The Martian was hilarious and heartwarming / FIRST TIME WATCHING reaction & review

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
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Комментарии • 775

  • @MaryCherryOfficial
    @MaryCherryOfficial  3 года назад +18

    follow me on ✰www.twitch.tv/maryycherryy (LIVE STREAMS)
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    • @douglascampbell9809
      @douglascampbell9809 3 года назад

      To give you an idea of just how extraordinary US astronauts are Jonny Kim is an American US Navy lieutenant (and former SEAL) who won both a Bronze and Silver Star, physician, Harvard graduate and NASA astronaut.
      Any one of those things would make him remarkable.
      Right now he is training for the 2024 moon landing.

    • @johngammon7891
      @johngammon7891 3 года назад

      You can grow most veggies from themselves...

    • @Nienhm
      @Nienhm 3 года назад

      In your spare time I would suggest the extended version. Just adds some nice little moments.

    • @staceytate4758
      @staceytate4758 3 года назад

      Some suggestions: Nightmare Before Christmas, Fly Away Home, Hotel for Dogs, Dolphin Tale 1 and 2, Avatar (Not cartoon), Planet of the Apes Trilogy (Not the 1960 ones), A Dogs life and A Dogs Journey, Because of Winn Dixie, Mighty Joe Young, Sharkboy and Lavagirl, Game Plan, Over The Hedge, Wreck It Ralph, Home (2015), Air Bud (1997), Night At The Museum Trilogy

    • @TheBunnyodeath
      @TheBunnyodeath 11 месяцев назад

      Cheers cherry love this film

  • @glennwelsh9784
    @glennwelsh9784 3 года назад +164

    The crew can't just simply turn the ship around and pick up Watney because it would require burning too much fuel to turn around, change trajectory, go back to Mars, retrieve Watney, and turn the ship back around to head home. If they run out of fuel, no one makes it back to Earth at all. Also, both planets would need to be in close enough orbit with each other to make the trip as short as possible. Both planets orbit the sun at different speeds, and Mars' orbit of the sun is wider than Earth's. That means the distance between Earth and Mars can be longer or shorter depending on each planet's orbit. It's absolutely necessary to travel between both at the right time - when they are closest to each other.

    • @darth856
      @darth856 3 года назад +25

      Science fiction movies make space travel seem so easy. I think that's why many people don't know how complex it really is. At least with our current level of technology.

    • @TheJabbate1
      @TheJabbate1 2 года назад +16

      99% of space travel is essentially falling. Rockets create the momentum and we let gravity do the rest.

    • @Londronable
      @Londronable 2 года назад +11

      @@TheJabbate1 When I figured out how space travel works that's the thing that's mind blowing imo.
      You need a shitton of delta V to get a ship in orbit.
      You only need a little more to get that ship to the moon.

    • @TheArrowedKnee
      @TheArrowedKnee 2 года назад +3

      @@Londronable And a little bit more than that to escape Earth's gravity and go interplanetary, albeit slowly

    • @ldfahrni
      @ldfahrni 2 года назад +4

      They mention the Holman Transfer window in the film, a comment which I am sure escapes over 90% of the audience but tells the physicists watching the film that they know why you can't make a U-turn whenever you want unless you have a tremendous amount of energy and mass to espend

  • @Paglavc1
    @Paglavc1 3 года назад +314

    The Martian is one of those movies that i watch when i feel down and need a Feelgood movie to cheer me up.

    • @roguedravidan2746
      @roguedravidan2746 3 года назад +7

      Yes, yes. Me too. I've watched it far too many times that I'm deliberately starving myself of this movie and plan to watch it again only after buying a 4k projector.

    • @StreetHierarchy
      @StreetHierarchy 3 года назад +6

      Damon's positive attitude and all that disco music! 🤣

    • @martinbaker613
      @martinbaker613 3 года назад

      Same 😏

    • @aquarius5719
      @aquarius5719 3 года назад +4

      The author depicts solutiins because he started to research problems and he as a programmer felt challenged to solve them. Then he saw he had a book in his hands. So he added a character and some humor and the story was served.

    • @Bekka_Noyb
      @Bekka_Noyb 3 года назад

      ditto

  • @bernardkim8906
    @bernardkim8906 3 года назад +508

    That is Ned Stark, one of the few times Sean Bean’s character doesn’t die
    And the whole Project Elrond thing was funnier since Sean Bean was also there 😂

    • @adamvialpando106
      @adamvialpando106 3 года назад +25

      His career in the movie died since he resigned.

    • @RedKytten
      @RedKytten 3 года назад +11

      Well, his career died... not quite the same thing I know. But its something.

    • @chefskiss6179
      @chefskiss6179 3 года назад +15

      I think it would have been hilarious if they showed him getting hit by a golfball at the end, he falls and they quickly cut to black. Just a quick in-joke at the end ;)

    • @donsample1002
      @donsample1002 3 года назад +23

      I kept wanting him to say "One doesn't simply walk into Schiaparelli Crater."

    • @ericmaddox8516
      @ericmaddox8516 3 года назад +5

      Sean Bean didn't die in The Big Empty (2003).

  • @logandarklighter
    @logandarklighter 3 года назад +128

    The bit with Mark blowing himself up and THEN wearing his space helmet in the second attempt is a classic example of -
    "Safety SECOND - for when Safety First wasn't considered in the original plan." :D

  • @ZacharyLoeser
    @ZacharyLoeser 3 года назад +97

    There's a hilarious line from the book they had to delete. When they're resupplying the space ship Johannsen secretly tells her dad that if something *does* go wrong the crew decided to take cyanide pills so that she could - and this is gross - eat them as sustenance in order to survive. After everything goes according to plan Martinez helps her grab the supplies and on the way casually asks her who she would've eaten first. She races on in disgust and Martinez calls after her, "BUT I THOUGHT YOU LIKED MEXICAN FOOD."

    • @JuzTroublez
      @JuzTroublez Год назад

      why do they need to take cyanide pills for her to eat the crew?

  • @scorp77snake
    @scorp77snake 3 года назад +104

    I think you are being a little harsh on Teddy , unlike the other members of NASA he's looking at the bigger picture and not just about Mark
    Not only was Mark a Botanist he was also the missions Engineer.
    The reason the airlock blew is due to the canvas of the Hab stretching it started with the storm on Sol 18 and every time Mark used the airlock it caused more stress eventually causing it to fail.

    • @standasebek5033
      @standasebek5033 3 года назад +25

      Yeah, I don't think he was cold, he was realistic and efficient. The rescue plan was cool, but there was a high change of killing the whole rest of the crew.

    • @joshuaking3731
      @joshuaking3731 3 года назад +4

      They really did him dirty in this film. He ended up being more negative and cold, taking on aspects of both himself and venkat kapoor from the book. He was ment to be realistic and rational.

  • @monsterlair
    @monsterlair 3 года назад +163

    This is a rare film that focuses on positivity and solutions rather than the crises occurring.

    • @owenmenning3878
      @owenmenning3878 3 года назад

      Crises occurring?

    • @monsterlair
      @monsterlair 3 года назад

      @@owenmenning3878 Sorry. "Occurring." English is not my native language.

    • @owenmenning3878
      @owenmenning3878 3 года назад

      @@monsterlair i wasnt asking about your spelling lol, i was asking what you meant by "crises occuring"

    • @aquarius5719
      @aquarius5719 3 года назад +2

      Another movie that depicts private space era is passengers. In the past only governments were customers of aerospace industry. Passengers came too far ahead of its time. Private space era at its best.

    • @jean-paulaudette9246
      @jean-paulaudette9246 3 года назад +2

      Yeah! And nary a single death, in an adventure film! Refreshing!

  • @simianinc
    @simianinc 3 года назад +126

    Sigourney Weaver, Russell Crowe, Matt Damon - Ridley Scott knows how to choose actors that can carry movies based on their sheer charisma

    • @maxis5650
      @maxis5650 3 года назад +5

      How could you leave Harrison Ford out? Blade Runner...

    • @simianinc
      @simianinc 3 года назад +11

      @@maxis5650 epic fail on my part - although in my defence i was providing examples not an exhaustive list!

    • @maxis5650
      @maxis5650 3 года назад +3

      @@simianinc I´m sure it was a slip of the mind, but... come on, charisma is Harrison´s middle name ;)

    • @RoodeMenon
      @RoodeMenon 3 года назад +1

      @@maxis5650 However Harrison Ford looked quite unhappy and forced in Blade Runner. Plus that film did not do well in theaters.

    • @metalore
      @metalore 3 года назад

      So you're saying Russel Crowe carried American Gangster, not Denzel Washington?
      You also forgot Tom Cruise.
      oh wait

  • @ethanvilla4418
    @ethanvilla4418 3 года назад +101

    Matt Damon @ 6:57 "looks at pouch containing his own waste."
    Mary Cherry @ 6:58 "because he knows his sh!t."
    Impressive.

  • @chemquests
    @chemquests 3 года назад +84

    My wife and I are chemists & fell in love with the movie when he said he needed to “science the sh*t out” of it.

  • @Grenn1471
    @Grenn1471 3 года назад +83

    A lot of astronaut training is knowing other team members jobs and a fair amount of medical procedures in case it's the doctor who's hurt or dead.

    • @johnluujl
      @johnluujl 3 года назад +18

      Or god forbid - the botanist

    • @40ozmangi
      @40ozmangi 2 года назад +2

      everyone needs to know basic first aide. can't put neosporin on everything ha

    • @rickbruner5525
      @rickbruner5525 2 года назад +1

      In the book Watney is a botanist and an electrical engineer

    • @JamesJoyce12
      @JamesJoyce12 2 года назад +1

      most astronauts are engineers and test pilots - ERTW - no botanist knows hexadecimal

  • @demyanrudenko
    @demyanrudenko 3 года назад +23

    12:05 he's not heartless, of course he cares. It's just that he as the director has to watch over space exploration as a whole, and all his decisions are directed at doing his best to not jeopardize the 'industry' as a whole.

  • @travisgreene3509
    @travisgreene3509 3 года назад +86

    “He’s played an astronaut so many times” - 2x in 84 movies lol

    • @zarquondam
      @zarquondam 3 года назад +6

      Well, technically twice is more often than the average actor.....

    • @MysterClark
      @MysterClark 3 года назад +2

      Maybe eventually he'll work up to a Jason Borne in space. And technically he was "in space" when he played Loki (the second time, not the first). Most of this movie was set on Mars, so if that counts then so would that one, right?

    • @travisgreene3509
      @travisgreene3509 3 года назад

      @@MysterClark what are you doing right now

    • @MysterClark
      @MysterClark 3 года назад

      @@travisgreene3509 That's... private (Ryan). Although 50 minutes ago when you made this reply I was watching other reaction videos. Why?

    • @engineer4854
      @engineer4854 3 года назад

      Just imagine that he is secretly an astronaut in all the rest of the 84 movies.

  • @henrytjernlund
    @henrytjernlund 3 года назад +39

    With all the unrealistic sci-fi people watch, they don't understand you can't just turn around. It takes huge amount of fuel to turn around. Fuel they wouldn't have. Just to make it there everything must be carefully balanced.

    • @robhax
      @robhax 3 года назад +5

      Also, once they leave Mars it is no longer in the same place it once was.
      It's not a fixed point from A to B. Flying from LA to NY is "easy" to turn around due to them being fixed positions.

    • @brandonb.5304
      @brandonb.5304 3 года назад +10

      @@robhax Yeah, even an airplane on Earth can't just "turn around" three quarters into their flight plan. They also have fuel limitations. People watch too much unrealistic sci-fi and think aircraft have limitless fuel reserves.

  • @logandarklighter
    @logandarklighter 3 года назад +27

    The reason the airlock “blew up” and destroyed his crops:
    The habitat is essentially a pressurized “tent”. Which sounds flimsy, but it does have an internal frame.
    And the hab had *three* airlocks. But because the rover and the Pathfinder probe were on one side, he kept using the same airlock over and over instead of using the others. And the fabric around the airlock got stressed and finally gave way. (This is info from the book that clarify what you see - READ THE BOOK!! It’s even more awesome than the movie! )

    • @crash406
      @crash406 2 года назад +6

      The book also mentions that the solar panels were the most efficient ever made, too
      He also had more than enough morphine to kill himself a couple times over.... but there's something about the human spirit that looks for a way out.

    • @evanflynn4680
      @evanflynn4680 2 года назад +2

      The audiobook is really good as well.

    • @citisoccer
      @citisoccer 2 года назад +3

      If you'll notice, I believe she looked down for the second that the malfunction panel flashed on the screen, which is why she didn't know what was happening. I think, anyway.

    • @jerryfick613
      @jerryfick613 Год назад +1

      The audiobook is read by Wil Wheaton, and very good.

    • @NuclearFridge1
      @NuclearFridge1 10 месяцев назад +1

      Yeah, Watney fell into a habit without realising it regards the airlock.

  • @lawrencenull
    @lawrencenull 3 года назад +94

    Andy Weir is a fantastic writer. This movie was great and so is the book. I'm hoping Artemis gets turned into a movie.

    • @blechtic
      @blechtic 3 года назад +7

      The book is amazing. At least with Artemis, they wouldn't have to leave out so much.

    • @Jayquinator-X
      @Jayquinator-X 3 года назад +2

      Same

    • @alexj.5207
      @alexj.5207 3 года назад +3

      I just finished the book yesterday

    • @therealmbassy
      @therealmbassy 3 года назад

      they are already working on it, though i'm not sure on how i feel about the crew so far. imdb /title/tt6857180/

    • @Mikimarux
      @Mikimarux 3 года назад +9

      His new book Hail Mary is amazing, I highly recommend it.

  • @my_randomology
    @my_randomology 3 года назад +24

    The reason they can't just turn the ship around is because they have a finite and carefully measured amount of fuel. The ship has enough to get to Mars, decelerate, and then accelerate back to Earth and decelerate. If they turned around, they would use up all their fuel getting to Mars and then get stuck.

    • @stanmann356
      @stanmann356 3 года назад +12

      One does not simply "turn around" in orbital mechanics

    • @charlesborden8111
      @charlesborden8111 3 года назад +1

      @@stanmann356 Oh, one can, but it never ends well. LOL

    • @TheArrowedKnee
      @TheArrowedKnee 2 года назад +1

      @@charlesborden8111 In fact, pretty much impossible with current technology. At best a spacecraft can do a mid course correction to intercept the planet it came from on the next orbit, but pretty much any spacecraft we have don't have enough fuel to literally turn back

    • @charlesborden8111
      @charlesborden8111 2 года назад

      @@TheArrowedKnee What did you not get about It Never Ending Well?

  • @eternalposer1955
    @eternalposer1955 3 года назад +25

    I adore this movie and how it approaches the story from an engineers/scientists mindset. It's not about some vague notion of believing in yourself or trying really hard. It's about using expertise to solve one problem at a time.

  • @finnmurphy6186
    @finnmurphy6186 3 года назад +72

    If u enjoyed this, u should check out a film called Moon (2009). It is one of the most criminally underrated films of all time and has an Oscar snubbed performance from Sam Rockwell. And it is directed by David Bowie’s son

    • @matthalaboo6694
      @matthalaboo6694 3 года назад +7

      MOON is an excellent movie!

    • @johnfriday5169
      @johnfriday5169 3 года назад +5

      To anybody that hasn't seen Moon...WATCH MOON. You're welcome.

    • @morkmon
      @morkmon 3 года назад +6

      Moon is so good, love Sam Rockwell

    • @7Rendar
      @7Rendar 3 года назад +4

      Never even heard of it - will check it out, thanks.

    • @djhart25
      @djhart25 3 года назад +2

      Appreciate the recommendation.. Growing up Apollo 13 was my favorite movie, and now this is one of them. Definitely will check out Moon, not sure how I've never heard of it!

  • @ParkerPG
    @ParkerPG 3 года назад +4

    Fun Fact: Of that 6 Person Crew 5 People have been in Marvel Movies

  • @duckie68
    @duckie68 3 года назад +6

    Orbital mechanics means you cannot simply "turn around". Getting from one place to another in space is mostly a matter of burn really hard to go the right way and then spend (in this case) months "falling" towards your objective. Attempting to "simply turn around" means counteracting all that time spent "falling" (read: accelerating) and there is no way to carry that much fuel with you. "Stopping" at your destination is a matter of a gravity capture or aerobraking since most of your fuel was already used up just to start the journey.
    Notice in this film, they do the opposite of a gravity capture and perform a "gravity assist" (slingshot) where the extra speed needed to return to Watney comes from "falling" so fast past the Earth that they shoot right back out there.

  • @supdawg2559
    @supdawg2559 3 года назад +31

    One of those films that you can watch more than once and that makes for a good movie

    • @blechtic
      @blechtic 3 года назад +1

      Another one would be Twister. It is ridiculously rewatchable.

    • @faureamour
      @faureamour 3 года назад

      @@blechtic There was a time when I watched Twister at least once a month. It is my favourite movie, not because it's amazing but because it's so fun and rewatchable.

  • @jeffthompson9622
    @jeffthompson9622 3 года назад +62

    I'm glad you liked this. Please consider watching Matt Damon and Ben Affleck as angels in Dogma.

    • @nicksouthwell9393
      @nicksouthwell9393 3 года назад +4

      And Matt plays Loki… lol

    • @IronmanV5
      @IronmanV5 3 года назад +4

      She should watch them in order: Clerks, Mallrats, Chasing Amy, Dogma, Jay & Silent Bob, Clerks II

    • @jeffthompson9622
      @jeffthompson9622 3 года назад +5

      @@IronmanV5 That would make sense. I enjoyed them all, but not everyone does. As a matter of fact, Jersey Girl is more mainstream than most of Kevin Smith's movies and still very good. Dogma, Jersey Girl, and Jay And Didn't Bob Strike Back are the last three movies I saw George Carlin in.

    • @TheNeonParadox
      @TheNeonParadox 3 года назад +1

      One of George Carlin's best rolls. Great f'n movie.

    • @samuelchallis3420
      @samuelchallis3420 3 года назад +2

      Stan Lee was rehearsing his Mallrats lines in Captain Marvel. Therefore the View Askew movies exist in the MCU. So Loki probably saw MD play Loki in Dogma and wanted him for the role in the stage play on Asgard

  • @jamesoblivion
    @jamesoblivion 3 года назад +10

    This was a film where casting the lead was everything. You need just the right person, when you're spending so much time with one isolated character. The whole thing hinges on it. The studio wanted Channing Tatum, but Ridley got it just right. And beyond that, the whole supporting cast is phenomenal, as well.

  • @PsychoMuffinSDM
    @PsychoMuffinSDM 3 года назад +35

    "Why can't they just turn the ship around..."
    Someone really needs to play some KSP =-)

    • @xtravagentk1275
      @xtravagentk1275 3 года назад +3

      I mean school should have taught her that but... Lol.

    • @Shadow92597
      @Shadow92597 3 года назад +3

      @@xtravagentk1275 to be fair, not everyone knows how orbital mechanics works so cut her some slack lol.
      Also not all schools teach this stuff, or at least not the schools I've attended.

    • @HiddenWindshield
      @HiddenWindshield 3 года назад +2

      @@xtravagentk1275 I should point you to XKCD comic number 1356.

    • @gonk_ch
      @gonk_ch 2 года назад

      @@HiddenWindshield XKCD for the win mate

  • @hkpew
    @hkpew 3 года назад +54

    Between Saving Private Ryan, Interstellar, and The Martian the US government has spent a whole lot of money rescuing Matt Damon.

    • @noni5961
      @noni5961 3 года назад +4

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @SCWillson
      @SCWillson 3 месяца назад

      Then they spent three Bourne films trying to kill him.

  • @zarquondam
    @zarquondam 3 года назад +14

    In the original book there's one more peril for him: as he's driving toward the pickup point, there's a major storm that NASA can see approaching but they can't contact him to warn him about it. I kind if wish they'd included that in the movie.

    • @MediaBrad
      @MediaBrad 3 года назад +7

      And he short circuits pathfinder accidentally so he's cut off from communicating with Earth preemptively.

    • @PamJernigan
      @PamJernigan 3 года назад +4

      Yes, the movie's great but the book is even MORE. Love the dust storm. Not to mention the hydrogen build up in the Hab.

  • @chrisnichols9840
    @chrisnichols9840 3 года назад +9

    A sol is a Martian day. Mars actually rotates just slightly slower than Earth so for simplicity's sake, they're essentially the same length. Therefore each sol is actually equal to a full Earth day.

    • @MagsonDare
      @MagsonDare 3 года назад +1

      Yup. 24 hours, 39 minutes, 35 seconds = 1 sol.

  • @RedKytten
    @RedKytten 3 года назад +16

    I love how much hard science is in this. The only 'creative license' he took (based on science of the time. I know that there are a few things that have changed since then) was on the strength of the winds. With 1% of the atmosphere of Earth, that means that 100km/h winds would have the force of 1km/h winds. But, hey. He needed the planet to strike the first blow.

    • @scorp77snake
      @scorp77snake 3 года назад +7

      At the end of the book, Weir explains that he wanted to make the story as scientifically accurate as possible, but he needed the dust storm at the beginning to get the plot moving.

    • @RedKytten
      @RedKytten 3 года назад +1

      @@scorp77snake Yep. He talked about that in some of the interviews as well. Since he wrote it, they have also found that the Martial soil is actually quite 'damp' (though frozen) only a few cm down, at least in the places they have checked. So Weir has also said that they landed in a 'desert' region where that isn't the case. (one of the science changes they had discovered since the book and movie were released).

    • @TheArrowedKnee
      @TheArrowedKnee 2 года назад

      @@scorp77snake Honestly i think most people are more than willing such an inaccuracy, when they get so much else of the science fairly correct

    • @redrick8900
      @redrick8900 2 года назад

      The winds would carry more force than that. While Martian air is thinner it's made of heavier particles. Also the wind storms push pressure fronts with higher density atmosphere.

    • @paulchaisson8301
      @paulchaisson8301 Месяц назад

      Another supposed inaccuracy is that while cooking rocket fuel into water, the temperature of the HAB would have gone up some 2000 degrees...

  • @scottalynch
    @scottalynch 3 года назад +13

    There are seven Marvel actors in this film...
    Matt Damon
    Michael Pena
    Benedict Wong
    Sebastian Stan
    Chewitel Ejiofor
    Donald Glover
    Kate Mara

    • @MikeB12800
      @MikeB12800 3 года назад +4

      Jessica Chastain, Dark Phoenix

    • @robhax
      @robhax 3 года назад +4

      Kristen Wiig was in WW84... not Marvel, but a superhero movie!

    • @robhax
      @robhax 3 года назад +2

      @@vishakarandunuge2235 Invisible Woman on the Fan4stic movie

    • @scottalynch
      @scottalynch 3 года назад +2

      @@vishakarandunuge2235 Sue Storm/Invisible Woman

    • @mattmurdoch6720
      @mattmurdoch6720 3 года назад +2

      One of the actors in crew is in thor dark world

  • @fajenthygia5760
    @fajenthygia5760 3 года назад +4

    Mary: "He knows his shit."
    Mark: *literally picking up vacuum-sealed shit*

  • @AlexandruCarjan
    @AlexandruCarjan 3 года назад +6

    Why can't they just turn the station arround? Because it's not a car that has a steering wheel. It's basically on a eliptical orbit/trajectory that intersects Earth, the only way to turn it arround is come back to Earth first...

  • @christophernelson24
    @christophernelson24 3 года назад +7

    Glorious thing about this movie is that it’s actually pretty scientifically accurate and somewhat possible to do things like this.

  • @RyoHazuki224
    @RyoHazuki224 3 года назад +5

    What I've always loved about this movie that puts it in my top list of movies, is that its such a positive, feel-good movie. Like, there are no villains in the movie, no bad guys out there to purposefully fuck shit up for their sole benefit/profit. Its all real people trying to do a job to save one person, and they figure it out and it ends on a positive note.

  • @crash406
    @crash406 3 года назад +3

    Each of the crew actually had two different 'functions'; Commander Lewis, for example, wasn't just the Mission Commander, but she was also assisting with gathering the appropriate soil samples (the geology mission). Watney was a Mission Specialist; obviously trained in Botany (he had a Master's Degree in it), as well as Mechanical Engineering (also holding a Master's...they had explained some of that in some of the extra stuff).
    So, he was an over-trained gardener & handy-man, exactly what he needed.

  • @kombatres
    @kombatres 3 года назад +6

    why does everyone think that you can just "turn around" in space?

    • @TheDetailsMatter
      @TheDetailsMatter 3 года назад +7

      Because they do it all the time in Star Trek and other shows of that ilk. Where drives work on impossibilium reactors and gravity is generated by magic devices in the floor.

    • @Icureditwithmybrain
      @Icureditwithmybrain 3 года назад +2

      Sci fi films.

  • @BigMikeDTW
    @BigMikeDTW 3 года назад +7

    If you want to see a space rescue movie that's even better than The Martian, check out Apollo 13. It stars Tom Hands, Bill Paxton, Kevin Bacon, and Ed Harris. It's one of my all time favorites!

    • @MikeB12800
      @MikeB12800 3 года назад +1

      Even though Iv’e seen it so many times, its suspenseful every time I watch it!

    • @peterdrewer2574
      @peterdrewer2574 3 года назад +5

      Agreed, and Andy Weir credits Apollo 13 as the inspiration for writing The Martian.

    • @praevasc4299
      @praevasc4299 2 года назад +1

      And that one happened for real!

    • @TheArrowedKnee
      @TheArrowedKnee 2 года назад

      Doesen't get much better than the real thing really. The Martian is pretty excellent in terms of the science though, with the notable exception of why the story happend in the first place. With Mars' atmosphere being so thin, such a powerful storm would be impossible in reality

  • @visvivalaw
    @visvivalaw 2 года назад +2

    The base was only meant to be occupied for 31 days. The airlock wasn't designed to go through so many cycles.

  • @peterpaul5214
    @peterpaul5214 3 года назад +11

    You can’t simply turn around a spacecraft. The energy required to do so is way to high. Orbital mechanics are way more complicated.

  • @BluDemonOzzy
    @BluDemonOzzy 3 года назад +8

    "How did this happen?"
    Well first Matt Damon was born..
    ...and about 44 years later he got stuck on Mars.

  • @TheBernito2
    @TheBernito2 3 года назад +7

    One of the few movie where Sean Bean doesn't die...

    • @Ugnutz
      @Ugnutz 3 года назад

      and its usually a sign of a movies quality if he dies or doesn't in every movie that he dies its a good movie while the ones he doesn't are not so this is the expception.

  • @fishwhistle4661
    @fishwhistle4661 3 года назад +1

    To give you a little context - the reason the ship couldn't just turn around is that orbital mechanics are really complicated. Just turning around would have actually taken longer (potentially much, much longer) than an entirely separate mission launched from Earth at the right time of the year. The slingshot maneuver around Earth took advantage of the right timing and on top of that picked up much more acceleration from Earth's gravity than the ship's engines would have been able to manage alone.

  • @Christobanistan
    @Christobanistan 3 года назад +17

    Still my favorite movie ever. AND THE BOOK IS EVEN BETTER!

  • @schumi246
    @schumi246 Год назад +1

    6:59, perfect timing. “He knows his s***.” As he is literally picking up the freeze dried poop.

  • @Dave_thenerd
    @Dave_thenerd 3 года назад +4

    24:53 For some reason I love this part of the movie so much. I just imagine Sojourner going "HOLY SHIT HOLY SHIT! HUMANS ARE YOU SEEING THIS SHIT! MARS HAS LIFE AND A WAY STATION AND PAVEMENT!"

  • @rhonafenwick5643
    @rhonafenwick5643 Год назад +1

    Dr Mann: Pray you never learn just how good it can be to see another face
    Mark Watney: Hold my potatoes
    A thoroughly touching and lovely film

  • @jonasfermefors
    @jonasfermefors 3 года назад +2

    Quite possibly the only hard Sci-Fi feelgood movie in existence. I love it.. even though there are some flaws in the physics with storms not being dangerous on Mars being the big one.

  • @Kestrel1971
    @Kestrel1971 3 года назад +4

    "They're f--king Matt Damon, and heading to the stars.
    They're f--king Matt Damon, and leaving him on Mars!"

  • @IR4TE
    @IR4TE 3 года назад +14

    If you want a movie dealing with loneliness away from Earth, I'd recommend 'Moon' with Sam Rockwell!
    Also I really can't recommend 'Good Will Hunting' enough, also starring Matt Damon, he also wrote the script together with Ben Affleck, fantastic movie, and so far in my opinion Damons best dramatic performance.

    • @SubZeroCommander
      @SubZeroCommander 3 года назад +1

      Plus it has the great Robin Williams in it!

    • @Yggdrasil42
      @Yggdrasil42 3 года назад +1

      Both are great recommendations.

  • @TheNeojanus1
    @TheNeojanus1 3 года назад +5

    The science in this movie is top knotch if you omit the storm in the beginning. And Pathfinder is a real Mars probe currently on Mars.

    • @TomVCunningham
      @TomVCunningham 3 года назад +1

      Yeah, apparently the storm and the toxicity of the Martian soil are the only real exceptions to scientific accuracy.

    • @paratus04
      @paratus04 3 года назад +5

      @@TomVCunningham and the toxicity of the Martian soil (perchlorates) wasn’t known until a couple of years after Weir wrote the book.

    • @liamjohnston2000
      @liamjohnston2000 3 года назад +1

      @@TomVCunningham There's also the part where Mark punctures his suit at the end. It would be a lot harder to control than was shown in the movie. It wasn't done in the book, so I think they changed it to make the final rescue a bit more suspenseful.

    • @TomVCunningham
      @TomVCunningham 3 года назад

      @@liamjohnston2000 right. The book has 2 exceptions, the movie 3.

    • @wwoods66
      @wwoods66 3 года назад

      @@liamjohnston2000 In the book, he jokes that 'if this were a movie, I would' ... And in the movie, that's what happens!
      There are other inaccuracies in the book; e.g. by the numbers given, he doesn't have enough solar panels to light up so many potato plants.

  • @alexthegreat398
    @alexthegreat398 3 года назад +11

    Idk if you ever started The Expanse, but this can be seen as a prequel of sorts to that

    • @engineer4854
      @engineer4854 3 года назад +1

      Life is a prequel to the expanse.

    • @Ugnutz
      @Ugnutz 3 года назад +2

      I loved when i came across the Ship named after Mark in the expanse books, it started off as just a nod to the Martian book by the Expanse authors but the authors of both books made it canon that they are set in the same universe.

    • @engineer4854
      @engineer4854 3 года назад

      @@Ugnutz cool

  • @mistrants2745
    @mistrants2745 3 года назад +2

    You cant simply turn a rocket around in the middle of space. Despite how its portrayed in sci-fi, spaceships dont work like planes.
    Generally, a rocket blasts off a planet till i reaches a certain speed and then shuts down its engines to safe fuel. After that it simply 'glides' towards it target making only minor adjustments along the way.
    If you wanna turn around in space youre going to have to turn your rocket around and slow down your speed all the way to zero and then speed up again in the opposite direction. This costs a gigantic amount of energy and fuel. Basically, realistically, its very unlikely a rocket can ever 'turn around' in the middle of interplanetary space. They will generally need a gravity assist (the thing thats explained as if its a eureka moment later on in the movie despite every nerd being well aware of that it is).

  • @Arrynek01
    @Arrynek01 3 года назад +2

    As for why they can't "just turn back."
    That's how space travel works. Things aren't like in Star Trek where ships can do whatever. In reality, they are extremely fuel limited and bound to exact trajectories between planetary bodies.
    The only way for the crew to turn around is to use Earth for a slingshot, and even that is with artistic license. They were moving too fast to do that in real life.

  • @SebastianWeinberg
    @SebastianWeinberg 3 года назад +5

    6:57 - *“There's actually a chance here, 'cause he knows his shit.”*
    Said at the _exact_ moment that Watney picks up the crew's… waste products.

  • @djorgs
    @djorgs 3 года назад +4

    "When they get him back, this man needs a promotion!" No, when they get him back, this man needs a good retirement plan.

  • @stevenkawleski3269
    @stevenkawleski3269 Год назад

    With regard to the potato, yes you can stick a potato in the ground and it will grow. No seeds necessary. In fact, that's how farmers do it on earth because a potato plant from seed takes 14 months, but a potato plant from another potato cut up takes 2 months.

  • @billlupin8345
    @billlupin8345 9 месяцев назад +1

    They answer the blowout a bit more clearly in the book. He kept using the same exit over and over, and the canvas wore out and tore.

  • @Cydonius1
    @Cydonius1 3 года назад +2

    "he knows his shit" just as he is picking up a freeze dried package of his shit lol

  • @finekat296
    @finekat296 3 года назад

    LOVE this movie so much! And yes Mark Watney is really smart. He's not just a botanist, he's also an engineer! They don't say it in the movie, but my mum who read the book shared that with me.

    • @Garryck-1
      @Garryck-1 3 года назад

      You should go read the book yourself.. there's a LOT that got left out of the movie.

  • @MichaelScheele
    @MichaelScheele 3 года назад +2

    The crew can't just "turn around". Their spacecraft does not have a surplus of fuel to reverse course. They also wouldn't have had enough food for the return trip with added travel time.
    They received more fuel and food prior to the rescue mission to Mars.

    • @wwoods66
      @wwoods66 3 года назад +2

      And even if they did, at that point there's no way for Mark to get up to the ship.

  • @kirk001
    @kirk001 3 года назад +3

    Among my friends and I, Jessica Chastain has become synonymous with competence. So when someone does something very well, we say she (or he) Chastained it. LOL. (I realize Matt Damon's the super space botanist here, but Chastain was a competent leader, and she's pretty much manifestation of competence in ever other movie she's in.)

    • @susanmaggiora4800
      @susanmaggiora4800 3 года назад

      It could also be synonymous for ‘Smoldering Sexiness’ as well..😏

    • @kirk001
      @kirk001 3 года назад +2

      @@susanmaggiora4800 "Smoldering Sexiness" = "Super Competence" Yup that's going in my thesaurus! :)

  • @maxducoudray
    @maxducoudray 3 года назад +5

    6:58 Matt Damon picks up packets of poop. Mary: “He knows his shit.”

  • @DeterminedJellyfish
    @DeterminedJellyfish 2 года назад +3

    Between Saving privatel Ryan, The Martian and Interstellar, the US government has spent billions trying to rescue Matt Damon

    • @fenrir4211
      @fenrir4211 Год назад +2

      LMAO I just realized too!

  • @readaholicgirl_5
    @readaholicgirl_5 Год назад +1

    The ship the crew is on, Hermes, is a giant ship that does not do good in turning around sharply. Its like a bus that takes the crew to and fro Earth and Mars using an ion engine that's constantly accelerating compared to a fuel engine like they do in Iris and Tien Shen (sp?).
    Its why the MAV and MDV are important ships. Hermies is the main ship that gets you to earth and mars but MAV gets you out of mars while the MDV gets you from Hermes to Mars.

  • @karlluigi1987
    @karlluigi1987 2 года назад +2

    if WONG just used his Portal, he could have save Mark in seconds

  • @GrumpyOldGuyPlaysGames
    @GrumpyOldGuyPlaysGames 3 года назад +1

    Neil Degrasse Tyson said this was one of the most scientifically accurate films ever made. The biggest inaccuracy, he says, is the storms. Storms on Mars don't have this kind of force, because the atmospheric pressure is so thin that even a hurricane would feel like a summer's breeze.

  • @blakewalker84120
    @blakewalker84120 Год назад +3

    15:50 "that looks like Ned Stark."
    Can't be.
    That guy is at least a head taller than Ned.

    • @Michael-dy2lb
      @Michael-dy2lb 5 месяцев назад +1

      That's a good one. Well done.

  • @Waterford1992
    @Waterford1992 3 года назад +2

    "That looks like Ned Stark"
    Well thats because it is

  • @Trifler500
    @Trifler500 3 года назад

    Yup, we cut up potatoes and grow them regularly. There is no such thing as a potato seed, as such. Not in the seeds in a packet sense. It works best if you get organic potatoes or potatoes from a farm, because a lot of stores like to spray them with a chemical that makes it harder for them to grow.

  • @ryanadams2671
    @ryanadams2671 3 года назад +8

    My favorite movie. This one sparked me to start watching a lot more Matt Damon films.

    • @nothingtoospiffy7913
      @nothingtoospiffy7913 3 года назад +1

      Watch The Talented mr. Ripley. Matt Damon is awesome in that movie period And I don't even have to recommend the Bourne series cuz that's a given

  • @Death36669
    @Death36669 3 года назад +3

    I don’t know if you have, but the Bourne Identity series of movies is Matt Daemon’s breakout roll and my favorites

    • @arrgghh1555
      @arrgghh1555 3 года назад +3

      Have you not seen Good Will Hunting? or the Rainmaker, or Dogma, or the Talented Mr Ripley.?

    • @MysterClark
      @MysterClark 3 года назад

      @@arrgghh1555 This is his breakout role from all of those other breakout roles... :P

    • @jeremyfrost2636
      @jeremyfrost2636 3 года назад

      @@arrgghh1555 3 Oscar darlings and 1 cult film. We're talking mainstream when we say "breakout". Think Star Wars or MCU type stuff.

  • @Christobanistan
    @Christobanistan 3 года назад

    FYI, if you read the book, the reason he had that outburst after the hab blew (a stress tear) was because he knew it mean all the microbes the potatoes needed to survive were dead and would not be coming back. So he was left with what potatoes he had left. So extreme rationing. Literally 2 years of scurvy and malnutrition and pain were ahead. All his efforts over many months were for naught and he couldn't contain the frustration anymore.

  • @MikeB12800
    @MikeB12800 3 года назад +1

    Sue Storm (Fan4stic) The Winter Soldier, Mordo (Dr. Strange), Wong (Dr. Strange), Aaron Davis (Spider-Man Homecoming) Luis (Antman) Vuk (X-Men Dark Phoenix) Thors Asgardian actor (Ragnarok) are all in this movie!! And Iron Man....kinda

  • @NominePatris
    @NominePatris 3 года назад +14

    Why didn't you like the director? He had to make some tough decisions and keep everybody happy, he used logic to do that. I admired him. :)

  • @holl0918
    @holl0918 Год назад +1

    The Survival Rule of Three
    3 minutes without oxygen
    3 hours without shelter
    3 days without water
    3 weeks without food
    3 months without hope

  • @SylviusTheMad
    @SylviusTheMad 3 года назад +1

    Spacecraft mostly drift unpropelled. The Hermes, as it returned to Earth, was coasting, falling toward Earth within the sun's gravity well. Turning around isn't a thing they could do.
    The way they did turn around - with a gravity-assist from the Earth - was the only way they could have done that.
    Spacecraft really don't carry much propellant, because once they're in space they hardly need any. Just give a little push in the direction you want to go and want for inertia to do the rest.

    • @wwoods66
      @wwoods66 3 года назад

      _Hermes_ had a nuclear-powered ion drive, so it was continuously under acceleration. Which gave it _some_ flexibility, but nothing like enough to turn around and go back.

  • @ryanoseguera1207
    @ryanoseguera1207 3 года назад +4

    This movie is one of those movies that is so good IT'S INFURIATING!!

  • @logandarklighter
    @logandarklighter 2 года назад

    Just to explain something about potatoes. They are the root of the plant. And if you look carefully at any given potato, you’ll notice it has several spots scattered over it. If you’ve ever done the science class experiment of leaving a potato half submerged in water on a windowsill with good sunlight through most of the day, then you’ll have seen the actual plant shoots begin to sprout from those “dots” and start branching into leafy greens.
    If you cut a potato into pieces such that each piece contains one of those “sprout dots”, then each piece - if given the right amount of light, nutrient laden soil and water, and maybe some fertilizer - then that piece will grow back out into a full root and also grow into a full potato plant.
    Every thing you see Mark Watney do in regards to his potato farm is correct (though some parts may have been glossed over for the sake of film running time).

  • @mitchthe3518
    @mitchthe3518 Год назад +1

    21:09 book has him go on a sailer mouth spree about moving to western Australia because its as far as possible from Idaho

  • @thekingofspades44
    @thekingofspades44 7 месяцев назад +2

    She isn't the brightest bulb in the Christmas tree

  • @sandwichanomaly6339
    @sandwichanomaly6339 3 года назад +1

    As an old kerbal space program player I know doing a u-turn mid trip to another planet is not possible. The amount of fuel needed to stop alone would empty the tanks.

  • @kjek1
    @kjek1 3 года назад

    “I’ll expect your resignation”
    “Bastard!”

  • @adm.petercowell9573
    @adm.petercowell9573 2 года назад +1

    That's so funny !!! "When he gets back this man needs a promotion"... Ah, he's already the highest ranking person on the planet. Lol

  • @inarar5334
    @inarar5334 3 года назад +1

    The novel makes a point of pointing out that between his particular skill set (he's not just a botanist, he's a mechanical engineer) and his sense of humor Watney was probably the only one that could have been marooned like that. It's even mentioned he was selected for Ares 3 in part because of his sense of humor making him an unofficial morale officer in a way.
    I also always have to laugh that they unabashedly did something that, in the book, Mark mentions would have happened had it been a movie. Right after he's rescued he notes that if it were a movie, the crew would have all met him at the airlock, but they had jobs to do.

  • @Greybeardmedic
    @Greybeardmedic 3 года назад

    If you read the novel you will learn that he is also a Mechanical engineer. Astronauts usually have multiple disciplines, that way NASA can have teams with a lot of built in knowledge.

  • @michaelevidente6300
    @michaelevidente6300 3 года назад

    the movie "The Martian" is actually a prequel to the TV Series "The Expanse", just that The Expanse happens several hundred years in the future

  • @rnkelly36
    @rnkelly36 3 года назад +14

    When coming from reading the book it is an ok movie. Good acting and a good translation of the story. The movie misses in a number of ways and does some character changes. You also don't get what was going on with crew as they pretty much dropped that part of the story. You also miss the detail of what he is experiencing that is described in graphic detail in the book. This is the one movie I would tell people go get the book you really get so much more.

    • @DavetheAvatar
      @DavetheAvatar 3 года назад

      I agree. I absolutely loved the book and whilst this is a good movie, they cut out so much.

    • @brandonb.5304
      @brandonb.5304 3 года назад +4

      Unless the movie is 3 1/2-4 hours, they can't include everything in the book. Stuff has to be cut. The crew's story is obviously secondary to Watney's, so they chose to cut that stuff out of the film adaptation.

    • @logandarklighter
      @logandarklighter 3 года назад +1

      @@brandonb.5304 Though they did at least film (though cut out) the bit where Johanssen and Beck's love affair was verified. Basically Commander Lewis says that normally she'd be pissed and it would be considered an unneeded distraction for the mission. But this is nowhere NEAR a normal mission anymore. So she just tells them to share a bunk and try not to scare the locals. :D It's one of the "extras" on the DVD.

  • @zarquondam
    @zarquondam 3 года назад +1

    I recommend the tv series THE EXPANSE. It's like a cross between THE MARTIAN, FIREFLY, and ALIENS.

  • @houdin654jeff
    @houdin654jeff 3 года назад +1

    Believe it or not, the Apollo missions made their own water as well. They brought hydrogen fuel cells and pure oxygen with them, combining them together made electricity, heat, and pure water, which they drank on their missions.
    Edit: the reason they can’t turn the Hermès around is they don’t have enough food on board to do so. If they used all their energy slowing down and going back, they wouldn’t have enough to make it back to Earth and all six of them would die of starvation. That’s why the Rich Pernell maneuver and resupply was necessary.

    • @Ugnutz
      @Ugnutz 3 года назад +1

      plus the Delta V required to turn a ship around and reverse it's orbital trajectory is far beyond the current or even near future technologies.

    • @houdin654jeff
      @houdin654jeff 3 года назад

      @@Ugnutz I’m not sure if that’s a limiting factor or not. According to the book, the ship has a nuclear powered ion thruster that accelerates (or decelerates) very slowly, but constantly by shooting argon out the back at near relativistic speeds. Slowing down enough to reverse course would just take far longer than the crew could survive for, even if they discovered he was alive when NASA did. Something for someone with far more orbital mechanics knowledge than me in either case.

  • @ct5625
    @ct5625 3 года назад +1

    This is one of those movies where you can watch it ten times and you still forget that he survives and that reunion scene is always as tense as f*ck. lol

  • @B20C0
    @B20C0 2 года назад +1

    Fun fact: The most unrealistic part of this movie is the severity of the storms on Mars.
    Regarding why the original crew can't just turn around: Orbital Mechanics are hard. To turn around at the position where they are would need around twice as much fuel as they needed to get from Earth to Mars.

  • @simonwaugh5519
    @simonwaugh5519 3 года назад +1

    You should watch Apollo 13 ( Directed by Ron Howard... excellent cast ) Apollo 13 was a real, desperate space survival event. that was globally broadcast live and had the world's attention. I remember it well and it was f***ing scary and amazing. The movie version of it was superbly done.

  • @JB-nc7yk
    @JB-nc7yk 3 года назад +1

    Marvel and the MCU is all over this movie.
    Fox marvel movies = Jessica Chastain (X-Men), Kate Mara (Fantastic 4), Matt Damon (Deadpool 2),
    MCU = Chewitel Ejifor (Dr Strange), Benedict Wong (Dr Strange), Sebastian Stan (Captain America), Michael Pena (Ant-man), Donald Glover (Spider-Man), Matt Damon (Thor Ragnarok), Kate Mara (Iron-man 2)

  • @davidkistler6749
    @davidkistler6749 3 года назад +1

    6:56 "There's actually a chance here because he knows his shit." ... I know you didn't plan that, but I swear you planned that.
    Why the Hermes couldn't just turn around and go back for Watney: Space travel doesn't work like that. Spacecraft only have so much reaction mass on board (think fuel, though it's technically not) and once they run out they're drifting dead in space and can't change course at all. Given how difficult it is to get each kg into space, rockets get designed to hold just a little bit more than what they need for their mission, rather than huge reserves. Hermes has burned through most of its remaining reaction mass to get on course for Earth, and what's left will be just enough to decelerate into Earth orbit plus a bit more for small corrections. They don't have enough to change course back to Mars, slow down to orbit, pick up Watney, accelerate back out of Mars orbit towards Earth, and then slow down once they reach Earth, all before they run out of reaction mass (and food). The best they can do is a really precise, really subtle maneuver in which they don't slow down at Earth, but instead adjust course slightly (while picking up more supplies, presumably food and reaction mass), so that Earth's gravity slingshots them back towards Mars fast enough to get there before Watney starves, where they don't have the spare reaction mass to slow into orbit but just barely manage to catch Mark as they go pass. And it took Purnell's out-of-the-box thinking followed by months of crunching the numbers to figure out that course was even possible. Moral of the story: Rocket science is hard.
    (And yes, to the inevitable pedantic commenter, I know Hermes used continuously-operating ion thrusters rather than discrete rocket burns separated by months of drifting, but it works out the same for whether they have the reaction mass and food to turn around and the explanation was long enough already.)
    Teddy's decisions: We see him make what we feel is the wrong call a lot, but each time it makes sense, and he's far from heartless. When he doubted that Watney was alive? It costs billion of dollars to send even a probe to Mars, much less a crewed ship, and as the agency's director he shouldn't authorize a mission on a whim or a hunch or guess, however optimistic. That's before we get into the question of announcing it to the public (including Watney's parents) before being sure. It was his job to tamp down on his people's enthusiasm and play devil's advocate until he was sure the evidence was solid. As for his call not to authorize Hermes returning to Mars, that was also, I think the wrong decision, but an understandable one. "High chance of killing one or low chance of killing six" is how he put it. As for not letting Lewis make the call? You commented at the climax (when Lewis decided she wanted to bomb her own spaceship) just how risky this all was. Astronauts are daredevils. If they weren't enthusiastic about risking their lives and cocky about their odds of success, they wouldn't have chosen to climb on top of a skyscraper of explosive rocket fuel and light it just to go to an environment that can kill them in an instant if anything goes wrong. Combine that with Lewis's guilt for leaving Watney behind, and Teddy had good reason for thinking that she couldn't make that call objectively. It turned out that going back for Watney worked, but not knowing that ahead of time makes the decision a lot harder to make.

  • @tomdowling638
    @tomdowling638 2 года назад

    The story is Roberson Crusoe, it's been made many times. Cast Away, Robertson Crusoe on Mars, Lt. Robertson Crusoe USN.

  • @tigqc
    @tigqc 3 года назад +3

    I swear the total amount of money and manpower spent to go save Matt Damon in all these movies is staggering.

  • @jesseclark3697
    @jesseclark3697 3 года назад +2

    I couldn't help but laugh at 6:58 "he knows his shit" as he's literally picking up packaged shit.

  • @OnceFan2013
    @OnceFan2013 3 года назад

    Andy Weir said part of his inspiration for writing "The Martian" was Apollo 13. You should watch Ron Howard's "Apollo 13" and compare it to this film. It's a similar story but even more dramatic since it really happened. And, remembering your comment about creating water, you'll also see that the Apollo missions made water by using fuel cells to combine hydrogen and oxygen.

  • @thorleif8872
    @thorleif8872 3 года назад +1

    "He knows his shit."
    At the same moment, Watney rummaged through the shit....literally :D