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Ad Astra: New sci-fi film starring Brad Pitt is dividing critics in a big way

Some called the space saga a 'masterpiece', while others found it 'tedious'

Jacob Stolworthy
Friday 30 August 2019 06:33 EDT
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Ad Astra trailer

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New sci-fi film Ad Astra is proving extremely divisive among critics.

The latest release from director James Gray stars Brad Pitt as an astronaut who travels to the outer edges of the solar system to find his missing father and unravel the curious case of what’s threatening the survival of earth.

Ad Astra wasn’t going to be for everyone; the film’s synopsis teases “a journey that challenges the nature of human existence and our place in the cosmos”.

While some critics are praising the “mesmerising” film following its premiere at Venice Film Festival, others weren’t so taken by the finished product and claimed that the film was tedious.

The Independent highlighted Pitt’s career-best performance and likened the “moving” film to Gravity and Interstellar.

The Guardian, The Telegraph and IndieWire all awarded the “masterpiece” a full five stars out of five.

According to The Times two-star review, though, Pitt is “as blank as he’s ever been” in the “tedious” film with The Hollywood Reporter calling it “stubbornly uninvolving”.

Vanity Fair levelled that, while the film is a visual stunner, it fails to offer anything new to the science-fiction genre.

Starring in the film alongside Pitt is Tommy Lee Jones, Ruth Negga, Liv Tyler and Donald Sutherland.

Director James Gray is best known for films The Immigrant and We Own the Night. His last release was the The Lost City of Z, which starred Charlie Hunnam and Robert Pattinson.

Ad Astra soars into cinemas on 18 September.

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