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In der fernen Zukunft berichtet Dr. Samantha Unger, CEO der Firma „Europa Ventures“, von einer gescheiterten Mission: Eine sechsköpfige Crew von internationalen Astronauten und genialen Wissenschaftlern wird im Jahr 2061 auf eine geheime Mission zum vierten Jupitermond mit dem Namen „Europa“ geschickt, nachdem viele Jahre zuvor unter dessen Oberfläche Wasser entdeckt wurde. Dort sollen die Wissenschaftler in den Eisbrocken nach möglichen außerirdischen Lebensformen suchen. Nach einem Jahr verlieren sie durch einen technischen Unfall jeglichen Kontakt zur Erde. Das Team will die Mission jedoch zu Ende führen und zeichnet weiterhin den Fortschritt mit Kameras auf. Sie finden neue Nahrungsformen und das Wasser entpuppt sich tatsächlich als flüssig, wodurch all ihre Hoffnungen und ihre Mission erfüllt zu sein scheinen. Die Crew macht sich für die Rückkehr zur Erde bereit, doch plötzlich spielen die Lichtsensoren verrückt und die Bewegungsmelder im Wasser schlagen Alarm …
Avis de la communauté (10)
Good movie, Nicely creepy. I'm a big fan of these audiovisual distortion effects. A much better space movie than Gravity IMHO. Even Sandy B couldn't save that one.
We all remember the final message sent by HAL at the end of 2010: ALL THESE WORLDS ARE YOURS EXCEPT EUROPA ATTEMPT NO LANDING THERE. Of course if you read the next book in the series (sorry, there was no movie made), you'd know that we humans just couldn't stay away and had to get hip deep in the soup. Although Europa Report is not part of Arthur C. Clarke's literary universe, it does partially channel his essence. Since Europa has a liquid ocean similar to that of Earth, it is the most likely place in the solar system where multicellular life probably exists. With that fact in mind, this moon of Jupiter should be high on the bucket list for any explorer of the final frontier. This movie explores that possibility in the form of a pseudo-documentary where most of the footage is provided by the multitude of interior cameras located within the ship, along with some one-on-one interviews or private communications sent back by the crew. This presentation style works for the film, even though the blackouts and/or flickering of the shot when trouble arises can get to be a bit tedious once you are 1/2 way through the movie. If you have seen Cloverfield (2008) or Monster (2008), you'll have an idea of what to expect once things start going south for our adventurers. And go south it does; fast, hard and unbelievably bad. This has to be the most cursed ship since the Titanic, because everything that can go wrong does and unlike the NASA of Armageddon (1998), these people do not double up on anything and are constantly playing life fast, loose and have no respect for even the simplest of safety protocols: EVA suits with no option of thrusters in case one might get separated from the ship while doing a space walk, never having a person in Ready-Go mode in case one of the astronauts gets into trouble, maintaining a tether to a secure point on the ship because you don't have thruster packs, sending out solo expeditions without a buddy back-up. Seriously, some of these protocols are so basic that people on Earth follow them religiously when SCUBA diving, rock climbing or just going out for a hike in the woods and it is unbelievable that they would not be followed constantly while navigating strange, new worlds or traveling through the depths of space. One might think that this would be because of a lack of space knowledge on the part of the writers, but there is screen after screen of acknowledgements and thanks for assistance from NASA advisors in the ending credits, so I'm not really sure why these issues exist, other than they were necessary to drive the plot and make you feel sympathetic to the cast. Personally, I just spent half my time shouting WTF's at the screen during the climax of every catastrophe. That being said, I liked the rest of what I saw. The cast was pretty mediocre and all of the characters could have easily been interchanged with other actors without detracting from the film. However, the performances were solid even though the personalities were forgettable. The Science was valid and believable without the writers needing to stretch the laws of physics or relativity to make things work and the premise was outstanding. All in all, Europa Report does everything well enough to not be bad, but not well enough to be good, especially when matching up against similar movies like Gravity (2013), Interstellar (2014), The Martian (2015) or Prometheus (2012). As long as you go in not expecting this to be a version of 2061: Odyssey Three, you should be fine.
The story isn't that bad, but I have to admit that there are some boring scenes in it. Some of the stuff rly should have been cut out, and it is a matter of taste if you like that the whole movie is set up as an "documentary"... Internal Ship cameras documenting everything, and all the time of the whole movie is that mission logo ......... -.- The problem is, that the mid and the ending of this movie is very predictable. No way that it es a "Masterpiece" in Science Fiction. It is no real Science Fiction... at least to me.
I found the non-linear story-telling to hurt this footage based sci-fi movie. The suspense stretches over the entire movie because you wonder if cliches like EVA accidents or communications failure are going to be different this time. It is not a bad movie if you like the genre but i find the very similar movie Sunshine to do everything a bit better.