Recently Watched Movies 2026 | Page 7 | The Boneyard

Recently Watched Movies 2026

Project Hail Mary

It's rare that the hype for a movie matches the enjoyability and this is one of those instances.

On a scale of 1-10, 1 being Starfleet Academy and 10 being Interstellar, I give this an 8. Interstellar is one of the greatest movies that will ever be so 8 is damn good in my book.

It's from a book by Andy Weir who wrote The Martian. Having read that book he only writes books to make them into movies. But it's still a good one.

The story is a blend of your favorite buddy movie with a bit of Interstellar, Contact, 2001, The Martian and some other movies yet it somehow feels really original. Ryan Gosling plays a chatty Scientist named Grace, who suddenly becomes mission essential on a project to save the sun which is infected with something which will result in extinction of life on earth.

The movie starts in media res with Grace waking up and the rest of the crew is dead. He has amnesia and has no idea where he is or why he is there. This is one of those dual narrative movies where you see the present and there are flashbacks to before the trip on earth.

When he gets to where he is going light years away, he meets an alien buddy who just so happens to be there for the same exact reason. And this is the best part, because instead of acting on a green screen, they use a real puppet to be the alien instead of awful Marvelesque CGI. The alien occupies a physical space and it makes a huge difference.

Gosling and the puppet have to carry the whole movie and it works perfectly. My only issue is that the most unbelievable storyline is that the Grace and Rocky end up in the same system at the same time. Also the movie is a bit long and not in the good Christopher Nolan long movie way.

Now, you have really gone and done it. Interstellar isn't even Chris Nolan's best science fiction movie, that would be Inception.

But I am looking forward to Hail Mary. Did you watch it in a theater?
 
Springsteen: Delivery Me From Nowhere

Thoroughly enjoyed it. Really appreciated its pace in relation to the artistic process. Jeremy Strong was fantastic as Bruce's manager and Jeremy Allen White did a great job too, honestly, I think it's the first work of his I've seen.
I can't see ''Lip" as Springsteen. But, we'll check it out.
 
Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man (2026)

Overall entertaining for Peaky Blinders fans. But the plot is pretty simple and not thought provoking.

Tommy Shelby (C. Murphy) is out of the family biz. He's writing an autobiography. His gypsy son, Duke, now runs Peaky Blinders and is about to get in bed with Nazi Germany to ruin England.

Tommy is lured back in and confronts his son, and together, they take on the Nazis.

I liked it.
 
Now, you have really gone and done it. Interstellar isn't even Chris Nolan's best science fiction movie, that would be Inception.

But I am looking forward to Hail Mary. Did you watch it in a theater?

Inception is great, I love all of his movies. But you are dead wrong on Interstellar. The rub on Inception is that people found it confusing.

Yes the theater.
 
They should have called it The Neverending Movie because random stuff kept happening long after any point of the movie had been made.
I finally saw it late in life on the big screen and that's kinda how I felt. But I still loved the visuals. I got a kick out all the times I caught something that was clearly an influence on a later movie. Speaking of random stuff, remember The Tree of Life? It was Oscar-nominated and went away. Only available if you pay extra.
 

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