Since then, he’s been brought up on the Mars station. Asa Butterfield steps up to his first adult lead as Gardner, whose astronaut mom died giving birth to him 16 years ago, en route to Mars. But it’s not so much The Man Who Fell to Earth as The Fault in Our Stars. There’s a persistent emo-fetishisation of illness, in the person of a teen visitor from Mars and his romantic infirmity. It features a near-future space travel plot with an awful lot of corporate promotional branding from Nasa – like Ridley Scott’s The Martian but without that movie’s occasional sense of humour. H ere is a love story that quickly turns into an insufferable display of sucrose interplanetary YA ickiness with the most guessable final twist of all time.
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