
Moon
Plot
Sam Bell has a three year contract to work for Lunar Industries. For the contract's entire duration, he is the sole employee based at their lunar station. His primary job responsibility is to harvest and periodically rocket back to Earth supplies of helium-3, the current clean and abundant fuel used on Earth. There is no direct communication link available between the lunar station and Earth, so his only direct real-time interaction is with GERTY, the intelligent computer whose function is to attend to his day to day needs. With such little human contact and all of it indirect, he feels that three years is far too long to be so isolated; he knows he is beginning to hallucinate as the end of his three years approaches. All he wants is to return to Earth to be with his wife Tess and their infant daughter Eve, who was born just prior to his leaving for this job. With two weeks to go, he gets into an accident at one of the mechanical harvesters and is rendered unconscious. Injured, he awakens back at the station in the infirmary, he assumes assisted by GERTY. GERTY tells him that a rescue team named Eliza will come to the station to clean up the aftermath of the accident. After his recuperation, he takes an unauthorized trip back to the broken harvester, where he makes an unexpected discovery. Because of his find, he begins to doubt his sanity, then his true identity, then the company and GERTY's willingness to do what is best for him. Because of his resulting beliefs, his sole mission becomes how to get back to Earth on his own.
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Overall Series Review
Categorical Breakdown
The film centers on a white male protagonist without any forced diversity or lectures on privilege. The plot focuses entirely on his individual character, personal merit, and survival.
The story celebrates the protagonist’s desire for his home and traditional roots. It critiques corporate corruption and totalitarian labor practices but does not demonize Western civilization or its history.
The movie avoids modern feminist tropes and the 'girl boss' archetype. The lead character is a devoted husband and father, and his family is depicted as a sacred source of motivation rather than a prison.
There is a total absence of queer theory or alternative sexualities. The narrative focuses on a normative heterosexual marriage and the importance of biological fatherhood.
The film explores the concept of the human soul and objective truth. It remains neutral toward organized religion and avoids moral relativism or the vilification of faith.
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