Another Earth backdrop
Another Earth poster

ANOTHER EARTH

2011 US HMDB
July 22, 2011

On the night a duplicate Earth is discovered in the solar system, the lives of a young woman and an accomplished composer become tragically connected after a fatal accident.

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Crew

Production: Nicholas Shumaker (Producer)Mike Cahill (Producer)Paul S. Mezey (Executive Producer)Tyler Brodie (Executive Producer)Hunter Gray (Producer)Brit Marling (Producer)
Music: Phil Mossman (Original Music Composer)Will Bates (Original Music Composer)

REVIEWS (1)

Roberto Giacomelli
Rhoda is returning home after an evening of celebration for her admission to MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), but a mysterious planet recently visible in the sky distracts her and causes a car accident in which the wife and son of musician John Burroughs lose their lives. Rhoda serves four years in prison and upon her release, all her dreams have vanished; tormented by guilt, the girl earns a living by cleaning in a school and meanwhile, the planet that had appeared in the sky has become increasingly large and visible. Rhoda happens to see John Burroughs, follows him, and discovers that he lives in deplorable conditions, so she decides to introduce herself to him and reveal who she is, but, not finding the courage, she passes herself off as an employee of a cleaning company and offers him her services. Scientists discover that the planet is a mirror of Earth, even inhabited by exact copies of the Earthlings, so shuttles are organized for the first visits to what is called Earth 2. Rhoda decides to apply. When science fiction becomes minimalist and decides to explore the intimate dimension of the human being, rarely deplorable works emerge, on the contrary, history (even recent) has taught us that it is the good ideas and not only the explosions and special effects that make good cinema, even in a "closed" genre like science fiction. "Another Earth" belongs precisely to this category, an independent film with science fiction themes that blend with a deep reflection on pain and second chances. "Another Earth" is perhaps a film not suitable for a wide audience, certainly not for those who expect only spectacle from fantasy cinema, to give you an idea of what to expect, imagine a small but beautiful film like "Moon", with few characters and an original story, but blend it with the philosophical intensity of "Solaris" and "Melancholia", all with a look at the cerebrating space/time paradoxes of "Donnie Darko". Well, "Another Earth" could be a shekeratura of all this, but with its own extremely powerful identity that in the end makes it stand out as a film unto itself, unique. The debutant Mike Cahill directs, writes, produces, edits, and is in charge of the photography of the film, in short, a jack-of-all-trades that denotes the extremely independent nature of "Another Earth". But if the deliberately raw shooting style, with frequent anti-aesthetic zooms, does not convince much, the almost natural photography, with beautiful shifts towards cold colors, strikes a lot for the realistic grip it gives to the story, underlined moreover by a suggestive original soundtrack signed by the group Fall on Your Sword. Obviously, the strong point of "Another Earth" is the screenplay, written by Cahill along with the lead actress Brit Marling. The film talks about guilt and pain, a pain more understood in an inner sense than in a physical sense. John loses his wife and young son, Rhoda loses her freedom, dignity, her future, and the will to live. Both characters are afflicted by the loss of something extremely important and perhaps all because of the mirror planet, which at some point becomes the cause and effect of every event. Earth 2 is a specular dimension to ours, there is a double of every human being, who has the same name and profession as their respective ones on Earth 1. But is it possible that the course of events on the two planets is independent of each other at the moment when the respective inhabitants become aware of the presence of the double? "Another Earth" at some point poses this curious question and from here develops the search for an escape from the nightmare, of a possible second chance to remedy the tragic errors of fate. The characters of Rhoda and John are written very well, never minimally banal and entirely credible in their acting and behavior. The initial lack of communication between the two (but also between Rhoda and her family) is indicative and propaedeutic to the evolution of events. Rhoda decides to literally clean up the mess for which she considers herself responsible by putting order in John's home, gradually replacing his deceased companion. To make the two protagonists credible and human, the actors also contribute a lot, William Mapother (who someone will remember as the mysterious Ethan in the series "Lost") and above all the almost debutante Brit Marling, who gives an incredible fragility to her Rhoda. "Another Earth" won the special jury prize at the Sundance Film Festival in 2011. A small film that deserves attention and success because a beautiful and simple idea has given rise to a complex and intelligent film… and this should not be underestimated! To watch.
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COMMUNITY REVIEWS (2)

Andres Gomez

5 /10

More ambitious than interesting. A story that wants to joint an epic sci-fi moment with a drama.

Not really working although seeing the Earth in the sky is quite interesting.

Peter McGinn

Peter McGinn

10 /10

When I first saw Another Earth several years ago I thought that, like some science fiction out there, it was light on the science and heavy on fiction. Fantasy, maybe. I was okay with that as long as the story and characters were strong. Besides, nowadays it seems like many mainstream physicists are seriously promoting the ideas around multiple universes or perhaps even an infinite number of alternate universes, perhaps science is catching up with the fiction. (Though I still think a planet popping into our galaxy so close to us would cause cataclysmic tides and whatnot.) . In any case, I recently bought and downloaded a digital version of it to watch it again.

But Another Earth isn’t about physics or science or what would become of humanity if a twin earth and moon suddenly showed up in our sky. It is about a heart-stopping event that cause a planet full of people to stop what they are doing and look up and wonder. Is that earth different than ours? Am I up there, and if so, is that version exactly like me or have they made different decisions that affect who they have become? Could I have made different decisions, or was this version of me locked into what I decided and thought? And in the case of our lead character, Rhoda, it leads her to a path to seek forgiveness and try to make up for a tragic mistake she made a couple of years earlier, actually on the day the second earth appeared.

So I will say no more about the plot, let alone the surprising little twist deep in the movie. You really feel for these characters. They seem real and you care about them. Kumamoto Pallana steals the scenes he is involved with. Because of the internal turmoil and the questions Rhoda is asking herself, even ordinary interactions with other characters feel imbued with deeper meaning. As a side note, it was written by the woman who plays Rhoda.

Try not to watch it when you are tired, but do try to watch it.

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