• Consequence
  • Music
  • Film
  • TV
  • Heavy
Menu Consequence
Menu Shop Search Newsletter
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Live
  • Podcasts
  • Videos
Advertisement
  • Reviews
  • Film Reviews

Film Review: Gravity

A

Directed by

  • Alfonso Cuarón

Starring

  • Sandra Bullock
  • George Clooney
  • Ed Harris
  • Orto Ignatiussen

Release Year

  • 2013

Rating

  • PG-13
Advertisement
Dominick Suzanne-Mayer
October 6, 2013 | 12:00am ET

    “Look again at that dot. That’s here. That’s home. That’s us. On it everyone you love, everyone you know, everyone you ever heard of, every human being who ever was, lived out their lives…on a mote of dust suspended in a sunbeam.” – Carl Sagan

    While Sagan was speaking of planet Earth as seen from billions of miles away, Alfonso Cuaron’s Gravity offers Earth as seen precariously close, through the perspective of two human beings rotating around it at terrifying speeds. Ryan Stone (Sandra Bullock) and Matt Kowalski (George Clooney) have homes somewhere on there; Stone mentions early in the film that she hails from Lake Zurich, IL. And rotating far above the earth, tethered to a piece of machinery that marginally isolates her from the endless, vast nothingness of space, a vacuum so expansive that eventually her hometown and everyone else’s can be reduced to Sagan’s mote of dust, Stone tries to fix a computer so that humanity can continue to entertain the delusion that space can be expanded into and tamed.

    Gravity, in short, is a film about what happens when two human beings become acutely aware of just how small they are in the universe. And it is the finest film of 2013 so far, the kind of cinema that technology is able to produce maybe two or three times every generation. The full dream of the earliest films comes closer to realization here than it has in some time, the dream of creating entire tangible worlds that would be otherwise impossible. And yet the world Cuaron creates so masterfully isn’t impossible; far from it. It exists hovering beyond myself as I write this and you as you read it, dangling by a thread strung between meticulously prepared safety measures. Gravity takes place in and around various machines, and once the U.S.’ is decimated in a stunning 14-minute single-take opening sequence, Ryan and Matt are forced into a drift. Tethered to one another, they have none of the reassurance of NASA-made protection, only their intelligence and one another as they orbit the Earth in what looks like a ballet-like float and is actually closer to an endless freefall.

    Advertisement
    Related Video

    While Clooney gets to play the standard Clooney type, all bravado and smiling humor and innate dignity, this is largely Bullock’s film. For all the technical marvels that Gravity offers, and there are many, Ryan is the film’s emotional core, her current wave of trauma resurrecting memories of past ones, initially left childlike in the face of nearly certain death before finding her resolve. As they fly through space, barely in control of their own trajectory, Matt teaches Ryan that “You have to learn to let go,” which proves essential in many different ways as the film progresses. There’s a lot of letting go in Gravity, both metaphorical and literal, and it’s a testament to how great a film this is that the former doesn’t interfere with the film in the slightest. Some of Gravity works in platitudes, but in a way that lends it a universal resonance. To demand that characters in a panicked situation be capable of nuanced dialogue is to define the concept of nitpicking, and Gravity is frequently more a film about tactile, visceral fear than it is about contemplation of the universe.

    At the same time, the film gives viewers plenty of openings to do so. Cuaron’s majestic, free-floating camera work (innovated in tandem with longtime collaborator Emmanuel Lubezki) captures both the indescribable beauty and total isolation of space, often simultaneously. (This works in tandem with the story, where Matt and Ryan appreciate those respective aspects of orbit.) When debris flies through the air, there’s scale and distance to it; rather than utilizing the film’s impeccable 3D as a free pass to have debris fly into the audience’s faces, Cuaron builds endless layers of scale, in which the barely visible dots floating off in the distance often hold just as much or even more weight than the silent explosions happening front and center. For all its pageantry, though,Gravity is above all a film about the undying resilience of humankind, set against the immense and the immovable. And it is the kind of film that builds dreams, that sets itself at the gateway of where Earth stops being a home planet and starts getting smaller and smaller in the universe. And it is a minor miracle of the imagination.

    Trailer:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Reddit

Sign up for updates

Subscribe to our email digest and get the latest breaking news in music, film, and television, tour updates, access to exclusive giveaways, and more straight to your inbox.

Advertisement

Popular Stories

david lee roth royal machines

Heavy Consequence

David Lee Roth Returns to Live Stage for Performance in Las Vegas: Watch

Drake Misses Lollapalooza Brasil Performance After Being Spotted at Strip Club

Music

Drake Misses Lollapalooza Brasil Performance After Being Spotted at Strip Club

Advertisement

Legendary Artists, Iconic Photo Prints - Shop Now!

Legendary Artists, Iconic Photo Prints - Shop Now!

the white lotus season 3 thailand

TV

The White Lotus Season 3 to Take Place in Thailand

Daru Jones Crate Digging interview 10 albums every drummer should own

Features

10 Albums Daru Jones Thinks Every Drummer Should Own

Latest Stories

What the Hell Happened to Blood Sweat & Tears

What the Hell Happened to Blood, Sweat & Tears? Review: For the Band’s Fans and No One Else

March 24, 2023

A-
Dungeons Dragons Honor Among Thieves Review

Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves Rolls a Natural 20 for Fun: Review

March 20, 2023

C-
Shazam! 2 Fury of the Gods (Warner Bros.)

Shazam! Fury of the Gods Forces Flaccid Fun Through A Sea of CGI Nothing: Review

March 16, 2023

C+
john-wick-chapter-4-keanu-reeves

In John Wick Chapter 4, Brilliant Fights Are Less Than the Sum of Their Punches: Review

March 13, 2023

C-
65-adam-driver

Adam Driver Pouts at Dinos In the Shoddy, Somber Sci-Fi Thriller 65: Review

March 9, 2023

B+
Scream 6 (Paramount Pictures)

Scream VI Is the Fun, Thrilling Slash in the Arm the Franchise Needed: Review

March 8, 2023

D-
Children of the Corn (RLJ Entertainment)

Children of the Corn Review: A Rotted Husk of a Horror Remake

March 3, 2023

C-
Operation Fortune: Ruse de Guerre (Lionsgate)

Operation Fortune: Ruse De Guerre Is a Limp Spy Caper As Nondescript as Its Title: Review

March 1, 2023

Advertisement

News

  • Music
  • New Music
  • Album Streams
  • Upcoming Releases
  • Tours
  • Film
  • TV
  • Pop Culture

Reviews

  • Music Reviews
  • Film Reviews
  • TV Reviews
  • Concert Reviews
  • Festival Reviews

Features

  • Editorials
  • Interviews
  • Cover Stories
  • Lists
  • Guides
  • CoSign
  • Song of the Week

Live

  • Tickets
  • Festival News
  • Tour Dates
  • Photo Galleries
  • Music Instruments & Gear

Heavy

  • News
  • Interviews
  • Concerts

More

  • Podcasts
  • Videos
  • Wellness
  • Giveaways

Other sites

  • Heavy Consequence
  • Consequence Media
  • Modern Drummer
  • About
  • Privacy policy
  • Advertising
  • Work For Us
  • Terms
  • Contact
  • Copyright
  • Do Not Sell My Personal Information

Download our app

  • Get it on the App Store
  • Get it on Google Play
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitch
  • Tiktok
Consequence
Current story

Film Review: Gravity

Menu Shop Search Newsletter
Consequence
News
  • News
  • Music
  • New Music
  • Album Streams
  • Upcoming Releases
  • Tours
  • Film
  • TV
  • Pop Culture
Reviews
  • Music Reviews
  • Film Reviews
  • TV Reviews
  • Concert Reviews
  • Festival Reviews
Features
  • All Features
  • Editorials
  • Interviews
  • Cover Stories
  • Lists
  • Guides
  • CoSign
  • Song of the Week
Live
  • Tickets
  • Festival News
  • Tour Dates
  • Photo Galleries
  • Music Instruments & Gear
Podcasts
  • The Opus
  • Kyle Meredith With...
  • Stanning BTS
  • The Story Behind the Song
  • The What
  • Going There with Dr. Mike
  • The Rome and Duddy Show
Videos
  • Interviews
  • Two for the Road
  • First Time I Heard
  • When I Made
  • Battle of the Bandmates
  • Peer 2 Peer
  • Essays
  • Fan Theories
Heavy
  • News
  • Interviews
  • Concerts
  • Premieres
  • Culture
  • Beyond the Boys Club
  • Mining Metal
Shop
  • Shop
  • Giveaways

Follow Consequence

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitch
  • Tiktok
Close
Close