We went off to see Gravity yesterday, and it's true, it's a truly awesome ride of a movie that is a crowd pleaser and technically amazing, and you should watch it in 3D. I do not want to discourage anyone from seeing such a spectacle of a movie.
But: I had did have a problem with its physics. And with a couple of other things. On the other hand, one thing which
David Stratton had a problem with that I think he is absolutely wrong about.
SPOILERS FOLLOW, YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED
I suppose I could just refer people to
Phil Plait's column on the science in the movie, which I deliberately did not read before I saw it. He loved the movie, but (like me) can't help thinking about how it shows science.
I was telling my kids exactly what he explains as the main problem with the movie's physics: you don't move around any substantial distance in orbit by pointing at something and firing rockets. Anyone who has read anything about astronautics knows that orbits have to be adjusted up or down to play catch up (or slow down) with with another object in orbit. There is no reference to this at all in the movie, and in fact, "point and fire" is really explicitly shown. Thinking out loud here - if you did have something ahead of you in the same orbit by scores of kilometres (and, hey, the fanciful notion that space stations work in the same orbit is another key thing anyone who knows anything about space knows does not happen) "point and fire" would result in a vector that puts you in a bit of a higher orbit and make you start slipping further behind. I think.
That was my main problem with the physics, and I had not noticed the other problem that Plait notes. (To do with George Clooney letting go.)
But remember, as Plait says, there is so much that is right with the way it shows movement in space, it's easy to forgive it for its problems.
And quite frankly, when I saw the shorts showing Bullock being flung off into space, I could not work out how it could be made into a movie at all, because I just could not imagine anything short of a newly launched rocket rescuing stranded astronauts in space. The movie is only possible, really, because it pretends things that are not real (in particular, the bit about space stations all being in identical orbits.)
My other comments are about the screenplay:
a. it's much, much more realistic than many other space movies, but I still don't think astronauts on EVA in orbit get to ramble on with anecdotes in quite the way George Clooney does in this one.
b. George seems to be unusually ignorant of the personal life of someone who is on his crew. I would assume shuttle pilots and mission specialists get to know each other really well before they get into space. (Hey, I know, how else do you explain a key bit of character background?)
c. David Stratton in his review evidentally had a problem with a really key scene, which he thinks "corny" and out of place in the movie. I think, in truth, he objects to it due to a possible supernatural interpretation. But he seems to be ignorant of the
Third Man factor, and the use of this in the movie seemed entirely appropriate to me. It is entirely conceivable that an isolated person in space would have this type of experience; it has been reported by many people before. You don't have to interpret it supernaturally at all - it is ambiguous, as are most of the real life stories like it. There was also absolutely no laugh or snicker in the cinema in the packed one I saw it in, as Stratton claimed there was in the cinema in which he saw it. He must move in different circles.
Anyhow, as I say, you should still see it. It's the nearest 99.999999999 per cent (that's not an accurate calculation) of the population will get to the sensation of being in orbit.
Update: Slate is trying to get clicks by running a ridiculous article:
Gravity Is Going to Be a Camp Classic.
Rubbish. Bullock does very well in the role, I reckon; and what faults there are in the screenplay cannot be described as "camp" by any stretch.