PROJECT HAIL MARY – Review

Ryan Gosling stars as Ryland Grace in PROJECT HAIL MARY, from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo credit: Jonathan Olley. © 2026 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Can a middle school science teacher save the world? With Ryan Gosling as the teacher with more potential than it first appears, he just might. In the intelligent, highly-entertaining, often funny science fiction adventure epic PROJECT HAIL MARY, we set out to find out, with a perfectly-cast Ryan Gosling as the science teacher plucked out of his classroom to try to do something incredible to try to save the world. PROJECT HAIL MARY is a film that exceeds expectations of what it could be, with great performance by Ryan Gosling, in a top-notch, visually glorious adaptation of the best-selling novel by the author of “The Martian,” Andrew Weir.

Like the movie adaptation of “The Martian,” this tale is science-forward and a thrilling adventure tale with a good dose of humor, about an unlikely man who finds himself in space, tasked with saving the world by using his brain-power, creativity and scientific skills to figure out how to not only survive, but save the planet – and more. Humor is a bigger part of PROJECT HAIL MARY than in THE MARTIAN, with its quirky main character, but this is still a smart, science-filled adventure that also offers the same uplift as THE MARTIAN.

Reportedly, PROJECT HAIL MARY is largely faithful to the best-selling novel. The film is directed by Phil Lord and Christopher Miller, the Oscar-winning team behind SPIDER-MAN: INTO THE SPIDER-VERSE, and THE LEGO MOVIE. Besides the frequent use of humor, PROJECT HAIL MARY is an optimistic film, offering hope and inspiration, which is a refreshing change from the dystopian science fiction dramas more common now, and making it a call-back to some earlier classic science fiction. Ryan Gosling carries the film as almost a one-man show for most of the film, and does so brilliantly, with charm, humor and heart.

Humor is a bigger part of PROJECT HAIL MARY than THE MARTIAN, often laugh-out-loud funny, but Ryan Gosling’s biology teacher in space, like the stranding astronaut in that previous film, has to uses his knowledge to figure it out on his own. But it is not just his survival at stake but the whole planet – and more – as something is destroying – eating – the sun. An international team has come together to solve the problem before the sun dims too much to sustain life on Earth. They recruit teacher Dr. Rylance Grace (Ryan Gosling), a molecular biologist who was ostracized from the scientific community after publishing a paper with a shocking premise, to help figure out what is destroying the sun, as part of a “try everything” plan to save the Earth.

But we first meet Dr. Grace as he is waking up from an induced coma aboard a spaceship, light-years from Earth. Grace remembers who he is but little else – not where he is, how he got there, or why he’s there, due to the prolonged time spent in an unconscious state for the trip. As Grace comically stumbles around the ship, he starts to figure things and discovers he is the only crew member to survive the journey.

Ryan Gosling is perfect in this role as this smart but quirky, funny and self-deprecating reluctant astronaut. The memories start to come back as this lone scientist starts to figure things out, which allows the film to tell us the backstory in long flashback sequences, of what brought him to space and why, while Grace’s space adventure story in the film’s present moves forward. Like in THE MARTIAN, Gosling records himself in little messages to himself about what he is experiencing, videos that are both funny and helpful narrative.

While it is only Gosling on screen much of the time, he does get some help from a few co-stars. Sandra Huller plays the stone-faced leader of one of the international teams working on the threat to Earth, who recruits the reluctant Dr. Grace to help with the project.

When Huller’s Eva Stratt shows up at Grace’s school, Grace argues that he’s just a teacher, but she counters by pointing to his biology paper with a startling hypothesis about life on other planets. Grace has a PhD in molecular biology, not astrobiology (yes, that’s a real field) but Stratt wants him to give it a shot anyway. Huller plays this character with a deadpan style that is the perfect comic foil for Gosling’s more emotional, oddball, non-conformist Dr. Grace.

Of course, Eva Stratt’s team isn’t the only one working on this problem, as many other teams are trying to solve it from different angles, and presumably, another team is working on this with astrobiologists. After all, it’s called Project Hail Mary because finding the solution is such a long shot – but the alternative is to do nothing and just wait to die.

Throughout the Earth-based part of the film, before he finds himself in space, Gosling’s Dr. Grace is reluctant, due to lack of self-confidence or maybe just aversion to risk, although when backed into the proverbial corner, he shows remarkable resourcefulness. His ability to “figure things out” keeps him on the team as they move towards finding a solution. But once he wakes up in space alone, he has to overcome this innate reluctance because he only has himself.

Gosling’s other major co-star is a space alien he meets when he encounters another spaceship. also with a sole occupant, sent from a different planet with a similar mission. This is no spoiler, as the alien is in the movie’s trailer, and the character is a major par of the story. The alien, which Grace dubs Rocky, is played by a puppet that looks like a rock with legs, winningly operated and voiced by puppeteer James Ortiz. Rocky is enthusiastic and energetic, and his comic bits have Gosling playing the foil, as the two, scientist and engineer, “figure things out” (a repeated phrase in this film).

Yes, the film has a little fun with the title, with Gosling’s Grace aboard a spaceship he calls Mary, but this is a smart if playful film. PROJECT HAIL MARY gets most of the science right and also delivers it in an accessible, engaging way. The most hard-to-believe part is that the world would come together to solve this problem, something that hasn’t happened since nations and businesses worked together to fix and ozone hole, and with current anti-science attitudes and lack of international cooperation generally, seems exceedingly unlikely now.

Visually, the film is marvelous. It shifts between close-in personal sequences, often laced with humor, as the scientists work, and gripping, exciting adventure sequences, moments of danger and tension, often in space. The film is visually astounding, shot for IMAX and with some 70mm versions out there too, so it is well worth seeing on an IMAX screen for sheer enjoyment.

Despite it’s two and a half hour running time, PROJECT HAIL MARY does not feel long, due to its level of excitement and engaging storytelling, but this is clearly an epic story.

All in all, PROJECT HAIL MARY is a smart, entertaining, not-to-miss science fiction adventure film, with a fabulous performance by Ryan Gosling, a wonderful story, and terrific big-screen visual effects. It is something to see on the biggest possible screen, and it is a film that holds up as entertainment through multiple viewings, while inspiring with a hopeful message that we can use our brains to figure it out.

PROJECT HAIL MARY opens nationally in theaters on Friday, Mar. 20, 2026.

RATING: 4 out of 4 stars

WAMG Marks The Blast Off Of PROJECT HAIL MARY With 14 Of Our Favorite High-Tech, Spaceship and Gadgets Movies

In Ridley Scott’s ALIEN, the audience isn’t introduced to the Xenomorph right off the bat, but to the glorious Nostromo travelling through space. Utilizing industrial scrap and military surplus to create a lived-in, “truckers in space”, the ship was filled with techy stuff like lighting built directly into the walls and ceilings using metal grates and practical fixtures, walls filled with “visual noise” created from banks of circuits and equipment salvaged from old automobiles, radios, and television sets. And best of all – the interior dressing came from scrapped Royal Air Force (RAF) stock. Designers famously used parts from a dismantled Handley Page Vulcan bomber to line the walls and corridors.

We still bow at the altar of ALIEN’s Production Designer Michael Seymour, Art Directors Les Dilley and Roger Christian (Christian is specifically credited with the “industrial” look of the Nostromo interiors, utilizing salvaged scrap metal and aircraft parts) and Set Decorator Ian Whittaker.

Read this article about the making of ALIEN: https://theasc.com/articles/behind-the-scenes-of-alien

Bravo to the genius who really got their Nerd on and published a book titled ALIEN: THE BLUEPRINTS. Its utter rapture filled with all the technical drawings of all the major ships and vehicles from the Alien movies, presented in incredible detail. Includes iconic spacecraft like the Nostromo, the Sulaco and the Covenant.

NASA is now readying the launch of the SLS (Space Launch System) rocket and Orion spacecraft powering the Artemis II from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida to travel to the Moon. Nothing will ever surpass the mighty Saturn V Rocket and the Apollo Missions, but the excitement surrounding the countdown to the Artemis II launch and return to Earth’s closest neighbor is nothing short of fantastic!

Ryan Gosling stars as Ryland Grace in PROJECT HAIL MARY, from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo credit: Jonathan Olley © 2026 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.

In the new film PROJECT HAIL MARY, the filmmakers and production designers had to answer a fundamental question: If humanity truly built a ship to save itself, what would it look like? Production designer Charles Wood (Guardians of the Galaxy, Avengers: Endgame) began that exploration with viability. If the filmmakers would be asking the audience to believe that this is humanity’s last, best effort to save the planet, the Hail Mary itself had to feel engineered as if very intelligent people built it under extraordinary pressure. The default of space-movie environments is steel-and-gray hues with sometimes bland or unarticulated spaces. But directors Lord and Miller wanted to experiment with the palette and create something fresh.

“They wanted it not to feel acrid or too monochromatic,” Wood says. “They wanted to find the color in space.” In addition, instead of sleek metallic minimalism, Wood introduced fabric and insulation as structural elements. Soft materials were woven into walls and padded surfaces were shaped and layered.

Gravity itself became part of the language design. Different areas of the Hail Mary operate under different gravitational states – acceleration gravity, centrifugal gravity, zero gravity – requiring sets that could rotate or reorient.

In the new film from directors Phil Lord & Christopher Miller, Science teacher Ryland Grace (Ryan Gosling) wakes up on a spaceship light years from home with no recollection of who he is or how he got there. As his memory returns, he begins to uncover his mission: solve the riddle of the mysterious substance causing the sun to die out. He must call on his scientific knowledge and unorthodox ideas to save everything on Earth from extinction…but an unexpected friendship means he may not have to do it alone.

Go on the ship: ProjectHailMary.com

And this isn’t Gosling’s first time playing an astronaut. Nope! Check out this clip where he played Neil Armstrong who commanded Apollo 11 becoming the First Man to set foot on the Moon.

To mark the blast-off of PROJECT HAIL MARY, we’ve come up with a list of 14 of our favorite techy, spaceship and gadgets movies.

For the movie nerds out there (including us) technically focused space movies are our jam, where we groove on the hard sci-fi films that emphasize realism and scientific concepts – but, okay, mostly for the lights, buttons, knobs, switches and toggles.

Ryan Gosling stars as Ryland Grace in PROJECT HAIL MARY, from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo credit: Jonathan Olley © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.

THE MARTIAN

A definitive “hard sci-fi” film that uses NASA-endorsed accuracy in botany, engineering, and orbital mechanics to show how a stranded astronaut can survive using existing or near-future tech.

The novel was absolutely brilliant with its schematics and it translated so well to the big screen showing a sophisticated fleet of spacecraft designed for the Ares program to transport the crew and supplies between Earth and Mars. Filled with an Orion capsule, The Hermes (and its ion engines), Taiyang Shen, and the Martian Rover, 

There were over 400 interactive screens and many weren’t just random code; they were a “patchwork” of real NASA data. For example, the weather screens used actual Martian atmosphere data, and the Hermes navigation screens used real motion vectors provided by NASA engineers. And the best? Instead of using green screens for monitors, the animations were played live on set. This allowed actors to actually interact with the buttons and data, making their reactions feel authentic. Glorious!

APOLLO 13

Based on a true story, it celebrates the ingenious problem-solving of NASA scientists who used “square pegs in round holes” and duct tape to bring astronauts home after a technical failure in deep space, never mind a slide rule. The lift off of the mighty Saturn V rocket, mission control in Houston and the crew in the command module made this Oscar nominated movie one filled with realistic physics, engineering, and survival.

Go see it at the Johnson Space Center in Houston TX – its a true marvel, with its original consoles and rotary dials.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saturn_(rocket_family)

GRAVITY

Director Alfonso Cuaron’s entire film is a masterclass in the physics of microgravity. It focuses on the “Kessler Syndrome,” where a chain reaction of satellite debris traveling at orbital velocity destroys everything in its path. Technology – specifically Manned Maneuvering Units (MMUs) and various airlocks – is the only thing preventing the protagonist from “drifting” forever into the vacuum.

The mind-boggling tech of this film won 7 Oscars at the 86th Academy Awards including Best Score (Steven Price), Best Visual Effects (Tim Webber, Chris Lawrence, David Shirk, and Neil Corbould) and Best Film Editing (Alfonso Cuarón and Mark Sanger).

INTERSTELLAR

The technological realism is thru the roof. The movie features plausible near-future technologies, such as the Endurance spacecraft, which uses rotation to create artificial gravity, and advanced robotic assistants like TARS and CASE. The interior is compact and practical, with a focus on functionality, including transparent touch screens, crew chairs, and a large main viewscreen. 

Check out this better look here – https://www.framestore.com/work/interstellar-cinematic-vr-experience 

2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY

A seminal work exploring humanity’s relationship with technology – from the first bone tool to the sentient AI HAL 9000 – as a driver for the next stage of human evolution.

The ships were wonders to behold.

Discovery One (USSC Discovery) was the 540-foot-long nuclear-powered interplanetary ship sent to investigate the signal from the monolith at Jupiter. It is controlled by the HAL 9000 computer. The Orion III Spaceplane was a sleek, needle-nosed Pan Am orbital clipper used to transport Dr. Heywood Floyd from Earth to the orbiting space station. The Aries Ib Lunar Lander was a  spherical, passenger-carrying moon shuttle that transports Dr. Floyd from the space station to the Clavius Base on the lunar surface and the Space Station V was a massive, rotating “wheel” station in Earth’s orbit that serves as a transit hub for travelers heading to the moon

MOON

Huge Nerd Alert!

Duncan Jones‘s movie uses a futuristic lunar mining operation to examine the ethical implications of cloning and the psychological toll of long-term isolation on a solo worker. It’s so rich to look at due to the lunar base, the space station (or lunar mining base) named Sarang Station located on the far side of the Moon to mine Helium-3, a clean alternative fuel for Earth. The movie stars Sam Rockwell as Sam Bell, the station’s sole human occupant, who is assisted by an artificial intelligence named GERTY. 

With the Helium-3 Harvesters and lunar rovers, the miniature models used instead of CGI gave these vehicles their realistic, gritty look.

SXSW Review: https://www.wearemoviegeeks.com/2009/03/sxsw-review-moon/ 

Tribeca Review: https://www.wearemoviegeeks.com/2009/04/tribeca-review-moon/ 

EVENT HORIZON

Okay so it ended up being jump to the “hell” dimension, which many at the time went… “HUH?!” But the awesome “industrial-gothic” design of the S.S. Event Horizon, divided into three primary modules, was connected by a 2-kilometer-long access corridor known as The Neck. The Bridge and the Gravity Drive had sci-fi fans intrigued by all it’s panels filled with monitors, lighted buttons and toggle-switches galore.

Read ASC’s interview visual effects supervisor Richard Yuricich, ASC and visual effects producer Stuart McAra here and cinematographer Adrian Biddle, BSC here — featuring director Paul W.S. Anderson.

Designed to look like a cathedral to evoke a sense of religious dread, the corridors are octagonal, and the lighting is kept low to make the ship feel “alive” and predatory.

Paul W.S. Anderson film has since become a cult movie and there’s even a Event Horizon: Dark Descent #1 – available now from IDW Dark.

Discover what happened to the original crew of the Event Horizon in this all-new cosmic horror graphic novel set in the universe of the terrifying cult-classic film!

This original comic series serves as an official prequel to the film! The Event Horizon was a revolutionary spaceship designed for one mission: faster-than-light travel with a top-secret, experimental gravity drive. But upon activating the device, the ship journeyed across the borders of Hell itself. In a nightmarish realm of torments beyond imagining, Captain Kilpack and the crew of the Event Horizon must resist all manner of demonic forces—including Paimon, the eyeless King of Hell, and their own descents into madness and bloodlust—if they’ve any chance of escaping back to their own world.

Abandon all hope and board the Event Horizon with multiple Eisner Award winner Christian Ward (writer of Batman: City of Madness, Two-Face) and powerhouse sci-fi artist Tristan Jones (Aliens: Defiance, Tales of the TMNT) in this unbelievable story of the true and final fate of the original Event Horizon crew.

WHICH BRINGS US TO ITS UNOFFICAL SEQUEL, ACCORDING TO FANS….

SUNSHINE

In Danny Boyle’s 2007 film Sunshine, the technology and spacecraft represent a blend of near-future industrial realism and high-concept scientific theory, developed with guidance from physicist Brian Cox.

The Icarus II is a massive vessel designed for a singular, suicide-mission-style objective: delivering a payload to reignite the dying Sun.  Solar Shield: The most prominent feature is a one-mile wide refractory gold-leaf shield that protects the ship from intense solar radiation and heat. The Spine: A long, delicate central armature connects the shield to the living quarters and engines. In the film, this spine rotates slowly to provide a degree of stability. Living Quarters: Designed to feel claustrophobic and utilitarian, contrasting with the vastness of the exterior. The Payload: A massive stellar bomb roughly the size of Manhattan, constructed from dark matter and uranium. 

The techy part is the Computer on The Icarus, an AI with a natural-language interface that communicates verbally with the crew. Its mainframe is kept in a coolant bath to prevent overheating and the Observation Deck, a room that allows the crew to view the Sun directly through attenuation filters.

EUROPA REPORT

This “found footage” style film focuses on plausible mission design and the scientific process involved in a private mission to find life on Jupiter’s moon, Europa. 

The user interfaces (UIs) in the film are minimalist and data-heavy. Transparent displays and helmet Heads-Up Displays (HUDs). Instead of flashy animations, the screens show telemetry data, oxygen levels, and orbital mechanics. This “functional” design makes the technology feel like it was built by engineers, not graphic designers.

THE BLACK HOLE

We love this film! It saw two Oscar nominations for Best Cinematography and Best Visual Effects and still one of our favorite sci-fi films ever.

The Black Hole combines gothic horror with sci-fi, centering on a massive spacecraft (the USS Cygnus) perched at the edge of a black hole, exploring the technological hubris of a scientist obsessed with entering it. The ship utilized powerful anti-gravity projectors (powered by a fictional element called Signium) that allow it to hover motionless on the edge of the black hole’s event horizon. Due to its immense size, the crew used a manually controlled, one-way tram system to travel between major sections like the docking bays and the control tower – a magnificent room filled with computer monitors.

The interior of the tower features one of the most elaborate sets in 1970s science fiction, designed to emphasize both the ship’s massive scale and its gothic atmosphere. 

A dominant feature is a massive star map and holographic display used for mapping and studying the black hole, the former crew turned into mindless cyborgs. The tower is designed with multiple levels and catwalks, allowing Reinhardt and his primary sentry, Maximilian, to oversee operations from elevated positions.

We also loved V.I.N.CENT voiced by an uncredited Roddy McDowall. He was a robot aboard the U.S.S. Palomino. Great score too by composer John Barry.

AD ASTRA

Where do we start with this futuristic film that explores the vastness and silence of the solar system through a journey to Neptune, using realistic depictions of lunar bases and commercial space travel to reflect on a son’s search for his father.

This was a dream for space enthusiasts – A space elevator, an International Space Antenna, Mars underground base, Vesta IX and Lima Station and the Cepheus – the SpaceCom transport vessel travelling to outer space. It made us believe Space exploration and tourism was a common event.

SILENT RUNNING

Director Douglas Trumbull’s amazing film focuses on environmental tech in space, where a botanist maintains the last of Earth’s plant life in geodesic domes attached to a spacecraft after all plant life on Earth has gone extinct. Named the Valley Forge, Berkshire, and Sequoia, these several massive American Airlines Space Freighters were tasked with carrying Earth’s last botanical samples. They were great to look at and were based the geodesic design on the Climatron dome at the Missouri Botanical Garden. These freighters are approximately 2,500 feet long (nearly half a mile) while the filming miniature for the Valley Forge was a 26-foot-long masterpiece built over six months using parts from over 80 different model kits.

But it’s the three little robots – originally designated as Drones 1, 2, and 3—that are the heart of the film’s emotional journey. Freeman Lowell (played by Bruce Dern), re-programs the clunky, box-shaped service drones to give them distinct personalities and nicknames them after Donald Duck’s nephews, Dewey, Huey and Louie.

THE CLOVERFIELD PARADOX

To start, this has to be the greatest example of pure marketing genius. To have kept it a secret, revealing it during the Superbowl eight years ago, followed by the surprise debut on Netflix immediately afterwards that Sunday night was unbelievable! We bow low on that drop!

https://www.netflix.com/title/80134431

Now to the tech stuff. The Cloverfield Station is a massive space station orbiting Earth in the year 2028. It is a modular, high-tech habitat designed to house the massive particle accelerator at its core. The Bridge/Cockpit features a mix of traditional physical controls and modern multi-functional displays.

GDP-07952.raf

The Shepard is the station’s primary experimental device, a particle accelerator described as being “one thousand times more powerful” than any on Earth.Its goal is to provide a sustainable, infinite energy source to save humanity. When finally successfully activated, the Shepard overloads and creates a “power curve” that rips the fabric of space-time. The device doesn’t just generate power; it causes the station to jump into a parallel universe and move to the opposite side of the sun. The firing of the Shepard shattered reality across multiple dimensions and timelines.

SATURN 3

The film is set at a remote base in the asteroid belt of Saturn, and crewed by 2 scientists, and was filled with futuristic gadgets featuring detailed props and computer consoles that serve as the “tech parts” of the station’s life support and research systems. The base was equipped with numerous wall-mounted consoles and interactive displays used for monitoring life support, research data, and internal security.

For we geeks living in the early 80’s this was the perfect movie – the evil robot Hector, spaceships and a space station… this was the ultimate Nerdvana

You can even watch the entire movie here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bD_tyBy3I3Q

Contributed by Michelle McCue, Marc Butterfield and Melissa Thompson

Win Passes To The St. Louis Advance Screening Of PROJECT HAIL MARY In IMAX

Science teacher Ryland Grace (Ryan Gosling) wakes up on a spaceship light years from home with no recollection of who he is or how he got there. As his memory returns, he begins to uncover his mission: solve the riddle of the mysterious substance causing the sun to die out. He must call on his scientific knowledge and unorthodox ideas to save everything on Earth from extinction…but an unexpected friendship means he may not have to do it alone.

Directed by Academy Award® winners Phil Lord and Christopher Miller (Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, The Lego Movie), PROJECT HAIL MARY stars three-time Academy Award® nominee Ryan Gosling (La La Land, Barbie), Academy Award® nominee Sandra Hüller (Anatomy of a Fall, The Zone of Interest) and James Ortiz (The Woodsman).

With a screenplay by Academy Award® nominee Drew Goddard (The Cabin in the Woods, The Martian) based on the novel by Andy Weir (The Martian, Artemis), the film is produced by Gosling along with Academy Award® nominee Amy Pascal (Little Women, Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse), Lord and Miller, Aditya Sood (The Martian, Cocaine Bear) and Rachel O’Connor (Challengers, Spider-Man: Brand New Day), as well as Weir.

Nikki Baida (Strays), Sara Esberg (Moolight), Ken Kao (The Nice Guys), Lucy Kitada (Borderlands), Patricia Whitcher (Marvel’s The Avengers) and Goddard are executive producers.

Ken Leung (Star Wars: The Force Awakens), Milana Vayntrub (Werewolves Within), Lionel Boyce (‘The Bear’) and Priya Kansara (‘Bridgerton’) round out the cast.

Joining Lord and Miller behind the camera are Academy Award®-winning cinematographer Greig Fraser (Dune, The Batman), production designer Charles Wood (Guardians of the Galaxy, Avengers: Endgame), costume designers David Crossman and Glyn Dillon (Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, Solo: A Star Wars Story) and film editor Joel Negron (Thor: Ragnarok, The Nice Guys). Academy Award® nominee Daniel Pemberton (Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, The Trial of the Chicago 7) is the film’s composer.

FILMED FOR IMAX® Only in Theaters March 20

Tickets now on sale

Prime members have exclusive access to enjoy an early screening of PROJECT HAIL MARY on March 16 in theaters only. 

Purchase your tickets HERE

The St. Louis screening is on Wednesday, March 18 at 7pm at Marcus Ronnies Cine. This screening will be on the IMAX screen.

ENTER HERE FOR PASSES: https://mgmscreenings.com/WAMGHailMary

Rated: PG 13.

Please arrive EARLY as seating is not guaranteed.

Ryan Gosling stars as Ryland Grace in PROJECT HAIL MARY, from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo credit: Jonathan Olley © 2026 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.

PROJECT HAIL MARY Takes Over Sunset Blvd! Plus New Clip Starring Ryan Gosling

Opening in theaters on March 20th is the wildly anticipated film PROJECT HAIL MARY – and the marketing team has the film floating over Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood. Click on the video link below to see the brilliant flyover.

Science teacher Ryland Grace (Ryan Gosling) wakes up on a spaceship light years from home with no recollection of who he is or how he got there. As his memory returns, he begins to uncover his mission: solve the riddle of the mysterious substance causing the sun to die out. He must call on his scientific knowledge and unorthodox ideas to save everything on Earth from extinction… but an unexpected friendship means he may not have to do it alone.

Directed by Academy Award® winners Phil Lord and Christopher Miller (Spider Man: Into the Spider-Verse, The Lego Movie), PROJECT HAIL MARY stars three-time Academy Award® nominee Ryan Gosling (La La Land, Barbie), Academy Award® nominee Sandra Hüller (Anatomy of a Fall, The Zone of Interest) and James Ortiz (The Woodsman).

With a screenplay by Academy Award® nominee Drew Goddard (The Cabin in the Woods, The Martian) based on the novel by Andy Weir (The Martian, Artemis), the film is produced by Gosling along with Academy Award® nominee Amy Pascal (Little Women, Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse), Lord and Miller, Aditya Sood (The Martian, Cocaine Bear) and Rachel O’Connor (Challengers, Spider-Man: Brand New Day), as well as Weir.

Academy Award nominee Daniel Pemberton (Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, The Trial of the Chicago 7) is the film’s composer.

Check out the brand new clip.

Experience the film early at select IMAX® 70mm March 13, 14 and 15

Watch The Stunning Final Trailer For PROJECT HAIL MARY Starring Ryan Gosling

PROJECT HAIL MARY starring Ryan Gosling and directed by Phil Lord & Chris Miller hits theaters & IMAX on March 20.

On Superbowl Sunday, Amazon MGM Studios released a brand new poster and final trailer before the film opens.

Science teacher Ryland Grace (Ryan Gosling) wakes up on a spaceship light years from home with no recollection of who he is or how he got there. As his memory returns, he begins to uncover his mission: solve the riddle of the mysterious substance causing the sun to die out. He must call on his scientific knowledge and unorthodox ideas to save everything on Earth from extinction… but an unexpected friendship means he may not have to do it alone.

PROJECT HAIL MARY, based on Andy Weir’s New York Times best-selling novel, with the screenplay from Drew Goddard (THE MARTIAN), also stars Sandra Hüller, Lionel Boyce, Ken Leung, and Milana Vayntrub and Priya Kansara.

Ryan Gosling stars as Ryland Grace in PROJECT HAIL MARY, from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo credit: Jonathan Olley © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.

See The New Trailer For PROJECT HAIL MARY Starring Ryan Gosling – Directed By Phil Lord & Chris Miller

An unlikely friendship. An impossible mission. Watch the new trailer for PROJECT HAIL MARY starring Ryan Gosling.

Science teacher Ryland Grace (Gosling) wakes up on a spaceship light years from home with no recollection of who he is or how he got there. As his memory returns, he begins to uncover his mission: solve the riddle of the mysterious substance causing the sun to die out. He must call on his scientific knowledge and unorthodox ideas to save everything on Earth from extinction… but an unexpected friendship means he may not have to do it alone.

Based on Andy Weir’s New York Times best-selling novel, starring Academy Award® nominee Ryan Gosling with Academy Award® nominee Sandra Hüller, Lionel Boyce, Ken Leung, and Milana Vayntrub, the film is directed by Academy Award® winning filmmakers Phil Lord & Christopher Miller with a screenplay by Drew Goddard.

See PROJECT HAIL MARY in theaters & IMAX March 20, 2026.

https://www.amazon.com/salp/projecthailmary?hhf

First Trailer Has Landed For PROJECT HAIL MARY Starring Ryan Gosling, Directed By Phil Lord And Chris Miller

“I put the ‘not’ in astronaut.” Ryan Gosling, who previously played astronaut Neil Armstrong in 2018’s FIRST MAN, suits up again in the brand new trailer for the highly anticipated PROJECT HAIL MARY.

Based on the novel by Andy Weir and directed by Phil Lord & Christopher Miller, with a screenplay by Drew Goddard, PROJECT HAIL MARY is in theaters March 20, 2026.

Science teacher Ryland Grace (Ryan Gosling) wakes up on a spaceship light years from home with no recollection of who he is or how he got there. As his memory returns, he begins to uncover his mission: solve the riddle of the mysterious substance causing the sun to die out. He must call on his scientific knowledge and unorthodox ideas to save everything on Earth from extinction… but an unexpected friendship means he may not have to do it alone.

Both Phil Lord and Christopher Miller (their first film since 22 Jump Street) won the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature for “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” in 2019. Goddard wrote Cloverfield (2008), World War Z (2013), and The Martian (2015), the latter earning him a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay. In 2011, he made his directorial debut with The Cabin in the Woods.

In 2018, Deadline reported Andy Weir’s ‘Artemis’ was also being adapted for the big screen based on, “the novel by The Martian author Andy Weir that Phil Lord & Chris Miller will direct.” In 2017, Salon said of the novel, “Hell Yes, ‘Artemis’ should be made into a movie.”