Ryan Gosling delves into high-concept sci-fi with Project Hail Mary, teaming with directors Phil Lord and Christopher Miller for an adaptation that has plenty to prove and largely delivers. Drawing from Andy Weir’s novel and carrying the DNA of The Martian, the film finds tension in problem-solving and survival, while carving out its own identity with a more offbeat, emotionally driven approach.
With a screenplay by Drew Goddard and key contributions from composer Daniel Pemberton and cinematographer Greig Fraser, Project Hail Mary quickly establishes a confident tone. It’s a film that trusts its audience to keep up, balancing dense scientific concepts with character-first storytelling, setting the stage for a journey that gradually expands in both scale and emotional weight.
Project Hail Mary overview
Project Hail Mary centers on Ryland Grace (Gosling), a reluctant teacher turned astronaut, who wakes up alone aboard a spacecraft with no memory of how he got there. As his memories return, the film reveals a desperate mission to stop a mysterious organism draining energy from the sun, threatening extinction on a global scale.
Gosling carries much of the film on his own. It’s a testament to his performance that the story rarely loses its grip. He balances the film’s heavy scientific exposition with natural charm and dry humor, making even its most technical moments feel accessible. There’s a looseness to his performance that works in contrast to the precision of the mission itself.
Where the film truly finds its identity, though, is in its unexpected pivot. What begins as a solitary survival story gradually evolves into something warmer and more collaborative, particularly through Ryland’s relationship with Rocky, an alien traveler on a parallel mission. Their connection, built through trials like language barriers, builds mutual trust and becomes the emotional core of the film, transforming it from a straightforward sci-fi puzzle into something more meaningful about cooperation and empathy.
The film’s primary drawback lies in its Earth-based sequences, which are used to fill in the mission’s backstory. Sandra Huller is excellent as Eva Stratt a Goverment agent in charge of this mission, but her cold, withdrawn deliberately leads to lack of connection with Ryland. While necessary for context, these moments occasionally disrupt the pacing of an otherwise engaging 2-hour-and-40-minute runtime.
Still, that structural divide ultimately works in the film’s favor. The colder, more procedural interactions on Earth only serve to highlight the warmth and sincerity of Ryland’s bond with Rocky, turning that relationship into the film’s most compelling and memorable element.
Lead up to Project Hail Mary
The film’s Earth-bound storyline begins on a smaller, almost understated note, with Ryland working as a middle school science teacher. It’s a deliberate contrast—someone once embedded in high-level research now removed from it, engaging with students who are only just beginning to grasp the scale of the crisis. Their questions about the sun’s unexplained dimming hint at the global stakes, while also grounding the problem in something immediate and human. Ryland’s interaction with the students also reveals his reluctance to take the solar crisis seriously. His explanation don’t seem to calm the students much.
Through a series of flashbacks, the film fills in the gaps. Ryland, a molecular biologist whose unconventional theories about life beyond water and amino acids once made him an outlier, is pulled back into the scientific community when those very ideas suddenly carry weight. Enter Stratt, the no-nonsense architect of an international effort to confront the crisis, who sees potential in Ryland’s work and pushes him to test it.
What follows is a methodical unraveling of the mystery, centered on Astrophage, a microorganism capable of absorbing and storing massive amounts of solar energy. The film leans into the procedural nature of discovery here, as Ryland and a global coalition of scientists work to understand, contain, and ultimately harness this newfound energy source. These sequences are dense with exposition, but they effectively establish the scale of the problem and the fragile hope of a solution, all while keeping Ryland at the center of the scientific breakthrough.
The final frontier in more ways than one
As the scope of the mission becomes clear, Project Hail Mary pivots from discovery to something more uncomfortable: the very real prospect of death. The film doesn’t frame Ryland as a natural hero, and that’s where it finds one of its more interesting angles. Faced with the likelihood that the mission is one-way, his instinct is to avoid. Gosling leans into that hesitation, playing Ryland not as someone eager to save the world, but as someone deeply aware of what it will cost him.
That reluctance becomes a defining trait. In a genre often filled with fearless astronauts and last-minute volunteers, Ryland’s resistance feels refreshingly honest. He understands the science, the stakes, and the odds. The film doesn’t rush past that tension either. It lingers in the discomfort, showing how survival instincts can clash with moral responsibility.
What makes this thread work is how it carries forward into the present-day storyline. Ryland’s earlier fear reframes his actions in space, adding weight to every decision he makes once the mission is underway.
In that sense, Project Hail Mary isn’t just exploring humanity’s survival. It’s exploring what it takes for an ordinary person to rise to that moment, and how messy, uncertain, and deeply human that process can be.
Rocky
Project Hail Mary’s emotional core lies in Ryland’s relationship with Rocky, an unexpected ally he encounters in deep space. What begins as cautious observation quickly evolves into one of the most compelling partnerships in recent sci-fi.
The film smartly leans into the challenges of communication while grounding them in shared purpose. Both Ryland and Rocky are alone, their crews gone, each tasked with saving their respective worlds. That parallel creates an immediate, unspoken bond, one rooted as much in circumstance as it is in necessity.
Rocky doesn’t speak, move, or even perceive the world the way humans do, forcing Ryland to approach their interactions like a scientific problem to be solved. What follows is a gradual, often quietly funny process of trial and error, as the two learn to understand each other through shared logic, experimentation, and evolving translation methods. It’s in these moments that the film finds a sense of wonder that extends beyond its central mission.
The relationship develops naturally, without forced sentimentality, just two isolated beings recognizing in each other the same drive to survive and protect their worlds. Rocky’s presence also reshapes Ryland’s perspective, challenging the fear and hesitation that once defined him and replacing it with purpose.
By the time their partnership is fully formed, it becomes clear that Project Hail Mary isn’t just about saving Earth. It’s about connection across the unknown.
Project Hail Mary Final Thoughts
Project Hail Mary succeeds because it understands exactly what makes Weir’s storytelling work. It delivers the expected thrills of a high-concept sci-fi mission, but it’s the quieter, more human moments that ultimately define the experience. This is a film that respects its audience’s intelligence while never losing sight of the emotional stakes.
Gosling proves to be an ideal anchor for that balance. He carries the film’s technical weight with ease, but more importantly, he gives Ryland a relatability that keeps the story grounded even as it reaches for something much bigger. It’s a performance built on restraint, allowing the character’s growth to feel earned rather than manufactured.
While the pacing occasionally stumbles, particularly in the Earth-bound segments, the film never fully loses momentum. Instead, those structural contrasts reinforce its core themes, emphasizing how isolation, fear, and uncertainty can give way to trust and connection in unexpected ways.
What lingers most, though, is the film’s sense of optimism. Not a naive kind, but one rooted in cooperation, curiosity, and the idea that connection is essential to survival.
In the end, Project Hail Mary isn’t just a smart sci-fi adaptation. It’s a deeply satisfying one, ambitious, heartfelt, and just strange enough to stand apart.
