Into walls and everything.
    Hey, maybe they had trouble with the rescue because Kate Mara served Tony with that subpoena at the start of "Iron Man 2? and Wantey knew that Tony doesn't like to be handed things?
    This was a 2015, so Michael Pena had already played Luis in Ant-Man (earlier that year), but Chiwetel Ejiofor and Benedict Wong had yet to team up for "Dr. Strange", which was 2016. But yeah, it's a Marvel-palooza.

  • @garybrockie6327
    @garybrockie6327 Рік тому +2

    Addie, Neil Armstrong was the first man to walk on the moon, July 21st 1969.
    If you love The Martian, I would highly recommend Ron Howard’s Apollo 13, a true story.

    • @anthonybernacchi2732
      @anthonybernacchi2732 Рік тому

      I think she was joking when she said, "Neil Armstrong who?" BTW, the line "In your face, Neil Armstrong" comes directly from the book, which was published online in 2011 and in print in 2014, two years after Armstrong's death. I was pleased that the line was retained in the film, released in 2015, and that it wasn't considered to be "too soon" -- since the book and film take place in 2035 (a date which, alas, already seems too optimistic), it's not "too soon" for Mark.

  • @derred723
    @derred723 Рік тому

    LOL. "those movies didn't make me want to go into space."
    LOL "hHoney. You got a storm coming."

  • @houdin654jeff
    @houdin654jeff Рік тому +1

    One of my favorite novels turned into one of my favorite movies. The novel has a fascinating story as to how it was written, originally it was a serial posted on Andy Weir’s website. Once he was done people wanted an ebook version so he published one to Amazon and that caught the interest of a book publisher and the film industry.
    While it’s very well researched and scientifically accurate, there are some major exceptions to that rule, and the author admits these are necessary for plot reasons. Firstly, the windstorm couldn’t do what it shows in either the novel or the movie. Mars atmosphere is very thin, less than 1% as dense as Earth’s. The speed is accurate, the force is not, it couldn’t lift a dish or tip a rocket, it would be like a light breeze even at a couple hundred kph. Another issue would be radiation. Mars doesn’t have a strong magnetic field to deflect cosmic and solar radiation. You could shield against it, but you’d need a couple centimeters of lead, 50 cm of water or a full meter or rock to do it. Without such shielding, as he puts it in the book, you’d have so much cancer, your cancer would have cancer.
    All that being said, I love the story, I love the book, I love this movie, so glad you dug it as much as you did. The audiobook is one of my favorites I’ve ever listened to, and another of Weir’s fantastic books called Project Hail Mary is currently in the works to be a movie too, with Ryan Gosling planned to be the lead.

    • @testfire3000
      @testfire3000 Рік тому +1

      Indeed, this is one of the most realistic science fiction movies in a very long time. Yes, that beginning with the massive wind storm is not possible. The other part that always bugged me is how did they keep the crew of the spaceship from hearing about Mark's survival when the entire Earth was talking about it for two months? That spaceship can't hear radio/TV signals? Other than those two items it mostly clicks for me.

    • @houdin654jeff
      @houdin654jeff Рік тому +1

      @@testfire3000 I think the hand wavy explanation in the novel is that NASA controls everything that goes to Hermes… which I suppose makes sense. I’m sure the crew would have more important things to do than scrub through, or try to filter out, broadcasting from the entire planet who might be trying to talk to them. Probably some encryption to prevent malicious code from getting on the several billion dollar space ship as well.

    • @testfire3000
      @testfire3000 Рік тому

      @@houdin654jeff Ok, I accept that its a very hand wavy reason. I can't help but notice it, but it doesn't ruin my experience of the movie either. It is still a kickass move with human wits against a hostile universe. How to say this: They don't have to throw aliens or asteroids at the cast throughout the movie, Mars itself is trying to kill him just by existing. I love his line that now I have to science the shit out of this. Perfect movie line!

  • @Rubiks_LIVE
    @Rubiks_LIVE Рік тому

    The book was one of my favorite reads of all time.

  • @balrog92000
    @balrog92000 Рік тому

    The Martian is my favorite straight up scifi-space movie.

  • @Sawyer1982OAC
    @Sawyer1982OAC Рік тому +1

    'Duct tape is magic and should be worshiped.'

  • @philmullineaux5405
    @philmullineaux5405 3 місяці тому

    Ridley scott ...45 years ago does Alien, now this. Sci-fi space movie, King! Also, they are both in Interstellar!😮😮😮

  • @Noahsampeer
    @Noahsampeer Рік тому +2

    Space is a lot like Godzilla. It's big, it's beautiful, and it's totally indifferent to human life. It doesn't *want* to kill you...but it will.

  • @jeffthompson9622
    @jeffthompson9622 Рік тому

    You mentioned people from Marvel movies. Kate Mara was in Iron Man 2, the most recent Fantastic Four movie(not made by Marvel, but based on their comics as well as Zoom(not based on a Marvel comics, but a superhero movie). Matt Damon was in Thor Ragnarok, Deadpool 2(not made by Marvel, but based on their comics), and I think he might be in Thor: Love And Thunder.

  • @HelloThere.GeneralKenobi
    @HelloThere.GeneralKenobi Рік тому +1

    hahahahaha ... Thank you for the scream warning, of course, you need to show what scared you!
    In 2014 then 2015 we got Interstellar and The Martian. I did not go see either.
    Matt Damon had a smaller role in Interstellar and then this lead. Part of me thought that these would be linked, I was obviously wrong. I have seen both since then.
    17:06 ... I could not wait for the LOTR reference scene to come and see how you would react. You did not disappoint! (you never do) You were so excited that you knew what it was about!! You're too precious! (see what I did there?)
    Along with this movie, you have a list of movies you haven't seen before. I did not see a lot of movies when they came out for one reason or another. Addie, you and other reactors have had an impact. You have had a few videos of movies I haven't seen. So to enjoy your reaction video, yup, I watched the movie for the first time myself.
    That seems to be a major reason why reaction videos are a hit, I want to enjoy that movie for the first time like you did. And I enjoy re-watching other movies while you watch for the first time.
    I don't know when I officially started following but I look forward to a notification from you every chance!
    Take care, Addie!

  • @bobcharles1204
    @bobcharles1204 Рік тому

    Welcome back! Love your comment about Sean Bean not getting killed! LOL!

  • @animux
    @animux Рік тому +1

    For "stuff that goes wrong in space" movies, you've seen this and Apollo 13. Next (if you haven't already seen) you should watch Interstellar, starring Matthew McConaughey (also has Matt Damon), and then Gravity, starring Sandra Bullock. :)

  • @enigmamz
    @enigmamz Рік тому +2

    The most weird thing about this movie is that Sean Bean didn't die in it. I think his last character to not die was Sharpe, from the 90s or something (no IMDB look because bah).

    • @anthonybernacchi2732
      @anthonybernacchi2732 Рік тому

      Sharpe, of course, was the main character of his own series. (Ever notice what Boromir says when he cuts his finger on the hilt-shard of Narsil? A great example of an in-joke done right without taking viewers out of the story.)

  • @paulconnett3654
    @paulconnett3654 Рік тому

    A Sci-fi movie with Stress and Humour, and causing tears is Brilliant and a Great reaction from Addie, A Gorgeous Red Head.x Stay Strong Decent People. Cheer's 🇬🇧

  • @MatthewStephensAU
    @MatthewStephensAU Рік тому

    5:08 It would, except the comms dish is what wiped him out, and the antenna is the thing he just yanked out of his stomach.

  • @MikeB12800
    @MikeB12800 Рік тому

    Big problem with a puncture from a stabbing or gunshot is material and dirt that gets brought into the wound which leads to infection.