Mission to Mars (2000) Poster

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5/10
A difficult derivative sci-fi film
mstomaso21 May 2005
After a second viewing, I can say that I am still not sure what to make of this film. Many will see this as something of a remake of 2001. And yes, the film is visually almost plagiaristic of the Kubrick masterpiece. The two biggest problems are a lack in originality and thoughtfulness. From my rating, you can see that I did not despise this film. It's visually nice, and the performances are all good. However, I am not sure I can recommend it.

I'm a sci-fi fan, and a scientist, so I was initially intrigued by the notion of a big-name dramatic film-maker doing a sci fi epic, which appeared, at least initially, to be hardcore sci-fi. By hardcore sci-fi, I mean fiction based on scientific reality, not fantasy with a tiny bit of science thrown in for decoration. An example, also using Mars as a vehicle, is Ben Bova's novel "Mars" - which focuses on the very edge of plausibility, only occasionally overstepping the bounds of scientific possibility. Film has rarely achieved this - a few interesting exceptions are Alien (the original), Outland and Silent Running. Hardcore sci-fi, which, I argue, this film could and should have been, is careful about that boundary. And 3/4ths of the way through Mission to Mars, it's still a hardcore sci-fi flick. Then suddenly, it's something else. I will leave that something else for you to discover, and stay focused on what the director and screenwriter were trying to do here.

What we have here is not really a single plot, but a pastiche of plots that have been strung together into one long, mysterious and grandiose story line. The film starts out with a couple of scenes which might have been lost in Appollo 13 - providing a little bit of character development and letting us know that we are about to witness the first manned space flight to Mars. That flight ends pretty quickly, as virtually everything goes wrong. And as a rescue mission begins, the question then becomes, why is everything going wrong? Up to the point where the rescue mission enters Martian orbit, this central question is sustained and developed skillfully, but then , in my opinion, things start to go wrong with the film itself.

There are major problems with what could have been the best aspects of this film. The spaceships are remarkably flimsy and poorly designed, but they look great! The safety protocols for the mission, about which we hear so much, are either not followed or incredibly naive. The heroes are not particularly clever about heroism, and seem to forget, at times, what the actual possibilities are for mobility in space (why not use the tether three times - twice out to Woody and once to get back after you run out of fuel, Terry?). The guy who authored the safety protocols does not appear particularly concerned with safety, or even protocols. The evolutionary biologist on the crew is amazingly poorly informed about the Paleozoic period of earth history and the evolution of species. I could go on.

The film is broadly derivative of 2001 A Space Oddyssey, The Abyss, Star Gate, Event Horizon, Fifth Element, Contact, and a few dozen other somewhat entertaining but not particularly believable space / sci-fi adventures, but while it resembles, and in fact pays homage to these films (especially 2001), it never entertains quite as well. Why? Because these films do not pretend to be based on scientific ideas, but rather, aesthetics and humanism. While most of these films invite interpretation, Mission to Mars simply repeats ideas from previous films and doesn't even bother to recast them into an interesting new light. Mission to Mars is something that has been done many times before, and in more interesting, entertaining, and thought-provoking ways.

Technical proficiency, which is something this film exudes, is no substitute for a compelling story and interesting individual characters. Unfortunately, even in terms of technique, the film has some flaws. Some will disagree, but I found the soundtrack irritating, and the pace of the film very uneven to say the least. And the characters lives are so intertwined in the few character development sequences that only Sinise, Robbins and Bennings' characters develop rudimentary individualities.

Despite his reputation, I can not hold Brian De Palma up to standards which are different than those of other film-makers, and I can not condone creating a special vocabulary or a sophisticated argument to permit interpretation of his films as part of some over-arching theme which only he and a few of his fans understand. There is a fine line between flattering imitation and shameless copying, so I'd rather not get into an extrapolated meta-film discussion of this film's relationship to 2001. I don't think this film is worthy of such a sophisticated analysis.

There are some truly great moments in Mission to Mars. This should not be too surprising with the wonderful cast, big budget, and talented production team. What did surprise me about this film was the 2001-like 180 degree turn it took off of the map of scientific possibility 3/4ths of the way through the film, and I can't say that turn and its outcome really impressed me.

If you're a sci-fi fan, or somebody with a very casual interest in science, you should probably see this. But if you haven't seen 2001 first, by all means, wait until you have. And don't take this one too seriously when you do get around to it. This has much more to do with fiction than science fiction.
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7/10
Sci-fi -- for the thinking spectators, that is
alcator1 December 2006
No laser beams. No alien attackers coming to consume Earth. No Will Smith and no Charlize Theron in sexy outfit. Not frightened yet? Read on...

I saw this movie in a cinema with my girlfriend - a Physics teacher. What we both liked was how it followed laws of physics - it was perhaps the first sci-fi we saw which showed properly how space works and what vacuum is all about.

I read in one review that the scene where they raise the USA flag is pathetic, when they should be running into the base to look for survivors; I disagree: Since they arrived nearly a year AFTER the incident, rushing doesn't make any sense.

I liked the "puzzle" part of the movie, as well as the final moments when the truth is revealed. Some laughed at that point, but I liked it a lot.

Remember how Space Odyssey plays with the idea that the intelligent life on Earth might be a product of "targetted imprinting"? Well, M2M suggests yet another possibility, and I find that extremely appealing.

The cast seemed brave to me: No top-class stars, no pretty faces, but instead good actors that are believable (after all, Garry Sinise played in Apollo 13 and Jerry O'Connell played a similar role in "The Sphere").
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7/10
Hits home as a solidly great sci-fi movie
Cent-310 March 2000
In this day and age of computer generated eye candy, it is very common to see movies that are based solely on special effects and nothing else. Movies like Wing Commander have great graphics, but the story line and acting leave you back at the ticket booth.

Mission to Mars does not fit in this category. When I saw previews, the special effects looked great, but I could also tell that there was a plot to this movie. For once, I was right on the mark. Mission to Mars made you think about what was happening and what the consequences were going to be. The suspense takes a firm grip on one's eyelids and pulls them up to the ceiling.

What truly makes this movie stand above others of its ilk is the great acting of the characters. In sci-fi shoot 'em ups, the viewer develops a way of not caring for the characters, as they are uncreative and inflexible. Mission to Mars made me care about every single character; I was eagerly awaiting every twist and relished every event.

The climax (which I will not at all spoil) was hair raising and at the end extremely satisfying. Upon leaving the theater I quickly realised that I haven't seen a better movie all year.

I give every recommendation I know to go see this movie. And, by the way, look out for some foreshadowing. It's in there.
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The Eye of God
tedg29 November 2001
Warning: Spoilers
Spoilers herein.

In my experience, there is no filmmaker like De Palma. As with Kubrick and Greenaway, you have to know what to expect going into a theater, because they do not concern themselves with storytelling in the ordinary sense. De Palma doesn't make films about life, and is unconcerned with the drama one normally finds there.

He makes films about films, and since the target is an abstraction in the first place, the dramatic focus is flat, the acting obvious, the stories predictable -- all by design. By definition, we've already been wherever he goes. The value of the experience is in how he takes something that is ordinary and examines it in new ways. Its the 1890s Paris painting scene, where the eye is everything.

We've seen him do Hitchcock, Kurosawa, Antonioni, and more. Here he tackles Kubrick, and the results are astounding.

Kubrick does an end-on entrance of a spaceship with majestic passing; De Palma does too, and then enters a window to show Robbins and wife in an elaborate view, dancing the camera around them with Robbin's face reflected just incidentally. Kubrick has a clever shot of a man walking around the gravity ring; De Palma elaborates on this a hundred-fold with comings and goings and ups and ins and reversals until we are dizzy. 2001's spaceships were the stuff of pulp covers, but here we have even accurate rivet patterns, everything scrupulously close to NASA specs. 2001 has a cheap Kaleidoscope passage and some clean room visions when the makers are encountered. M2M's `makers' are encountered in an ever-cleaner, ever more abstract room.

Incidentally, in the only clever element of the script, those makers show images of how they `seeded' Earth, with an ambiguity between the making of the image and the act itself.

One doesn't go to a film like this expecting a traditional Lucas-like ride. This is intelligent, self-referential stuff targeting not the mind but the eye. I suppose a question is whether it can also be entertaining for kids. I suspect not. Kubrick himself never tried. The fault is with the marketeers who try and sell these films in the same way as simple thrill rides. Shame on them. Regrets to all the ticketbuyers expecting Spielbergisms.

If you are an IMDB visitor and reading this, chances are you are serious about film. If so, I recommend that you see 2001, then this in one evening. Forget about story, acting, drama, and focus on where these gents take your eye. The thrill is that you become God -- what higher fantasy do you wish?
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7/10
Make This Your Mission
Richie-67-48585224 March 2018
Good story that is easy to follow with suspense here and there and of course it takes place in space which is always exciting because there is so much we do not know. Here we are introduced to crews in space making a go of it and things go wrong but they also go right too. This has one of the most powerful endings in Science Fiction that I have come across. I rate it as follows: If a movie or scene in sci-fi manages to trigger your imagination and then engage it, ten we are getting maximum return on the concept and then some. That's what takes place here. The discussion to follow the movie afterwards with a friend would enlighten and entertain of itself. Enjoy Gary Sinese who is a solid actor earning his keep in trade. Go toward this movie and.....
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6/10
Solid, Intelligent Entertainment
raymond_chandler26 April 2003
I do not understand why this movie was slagged so badly when it came out. I finally watched it on VHS, and I liked it much better than "Red Planet", its companion Mars movie.

Sure, "MTM" steals from lots of other movies, but what film doesn't? The opening is lifted directly from "Apollo 13", but it serves the purpose of setting everything up rather painlessly. I love the cast, and they do establish a sense of camaraderie here.

I am not an aeronautical engineer, but I do know enough science to appreciate the way the fight to survive the entry into Mars' atmosphere is based on the limitations of their equipment. In most action movies, the hero has limitless ammo, fuel, food, etc. It was truly heartbreaking to see Tim Robbins' character make the choice he did.

Overall, "Mission to Mars" is very enjoyable. It felt like a short story lifted directly out of the Sci-Fi of the 60's, which I grew up reading. The pacing is very good, the acting is good (given some of the cliched situations), the script does not insult your intelligence, and I liked the resolution very much. Fun at the movies, what more can you ask?
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1/10
Good Lord! This was TERRIBLE!
sibelian20 September 2006
Warning: Spoilers
I know good science fiction isn't tremendously fashionable these days, but this piece of dreck was almost an insult to science fiction fans.

SPOILERAMASAURUS...

Those ridiculous M&Ms! Rotating happily around each other in a DNA helix! WHY? If they were attached to each other in some way it would merely have been a hideous product placement but in this movie they completely *flout* the laws of physics in an obvious attempt to looks "science fictiony"! Objects (unless they are the size of planets) do not simply go round and round each other in circles in zero G just because doing so makes nice patterns! ARGH! Don't even get me started on the jockish, rubbishy dialogue. Jocks don't watch science fiction movies, Hollywood. If you want people like ME to enjoy and continue watching your movies, stop scripting them for people who are never going to watch them. "Eurobabble." FEH.

And that cruddy alien! And the stupid giant face! And the entirely pointless "noble" death scene (incidentally,what on Earth was Tim Robbins doing in this movie? He can *act*)! And the toy spaceship taking the good ol' boy astronaut off for "a ride" at the end of the movie, puttering along like a cheesy 70s pimpo golf cart! It's not even at the level of Plan Nine from Outer Space! *Unimpressed*, peeps... 1 tiny cheap tin foil star pasted onto black construction paper for this effort, filmed in a wobbly way with your Dad's cruddy camcorder... and that's only because I can't give it *zero*...
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7/10
Sci-fi and fantasy flick about a manned mission to Mars has run into problem and a rescue team has the task of going in after them
ma-cortes3 June 2023
¨Mission to Mars¨ by Brian de Palma boasts a good cast with Gary Sinese, Tim Robbins , Don Cheadle , Connie Nielsen , among others . When the first manned flight to Mars ends in disaster , NASA sends a risky rescue mission consisting of Jim (Gary Sinese) , married astronauts Woody (Tim Robbins) and Terri (Connie Nielsen) and generic tech guy (Jerry O'Connell) . All they have to do is align themselves to the correct the orbit , but a dangerous fuel leak may be about to jeopardise their plans . On the way to Mars they become involved into more and more troubles , difficulties and weird surprises . Getting there was the easy part !. Let There Be Life !. For centuries, we've searched for the origin of life on Earth...We've been looking on the wrong planet !.

Decent space odyssey with fine cast , including thrills , chills , and spectacular Mars scenes. This enjoyable picture blends Science Fiction and Fantasy genre , developing an intelligent script that disseminates the clues to maintain the interest and tension of the viewer and reflect on the eternal theme of the confrontation between man and nature , as well as the struggle between faith and scientific reason . However , some incongruous scenes undermine whatever it was director attempting to accomplish . Adding other philosophical themes as theories of Ancient astronauts , crew doubts , fears and questions about God and divine providence , man's destiny and the nature of the universe turn defining elements in their fates . Writers spent a long period investigating with the goal of researching Mars and space travel and studying photography to see how light behaves in the atmosphere . The result is a feature film narrated with rhythm enough , including careful production design and a sober touch on the scenes in which the dazzling special effects stand out . It is an interesting and thought-provoking motion picture , though typical routine -at times- space odyssey that goes wrong when some astronauts find death in diverse strange forms . In the film there're chilling set pieces , suspense , body-count , intrigue and visual wizardy , but the very used plot and some indifferent interpretations spoiled the final result . Mission to Mars (2000) follows the style of other 2.000's films in which expeditions on Mars get in trouble , such as : the subsequent ¨The Last Days on Mars (2013)¨ by Ruairi Robinson with Liev Schreiber , Elias Koteas , Romola Garai , Olivia Williams and being made at the same time to ¨Red Planet¨ (2000) by Anthony Hoffman stars Val Kilmer, Tom Sizemore , Benjamin Bratt , Simon Baker , Terence Stamp ; that was its greatest rivalry and competence . The biggest claim of this space epic ¨Brian De Palma's Mission to Mars¨, (2000)¨ results to be its cast , headed by Gary Sinese , Tim Robbins , Don Cheadle , Connie Nielsen and a large support cast in brief apperances , such as : Peter Outerbridge , Kavan Smith , Armin Mueller-Stahl , Kim Delaney , Elise Neal , among others .

It displays monumental musical score by genius composer Ennio Morricone , adding colorful and brilliant cinematography by cameraman Stephen Burum. The motion picture was well directed by Brian De Palma (Snake Eyes , Mission: Impossible, The Untouchables , Scarface , Body Double , Obsession , Phantom of the Paradise, The Fury , Dressed to Kill , Sisters) who's well known for his visual wizardry and on that element he doesn't disappoint . Rating : 6.5/10 . The pic will appeal to Sci-Fi fans.
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1/10
Run, don't walk, away from this movie
Ebola-213 March 2000
This movie is flat out awful. There is no attempt at even developing any real plot, the movie is more about the trip to Mars than the planet itself, and the characters have all the depth of parking lot puddles. I guarantee that this movie will be up for the worst of the year. The special effects aren't even that good, and I saw it on digital projection (which, by the way, is a fabulous way to see a movie). I found Armageddon to be light summer fare, and while it would never win any Oscars, it was entertaining. This movie didn't even do that. The ending was stolen from other movies and TV shows, and DePalma must have been trying to come up with this generation's 2001. Instead, he came up with another Lost in Space. I gave this movie a 1 only because I couldn't give it a 0. Save your time for something better to do, like watch paint dry.
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7/10
Mission to entertain
Spondonman30 December 2012
The worst film ever made? A statement almost as ludicrous as considering it the best film ever made! If people don't like this they can't like Alfred Hitchcock for instance, or indeed any film made by anyone in the world before the 1960's because family entertainment nearly always came before Art back then – plot non-sequiturs, nonsensical plot holes, fuzzy mcguffins, logic cliffs and scientific balderdash was the norm in the effort to entertain ordinary people. Scientists and art critics came probably near the bottom of the expected target audience. Those people who consider this to be the best film made probably have never seen a Kurosawa film though. This film is merely entertainment with a dodgy sense of realism but a great line in viewer engagement.

4 astronauts from NASA land on Mars, only to encounter a violent mysterious disaster. Rescue mission is sent heavy with emotional baggage but light on serious planning to encounter further mind boggling problems. To me it's a very well done soap opera: for example Woody's loss in space, Terri's horror and Luke's later realisation of his loss is so expertly handled I'm always impressed. Nothing wrong with soaps – millions of ordinary people watch 'em every day while Artheads snicker. The acting is OK, production very good, stirring music as usual from Morricone, story (for non-scientists) is great. It must be good because that wonderful Arthead director Ridley Scott ripped off the main idea in Mission To Mars for his Prometheus 10 years later, unless Quatermass from the 1950's can be considered as the original.

It's corny, witty, emotive, deadpan, infuriating, satisfying – in fact all ingredients in a good movie.
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1/10
Spoilers within...but then, who cares?
K-Doggy-Dog20 March 2000
Warning: Spoilers
Mission To Mars was BAD BAD BAD. The science fiction ideas were weak and have all been done before--and done better. The action sequences were contrived and ridiculous. (Why *wouldn't* you put your spare helmet on during cabin depressurization, if not to inject tension into a lackluster sequence?) SCIENCE fiction? Science was simply *absent* from this movie. It's as if they had no technical advisors at all. I mean...Dr. Pepper BOILS in space, it doesn't freeze. Human DNA consists of slightly more than six base pairs. There was good marketing-fiction, though. Kawasaki Mars rover...uh-huh. Sigh. I can understand why people go see manipulative, butt-stupid dreck like Armageddon. At least there's lots of purdy 'splosions and sparkly lights. But why would ANYBODY like M2M, which has NO tension, NO action, NO original ideas, mediocre FX, and NO reason for being, other than to separate you from your eight bucks? WHY? Why, when it's ALL been done before? M2M shamelessly ripped off Apollo 13, The Mummy, 2001, 2010, Star Wars, Close Encounters, and even The Abyss (right down to the damn WATER!). It's infuriating! I can only think that the positive reviews seen here were written by studio hacks to try kicking up the word of mouth on this piece of filmic fecal material. Well, here's my word of mouth: SUCKS. And one last thing, merely a stylistic note to the writers...the typical human reaction to having a hole blasted in one's hand by a tiny piece of rock is not to sit in your chair and blandly utter, "micrometeorites." It's more like "AAAAAHHH!!!!! AAAAHHHHHHHHH!!!!! MY HAND!! OH, GOD, MY HAAAAAANNNNDDDDD!!!!!"
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8/10
Not Without It's Flaws, But Still A Wonderful Experience!
g-bodyl1 February 2014
Before watching this film for the first time the other night, I knew this film got middling reviews and after watching it, I can't see why. Just like 2001: A Space Odyssey, Mission to Mars gives us a sense of wonder, of hope, and even of awe. The final half-hour of the film really gives us these emotions. The first part of the film may be a little boring or I shall say intellectual, but I found it interesting to watch. The visuals are really good and especially on Mars and that make the film pretty to look at.

Brian De Palma's film is about how the first manned mission to Mars goes very wrong thanks to a catastrophic and somewhat mysterious event. A rescue team goes to Mars to see if anyone is alive and they discover something that may enchant them forever.

This film has a pretty good cast and it seems like they had a good time. I don't see much of Gary Sinise anymore, but he does a good job as Jim. Don Cheadle is awesome as always. I can't complain about Tim Robbins since he usually does a good job in anything. All in all, everyone has good chemistry here.

Overall, this is a decent, wonder-inspiring sci-fi film. It may not be perfect thanks to some corny dialogue and some times of slowness, but it's much better than what people give it credit for. It's also a film that gives a possible view on where we people from Earth came from. I can't believe people say Morricone's score is bad, but it's far from bad. It's a haunting, stylish score that will stick with you, just like the movie. I rate this film 8/10.
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6/10
Better than Red Planet
Ralpho29 June 2001
Mission to Mars is superior to Red Planet because (A) It has an uplifting, forward-looking ending, while Red Planet is nothing but an action movie in space. And (B) because Mission to Mars doesn't gratuitously announce that Mars must be colonized because decades of neglect by humans has all but destroyed the environment on Earth as Red Planet does. That said; I was only impressed enough with Mission to Mars to rent it twice, not to own it. Although Gary Sinise's character is our protagonist, I was more impressed with the sacrifice of Tim Robbins' character. I've never liked Tim Robbins in a movie until this one. His character makes the ultimate sacrifice, and nothing anyone else does can equal it. The climax struck me as a little too neat and clean. The "suspense" over whether Terri and Luke will make it back to the ship before it lifts off isn't suspense at all because we know they're going to make it. The special effects surrounding Sinise's boarding of the alien ship were overdone. And what was the point of immersing him in water? Do the filmmakers really believe we'll think he's going to drown? The ending would have been better if Tom Hanks had reprised his Forrest Gump role and met Sinise in the alien spaceship. "Lieutenant Dan!" he would say, "I've been waiting for you."
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1/10
Another great idea down the drain
Rammstein-23 August 2000
I'm disappointed. No, actually, I'm sad. No, in fact, Iäm rather angry - I have never seen such a great and wonderful idea be turned into something so insanely sappy and corny and cheesy and stupid in my entire life.

It could have been so fantastic - it could have been a "Contact"-class sci-fi flick. Instead, we are served the lowest kind of americanism: staring into space; uttering "Oh my God" a hundred times and at every single event, small or great; A crying alien - PLEASE!; holding hands; the mandatory loss of someone dear; the lone hero who has nothing to lose and so on and on and OOOONNNNNNNN!!!!!! There is only one leniency to be found: it IS fairly scientific and believable, except for the fantastic feat of landing the satellite thingy exactly on the spot.

This is by far the most disappointing film I have seen. It is always terrible to see a really bad movie, but it's a lot worse when they trick you into thinking it could actually be worth watching. This one certainly isn't...
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I can't believe the bad reviews !
rennarda1 October 2001
I don't understand why this film is getting such a hard time here ! OK, so it's no 2001 - a film with which is has much in common - but it's certainly no Battlefield Earth either.

The story is engaging - the action sequences are realistic and entertaining - the special effects are excellent, with very realistic spaceship designs and photography. The main criticism I can level at the film is that is totally avoids some important scenes, such as the first landing on Mars, or the landing of Mars 2 crew. Also the initial scene is drawn out and there's far too much hugging going on !

This is an intelligent, but low-key film - it reminded me of some mid-fifties sci-fi, like the Thing. Perhaps audiences today are less sophisticated - having been brought up on a diet of poor action movies and even poorer Star Trek 'science fiction'. Mission to Mars has a more realistic basis, is less flashy - and I don't think there's even one explosion in the whole film.

If you enjoyed Contact or 2001 and want more of the same, then Mission to Mars is a definite must-watch. It's a shame that a quality film like this is getting panned so badly, as movie studios are more likely to avoid similar projects in the future. Would 2001 be made today ? I doubt it.
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7/10
Good enough
Samiam31 February 2009
Mission to Mars is interesting, but a difficult film to appreciate unless you've seen '2001: A Space Odyssey'.

Like '2001' and It's sequel '2010', This movie is more of a visual spectacle than an adventure story. The special effects of outer space and the surface of Mars are convincing, but lack the ethereal feeling that is present in '2001'. While the story is never really strong or compelling, in some ways it is step up from Stanley Kubrick's masterpiece, although not a huge one. Mission to Mars has more character development and dialog. It manages to be touching at times, but unfortuanely, it fails to be thrilling or suspenseful when it tries. There are also moments when the movie is so scientifically inaccurate that some might find it amusing, but for most of the time, it avoids going over the top. Ignoring the various other holes, Mission to Mars is decent as a science fiction movie, but may be not for everyone.
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7/10
Well, I liked it.
pummisher12 March 2000
I have been reading some of the reviews for this movie preceding me on this list. I cannot believe how many hated it or considered it a blatant rip-off of 2001 and other movies like it. Hey, good ideas are always borrowed. That's life. Get over it. It was a great movie. Great effects. Music was overly patriotic but it is set in 2020; how are we to know what the future's little details will be?

If the people who hated it and considered the movie a rip-off, then they are looking too hard for something that is not there. Let's see you movie scrutinizers try to make a movie that is not "ripping-off" another movie - I'd like to see you try.

And Mission To Mars dialogue was not that bad; they're supposed to be astronauts, not writers.

I give it 7/10.
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1/10
God awful!
dariushd3 April 2000
Not a single redeeming thing about this film. Perhaps the visual effects, but otherwise, this was heavy handed and pandering. The characters were ill developed and their interactions subsequently forced. Just not a good film. Sorry.
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7/10
Like a vivid dream
sowhatnowthennext24 May 2020
I really liked the cinematography here. Especially the last 2 minutes felt like seeing a dream. Indeed the actors do have a look of awe plastered across their faces, especially Gary Sinise. It is a work of fiction and an enjoyable movie nonetheless.
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1/10
HOLY S**T! This movie SUCKS!
Morpheus-2015 April 2000
This was one of the worst movies I have ever seen... My heart goes out to Tim Robbins and Gary Sinise, two of my favourite actors. Okay, the first half is not a total loss, but when the second mission to mars comes along... phew!!! Stink-city! One major point: The parts of a DNA-helix are NOT called chromosomes!!! Chromosomes are made up of DNA!!! A good description of the second part: "Vulgo-Disney". (A friend of mine who saw the movie at the same time...)

Don't see this movie! Instead see 2001 and/or Contact. You'll feel better for it!!!
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6/10
A solid flick in a difficult genre.
=G=13 September 2000
"Mission..." offers the audience a good cast, good special effects, good sets, some excellent production talent, and an interesting story. It builds from a hokey backyard barbecue opening to an outer space technodrama and waxes in the denouement to a ponderous fantasy. Overall the flick is solid entertainment. If "Mission..." has a problem, it's the daunting task of crossing the left-brain/right-brain barrier (most people are one or the other and not both) in a difficult genre.
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1/10
sh*t in cellophane
karo-614 July 2006
Rarely has a sh*t this bad been packaged this nicely.

I didn't catch the beginning of this movie, but from second one i did see, it was so screaming with BAD i just had to continue watching. Such an overload of clichés is not easy to find. I have an urge to say the acting stinks too, and although it is absolutely true, the actors are totally excused, simply because there's nothing to act on. You simply cannot utter sentences and act out story bits seen and heard so many times and have an expression, apart from cartoon-like mimic and eye-brow work. EVERYTHING was so bad here, from direction to acting to perhaps-good-but-totally-misplaced score to camera, i just had to comment aloud all the time, although i was home alone! I don't do that usually; it was really that bad. Occasionally, computer graphics would appear which, to my surprise, looked exceptionally good (although very kitchy). This made me think "how the hell a director and a story this crappy got so much money for CGI??".

When after the film i read that this is a Brian De Palma movie, i was shocked. Something MUST have gone terribly wrong in the production of this. A badly timed deadline? Urgent need of money? I don't know. And i don't want to know. I want to forget this, as soon as i write this review.

Now, as a youngster i was a great fan of sci-fi literature, and even today i like to see a good SF movie; alas, by now i already realized there is almost no such thing; with very rare exceptions. So i continue to watch the bad ones, this piece of crap included. Thus, as a principal SF fan, i agree with all the people here who say they are sick of all the 'fight the alien monster' movies. But, contrary to most of them, i don't think that making aliens nice and wise makes it a good film, or even story. _Sh*t_stinks_, whatever shade of brown it may be.

Not to forget: shameless ripping off also stinks, especially when it is so obvious, as this rip-off of 2001 Space Odissey is; and even more so when the rip-off is such a simplistic version of the original. As i watched, i kept thinking "When this guy (i.e. director) was young, he wished he made 2001 SO". Eventually he did, and he screwed it up to last bit, and he called it "Mission to Mars".
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9/10
Unfairly Bashed
jpb3210 March 2000
I have seen many reviews bashing Mission to Mars. I see why they've attacked the film but I think they missed that the excitement, action and deep humanity of this film far outweigh the forced quality of a few scenes. There is scene after scene in this movie that pulls the viewer's heart and mind nto some of the deepest veins of human emotion. More than once I felt myself drawn into the middle of intense depictions of love, terror or excitement. If a little subtlety were mixed into just a few scenes this movie would have stood out as one of the greatest and lasting human dramas in science fiction history. I heartily recommend this movie; it will transport you and involve you if you are just a little forgiving.
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6/10
Kiddie sci-fi
ctomvelu-126 July 2008
A rescue team is sent to Mars to find out what happened to a previous ship and its crew. They eventually get to the surface of the angry red planet, to find a single colonist alive. They also find a sign of intelligent life from elsewhere that may be ignored at their peril. Other than one grim sequence involving Tim Robbins freefalling toward the Martian atmosphere, the movie is strictly a G-rated affair about first contact with benevolent beings from another place and time. I have always thought Gary Sinise as one of the astronauts was miscast here, but considering the films he normally appears in, here is one he can safely show his kids and grandkids. MISSION is like those kiddie sci-fi novels of the 1950s with their simplistic, garish covers, and plays a little like some of those simplistic sci-fi flicks of the 1950s, only with far superior visuals. Don Cheadle plays the surviving colonist. The ending will thrill 8-year-olds everywhere, and may be a little hard for adults viewers to swallow. So be it.
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1/10
Mission to Misery: stay far away from this one!
davetrou22 September 2000
"Mission to Mars" was one of those movies that I had intended to see at the theatre, but missed it until it came out on video. Well, that was the best eight bucks I ever saved.

The banal dialogue, awful acting, bad special effects, and predictable storyline leads me to wonder who approved the budget for this film. Did they read the script first? Was there a script?

I may have saved eight bucks at the box office, but I wasted three at the video rental place. Save your money. Leave this one on the shelf.
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