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Moon (2009)

Release Date:
Friday, June 12, 2009

MPAA Rating:
R

Rating Reason:
Language.

Genre:
Science Fiction

Starring:
Sam Rockwell, Kevin Spacey, Matt Berry, Robin Chalk , Dominique McElligott, Kaya Scodelario, Malcolm Stewart, Benedict Wong

Written By:
Duncan Jones, Nathan Parker

Director:
Duncan Jones

Official Site:

Synopsis:
Astronaut Sam Bell has a quintessentially personal encounter while stranded on the moon for a three-year period.

Moon (2009) | Review

No Place Like Home
Elisabeth Leitch

Content Image
Like the situation in which Sam finds himself at the beginning of the movie, the unfortunate reality of human existence is that we all will find ourselves separated from God at some point. The lives we lead will carry us to distant places. The influences that surround us will make us feel like our cries to Him are going nowhere and the communications He sends our way are don't even exist. And in the same way that Sam's Helium mining is marketed as a harvest of life, as we see in the toll that it takes on his mind and body, the problem with so many of the so called "fuels" we seek to give us life is that they actually take it away.

But at the same time that Sam's draining job and solitary life align his plight with that of mankind, the multiple sacrifices Sam makes also establish him as sort of a Christ figure. Before any of the film's complicating events have even occurred, Sam's simple act of giving three years of his life to harvest Helium—along with Helium 3 harvesters Matthew, Mark, and Luke—aligns his character with a sacrificial figure from day one. As Christ was separated from God for three days to be resurrected and reunited with Him at the end of the third, Sam has been separated from his friends and family for three years to be reunited with them at the end of the third. And as Sam's sacrifice of significantly more than just a determinate portion of his life is revealed, we are confronted with both the inhumanity of forcing any human to give so much and the awe that anyone might actually volunteer to make such an incredible sacrifice.

Although as the commercial that opens the film indicates, Helium 3 is purported to be the ultimate source of energy, life, and hope for everyone on earth, the message at the movie's end is that life, both that which runs through our veins and that which we live, requires something much more complex. Ultimately, Helium 3 is revealed to be nearly as life-depriving as it is life-giving. But as the film recognizes throughout, in relationships of love is an infusion of life and hope that seems to never fail. With the knowledge of relationships of love awaiting us in a place called home, we can endure almost any trials and find motivation to complete almost any task. As we see when the promise of that hope comes under question for Sam, its lack of existence is almost enough to pound the final nail in his coffin right then and there. But thankfully for us, we need not fear the illusion of the love and hope we have been promised.

As Jesus tells his disciples in John 14:2-3: In my father's house there are many rooms; if it were not so, I would have told you. I am going there to prepare a place for you. And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come back and take you with me that you also may be where I am. Despite the many false sources of life the world may offer us, God offers us life which will neither destroy us or let us down. As Jesus tells a Samaritan woman in John 4: 13-14: Everyone who drinks this water will be thirsty again, but whoever drinks the water I give him will never thirst. Indeed, the water I give him will become in him a spring of water welling up to eternal life.

And no matter what may try to separate us from His life and hope, His sacrifice has determined that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor ruling spirits, nothing now, nothing in the future, no powers, nothing above us, nothing below us, nor anything else in the whole world will ever be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord (Romans 8: 38-39)

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