Biosphere
- 2022
- 1 Std. 46 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
5,5/10
2861
IHRE BEWERTUNG
In nicht allzu ferner Zukunft müssen sich die letzten beiden Menschen auf der Erde anpassen und weiterentwickeln, um die Menschheit zu retten.In nicht allzu ferner Zukunft müssen sich die letzten beiden Menschen auf der Erde anpassen und weiterentwickeln, um die Menschheit zu retten.In nicht allzu ferner Zukunft müssen sich die letzten beiden Menschen auf der Erde anpassen und weiterentwickeln, um die Menschheit zu retten.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Auszeichnungen
- 2 Nominierungen insgesamt
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Greetings again from the darkness. 'Life will find a way.' The iconic line spoken by Jeff Goldblum in JURASSIC PARK (1993) fits right into this offbeat science-fiction film from writer-director Mel Eslyn and co-writer and co-lead actor Mark Duplass. You may not be familiar with indie filmmaker Eslyn, but Duplass has built a career by specializing in projects that rip us out of our comfort zone, and then force us to consider a topic from a new perspective ... as evidenced by films like CYRUS (2010) and CREEP (2014).
The pre-credit opening scenes quickly establish the personalities of Ray (Sterling K Brown) and Billy (Duplass). Ray is a dedicated and serious scientist, while Billy is the former US President (likely inspired by George W Bush). The two are lifelong friends who have been living a few years isolated in the biodome created by Ray. We are to assume these are the final two human survivors on Earth, and we may also assume they are still alive thanks to Ray's ecosystems of fish for protein and plants for nutrients.
Initially, this gives us the appearance of a buddy film as the two men share a morning jog and discuss the dynamics of Mario and Luigi. It's the first of our clues, along with Billy reading "Kiss of the Spider Woman", and the repeated viewings of LETHAL WEAPON. However, the tone shifts pretty quickly with a certain development in the fish habitat. It's best to avoid any further specifics on where the story goes from here, because although there are leaps of faith that must occur by viewers, the core elements raised here are certainly unusual.
A recurring gag about a magic trick with a bowling ball (and its thud), and an ever-present green light in the sky, punctuate the Ray and Billy chats centered on philosophy, gender roles, friendship, masculinity, adaptation, and of course, survival. This is termed a "two-hander" since only two performers make up the entire cast. Sterling K Brown and Mark Duplass are both likable actors and they expertly overcome any shortcomings in the script. And despite those flaws, you'll likely carry on some internal discussions with yourself long after the final drop.
Opening on July 7, 2023.
The pre-credit opening scenes quickly establish the personalities of Ray (Sterling K Brown) and Billy (Duplass). Ray is a dedicated and serious scientist, while Billy is the former US President (likely inspired by George W Bush). The two are lifelong friends who have been living a few years isolated in the biodome created by Ray. We are to assume these are the final two human survivors on Earth, and we may also assume they are still alive thanks to Ray's ecosystems of fish for protein and plants for nutrients.
Initially, this gives us the appearance of a buddy film as the two men share a morning jog and discuss the dynamics of Mario and Luigi. It's the first of our clues, along with Billy reading "Kiss of the Spider Woman", and the repeated viewings of LETHAL WEAPON. However, the tone shifts pretty quickly with a certain development in the fish habitat. It's best to avoid any further specifics on where the story goes from here, because although there are leaps of faith that must occur by viewers, the core elements raised here are certainly unusual.
A recurring gag about a magic trick with a bowling ball (and its thud), and an ever-present green light in the sky, punctuate the Ray and Billy chats centered on philosophy, gender roles, friendship, masculinity, adaptation, and of course, survival. This is termed a "two-hander" since only two performers make up the entire cast. Sterling K Brown and Mark Duplass are both likable actors and they expertly overcome any shortcomings in the script. And despite those flaws, you'll likely carry on some internal discussions with yourself long after the final drop.
Opening on July 7, 2023.
There's a lot I like about Biosphere and a lot that didn't fit right for me. The obvious thing that works about this film are it's performances by Sterling K Brown and Mark Duplass. Brown brings a sturdiness to Duplass's humor, creating a great dynamic that is fun to watch and believable. Brown's character Ray provides a grounding to such a serious moment. Duplass's Billy brings the levity necessary to keep two guys in a small dome funny and fresh. Some of the dialog and plot points in this film are absolutely hilarious.
This film has a huge idea and a very small scope to demonstrate it. The choice to skip most of the exposition in how we got here is welcome. I enjoy not being spoon fed the situation, reading clues and attempting to discover what has happened and what will happen is much more satisfying. Throughout the film, I kept wondering "how will they wrap this up?" And they did so by leaving all of the plot points as loose ends which will bother many who watch Biosphere. I didn't mind this choice but the ending left me with a bit of a "then what?" Feeling.
It's hard to review this film without spoilers, but there is so much to the backstory that is never fleshed out, no flashbacks, no additional settings or characters. With such a small scope, some will be very aggrieved at this, others will be content like I was to explore what we do know. This scope hampers the development of place and time but enhances the interest in our two characters and their potential outcomes. The feeling of place in this movie is quite distinct but somewhat empty given our lack of outside knowledge.
Making a film that explores a theory becoming reality is incredibly challenging. Duplass and Brown are able to deliver on this tall, daunting task but it's not great by any stretch.
This film has a huge idea and a very small scope to demonstrate it. The choice to skip most of the exposition in how we got here is welcome. I enjoy not being spoon fed the situation, reading clues and attempting to discover what has happened and what will happen is much more satisfying. Throughout the film, I kept wondering "how will they wrap this up?" And they did so by leaving all of the plot points as loose ends which will bother many who watch Biosphere. I didn't mind this choice but the ending left me with a bit of a "then what?" Feeling.
It's hard to review this film without spoilers, but there is so much to the backstory that is never fleshed out, no flashbacks, no additional settings or characters. With such a small scope, some will be very aggrieved at this, others will be content like I was to explore what we do know. This scope hampers the development of place and time but enhances the interest in our two characters and their potential outcomes. The feeling of place in this movie is quite distinct but somewhat empty given our lack of outside knowledge.
Making a film that explores a theory becoming reality is incredibly challenging. Duplass and Brown are able to deliver on this tall, daunting task but it's not great by any stretch.
A curious little indie that is delivered through key support from Mark and Jay Duplass, with Mark taking on co-leading man duties with the game Sterling K. Brown, debut feature film director Mel Eslyn's single location dramedy Biosphere is unlike anything you've likely seen before in ways both good and bad, with this high-concept genre bending offering one that provides a varying experience that ranges from engaging to irksome, often within the space of mere minutes between each up and down.
Set entirely in a small custom designed dome that survives off regular air supply and a dwindling supply of fish in a world where the last two humans alive are Duplass's Billy and Brown's Ray, long term friends and avid Super Mario players that found their successful careers in politics cut short by a catastrophic world event that has seemingly doomed mankind's future to an inevitable conclusion.
Saying too much more about how the slowly unravelling plot unfolds in Eslyn's film would be a disservice to viewers who are in for a wild and surprising ride, with an on face value buddy dramedy film far away from the product we actually get as we start to delve into evolutionary angles and life-changing scenarios that are wild, wacky and even at times tinged with a decent emotional heft, making Biosphere an experience that will enrapture others but alienate others, pending entirely on their tolerance and acceptance of where Billy and Ray's arcs begin to head.
In a day and age where originality can often be the subject of outcries in an industry many accuse of being too cookie cutter or people pleasing, it's always refreshing to see something like Biosphere come along and attempt to shake up expectations and go where no film has yet gone and while there are elements in Eslyn's film that feel familiar, for the most part the film does a solid job of carving out it's own pathway with the commitment of Duplass and Brown undeniable as the two talented leads chew on ample dialogue and play off one another in a series of situations that could've completely derailed the film at any moment.
For a film with such a limited scope in a setting sense no one could deny that Biosphere tries to tackle a series of big issues and high reaching concepts, some of which pay off and others that don't but for anyone that wants to watch something a little outside of the normal or too be expected, Biosphere may just be their new favourite with potential cult fandom soon to come its way.
Final Say -
A film that is best left to be discovered rather than explained prior to a viewing, Biosphere doesn't stick all of its landings but there's enough going on here including two notable lead turns to suggest Biosphere is worth visiting for open-minded viewers.
2 1/2 foot massages out of 5
Jordan and Eddie (The Movie Guys)
Set entirely in a small custom designed dome that survives off regular air supply and a dwindling supply of fish in a world where the last two humans alive are Duplass's Billy and Brown's Ray, long term friends and avid Super Mario players that found their successful careers in politics cut short by a catastrophic world event that has seemingly doomed mankind's future to an inevitable conclusion.
Saying too much more about how the slowly unravelling plot unfolds in Eslyn's film would be a disservice to viewers who are in for a wild and surprising ride, with an on face value buddy dramedy film far away from the product we actually get as we start to delve into evolutionary angles and life-changing scenarios that are wild, wacky and even at times tinged with a decent emotional heft, making Biosphere an experience that will enrapture others but alienate others, pending entirely on their tolerance and acceptance of where Billy and Ray's arcs begin to head.
In a day and age where originality can often be the subject of outcries in an industry many accuse of being too cookie cutter or people pleasing, it's always refreshing to see something like Biosphere come along and attempt to shake up expectations and go where no film has yet gone and while there are elements in Eslyn's film that feel familiar, for the most part the film does a solid job of carving out it's own pathway with the commitment of Duplass and Brown undeniable as the two talented leads chew on ample dialogue and play off one another in a series of situations that could've completely derailed the film at any moment.
For a film with such a limited scope in a setting sense no one could deny that Biosphere tries to tackle a series of big issues and high reaching concepts, some of which pay off and others that don't but for anyone that wants to watch something a little outside of the normal or too be expected, Biosphere may just be their new favourite with potential cult fandom soon to come its way.
Final Say -
A film that is best left to be discovered rather than explained prior to a viewing, Biosphere doesn't stick all of its landings but there's enough going on here including two notable lead turns to suggest Biosphere is worth visiting for open-minded viewers.
2 1/2 foot massages out of 5
Jordan and Eddie (The Movie Guys)
At the end of the world, former President of the United States Billy (Mark Duplass) and his science advisor and best friend Ray (Sterling K. Brown) live out their existence in a self-sufficient shelter made by Ray. When the last female fish in their eco system dies, the two become consigned to the fact their days are now number with the artificial ecosystem no longer self-sufficient. However, destruction is averted when one of the remaining male fish begins to undergo sequential hermaphroditism, the process of which allows it to change from male to female and procreate. With the appearance of a mysterious greenlight in the sky, a similar process soon begins to happen to Billy.
Biosphere comes to us from the Duplass Brothers production company and is written and directed by Mel Eslyn along with Mark Duplass who also stars in the movie based on an outline the two developed at a writers retreat in 2018. As one can note from the Duplass films of the past, the brothers have a filmmaking style that often mixes quirky indie tropes around uncomfortable or charged topics. Biosphere is no different here as it takes a very loaded approach and while it has charm and some unique ideas, it also feels like a movie that's maybe a little too stretched.
To start off on a positive note, Sterling K. Brown and Mark Duplass have fantastic chemistry together and with the movie being a chamber piece it definitely needed that authentic buddy dynamic in order to sell this premise with the two being something of an "odd couple" with Ray the more optimistic and knowledgeable one while Billy is the slightly dumber pessimist. The movie itself is rather odd and the best way I can describe it is if we followed Dr. Strangelove past its ending and mixed it with the movie Nothing with a seasoning of Junior (the Schwarzenegger film from 1994). The directions the movie takes are so unexpected (especially going in blind) that I was legitimately engaged in spite of the rather rambling nature of the film. The movie clocks in at about 107 minutes, and it definitely feels like it could've benefitted from being trimmed to a leaner 85 to 90 at most. A big reason is the primary plot doesn't really shift into gear until about a half hour in and that first half hour offers a lot of points that feel repeated throughout the later bit of the film. I certainly enjoyed the shifting character dynamics and relationships in the film, even if the film itself sometimes proved a challenge to get through. Biosphere certainly isn't the first film to go into this kind of territory as it was flirted with in the 1985 science fiction film Enemy Mine and we even saw it explored to a degree in the "Brinky" episode of Pinky and the Brain, and while I definitely prefer those over this given the choice, Biosphere isn't without it's own insights into the premise.
Biosphere won't be for everyone and for people who already like the Duplass brothers or premise you'll need to give the film a lot of patience in order to get to the best parts of the film. For those willing to give it a chance you'll find a flawed movie, but one with some interesting ideas.
Biosphere comes to us from the Duplass Brothers production company and is written and directed by Mel Eslyn along with Mark Duplass who also stars in the movie based on an outline the two developed at a writers retreat in 2018. As one can note from the Duplass films of the past, the brothers have a filmmaking style that often mixes quirky indie tropes around uncomfortable or charged topics. Biosphere is no different here as it takes a very loaded approach and while it has charm and some unique ideas, it also feels like a movie that's maybe a little too stretched.
To start off on a positive note, Sterling K. Brown and Mark Duplass have fantastic chemistry together and with the movie being a chamber piece it definitely needed that authentic buddy dynamic in order to sell this premise with the two being something of an "odd couple" with Ray the more optimistic and knowledgeable one while Billy is the slightly dumber pessimist. The movie itself is rather odd and the best way I can describe it is if we followed Dr. Strangelove past its ending and mixed it with the movie Nothing with a seasoning of Junior (the Schwarzenegger film from 1994). The directions the movie takes are so unexpected (especially going in blind) that I was legitimately engaged in spite of the rather rambling nature of the film. The movie clocks in at about 107 minutes, and it definitely feels like it could've benefitted from being trimmed to a leaner 85 to 90 at most. A big reason is the primary plot doesn't really shift into gear until about a half hour in and that first half hour offers a lot of points that feel repeated throughout the later bit of the film. I certainly enjoyed the shifting character dynamics and relationships in the film, even if the film itself sometimes proved a challenge to get through. Biosphere certainly isn't the first film to go into this kind of territory as it was flirted with in the 1985 science fiction film Enemy Mine and we even saw it explored to a degree in the "Brinky" episode of Pinky and the Brain, and while I definitely prefer those over this given the choice, Biosphere isn't without it's own insights into the premise.
Biosphere won't be for everyone and for people who already like the Duplass brothers or premise you'll need to give the film a lot of patience in order to get to the best parts of the film. For those willing to give it a chance you'll find a flawed movie, but one with some interesting ideas.
Former US President Billy and his scientific advisor Ray are the last two humans alive, living in a custom made done, surviving on a custom built eco system, but when their last female fish dies, they are forced to re-evaluate their situation.
Mark Duplass writes and stars, and he's rather good I thought, Sterling K. Brown was excellent, the chemistry between the pair was excellent, and one of the film's strongest points.
First off, I can totally get why some people have slated it, this is a movie that is genuinely not for everyone, arguably not for most, but I do like the odd movie now and then, and this remarkably odd movie was just so different.
The story is over the top and outlandish, it definitely had a strong relevance for this day and age, lots of talk about gender, sex and masculinity, but it does not preach.
An odd mix of drama, sci fi, fantasy and comedy, there were quite a few occasions that I burst out laughing, not sure if it was the gags, or the sheer bonkers story.
It's a crazy film, but I enjoyed it.
7/10.
Mark Duplass writes and stars, and he's rather good I thought, Sterling K. Brown was excellent, the chemistry between the pair was excellent, and one of the film's strongest points.
First off, I can totally get why some people have slated it, this is a movie that is genuinely not for everyone, arguably not for most, but I do like the odd movie now and then, and this remarkably odd movie was just so different.
The story is over the top and outlandish, it definitely had a strong relevance for this day and age, lots of talk about gender, sex and masculinity, but it does not preach.
An odd mix of drama, sci fi, fantasy and comedy, there were quite a few occasions that I burst out laughing, not sure if it was the gags, or the sheer bonkers story.
It's a crazy film, but I enjoyed it.
7/10.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesIn a 2023 interview with The AU Review, Mel Eslyn spoke about the initial idea for the film: "Mark Duplass pitches me ideas that are always half a sentence and someone has to finish it. But they are always the best first half of a sentence you've heard. He had pitched me an idea along the lines of, 'What if there are the two last men on Earth and they're living in a biosphere and they're obsessed with Mario Brothers?' So we kind of started there, and I thought, 'Well, if the last two people on Earth are men then there's some stuff to dig into.'"
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Details
Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 60.149 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 33.805 $
- 9. Juli 2023
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 96.257 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 46 Minuten
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.35 : 1
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