Europa Report

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Europa Report
Europa Report Official Poster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Sebastián Cordero
Produced by Ben Browning
Screenplay by Philip Gelatt
Starring <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Music by Bear McCreary
Cinematography Enrique Chediak
Edited by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • Aaron Yanes
  • Alexander Kopit
  • Craig McKay
  • Livio Sanchez
Production
company
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  • Start Motion Pictures
  • Wayfare Entertainment Ventures LLC
Distributed by Magnet Releasing
Magnolia Pictures
Release dates
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  • June 27, 2013 (2013-06-27) (VOD)
  • August 2, 2013 (2013-08-02) (United States)
Running time
89 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget Less than $10 million[1]
Box office $125,687[2]

Europa Report is a 2013 science fiction film directed by Sebastián Cordero, and starring Christian Camargo, Anamaria Marinca, Michael Nyqvist, Daniel Wu, Karolina Wydra, and Sharlto Copley. A found footage film, it recounts the fictional story of the first crewed mission to Europa, one of Jupiter's moons. Despite a disastrous technical failure that loses all communications with Earth mission control[3] and a series of dangerous crises, the crew continue their mission to Europa and encounters a baffling mystery.

Plot

Dr. Unger (Embeth Davidtz), CEO of Europa Ventures, narrates the story of the Europa One mission. Six astronauts embark on a privately funded mission to Europa, a moon of Jupiter, to find potential sources of life.[4] The crew members are Captain William Xu (Daniel Wu), pilot Rosa Dasque (Anamaria Marinca), chief science officer Daniel Luxembourg (Christian Camargo), marine biology science officer Katya Petrovna (Karolina Wydra), junior engineer James Corrigan (Sharlto Copley), and chief engineer Andrei Blok (Michael Nyqvist).

After six months of mission time, a solar storm hits the ship, knocking out communication with mission control. Blok and Corrigan perform an EVA to repair the system from outside, but an accident rips Blok's suit. While he is being guided back into the airlock, Blok notices that Corrigan's suit has been coated with hydrazine, and he cannot enter the airlock or else he would contaminate the rest of the ship. Blok attempts to save Corrigan by taking him out of his suit, but he blacks out from a lack of oxygen. Knowing there is no hope for himself, Corrigan pushes Blok into the airlock, but also forces himself away from the ship as it continues its journey to Europa. Stranded, he dies in space. Corrigan's death demoralizes the crew, who continue with the mission.

At twenty months, the ship lands safely, but misses its original target zone. The crew drills through the ice and releases a probe into the underlying sea. Blok, who is sleep-deprived and eliciting concern in the rest of the crew, sees a light outside the ship. However, he is unable to record it or otherwise convince the crew of its occurrence. The probe is struck by an unknown lighted object, and contact with it is lost.

Petrovna insists on collecting samples on Europa's surface. After a crew vote, she embarks on a walk outside. Analyzing the samples, Luxembourg discovers traces of a single-celled organism. As communication is disrupted by increasing radiation, Petrovna sees a blue light in the distance; she decides to investigate it. She approaches the light glowing through the ice; the ice below her breaks and she falls through. As she descends into the depths, only her head camera continues to show footage, displaying her terrified face as the blue bioluminescence is reflected in her eyes, before cutting out.

The crew agrees to leave in order to bring their discovery back to Earth, but the engines malfunction. As the ship hurtles back to Europa's surface, Xu unbuckles from his seat to remove water shielding to reduce the impact speed. Remarkably, the ship crashes at the originally-targeted landing site. On impact, Xu is killed, and the ship is damaged, leaking oxygen and losing heat. It begins to sink into the ice.

Blok and Luxembourg suit up to make repairs outside the ship. Luxembourg tries to descend, but falls through the ice. Blok knows that there is no chance that he alone will be able to repair the ship before it sinks. Instead, he manages to fix the communication system, at the expense of turning off the life support systems, just before the same blue light Petrovna saw approaches and he appears to fall through the ice as well.

Dasque re-establishes communication with Earth. All the collected images and data that have been saved over the blackout months are sent, just as the ice cracks and the ship begins to sink. Alone and anticipating her death, Dasque opens the airlock to flood the ship in hopes of revealing the source of the light. As the water rises to the cockpit, she sees a tentacled, bioluminescent creature[5] rising toward her, before the camera cuts out.

In the epilogue, Unger confirms that the crew of Europa had discovered life, and exceeded every expectation, as the footage plays from an earlier scene of the crew posing in front of the camera.

Cast

Production

Filming took place in Brooklyn. The first image from the film was revealed on February 11, 2012.[4] A viral website to promote the film was launched shortly afterward.[6]

The film's screenplay was written by Philip Gelatt, and the production design was done by Eugenio Caballero.[4] It was scored by Bear McCreary.[7] The movie is a found footage film and follows a nonlinear progression.

The crew used as inspiration real footage from the International Space Station and space walks from the space shuttle.[5] The space ship was designed through computer graphics, giving high detail to the camera angles to be used in the film. Weightlessness was simulated with balance balls, suspension from wires was used for interior shots. The flooding ship was filmed on a one-third scale model.

The aspect of the moon Europa was based for accuracy on data from NASA and JPL's maps of the moon's surface. The creature's design included bio-luminescence from the initial concepts. The visual effects supervisor stated that the creature was modeled based on a cross of an octopus and a squid, with early sketches resembling a jellyfish and a manta ray.[5]

An online trailer was released on May 20, 2012.[8] The film was released on Video on Demand, iTunes, and Google Play Movies & TV on June 27, 2013, and was released theatrically on August 2, 2013.[8]

Reception

Critical response

Europa Report has received generally positive reviews from critics. Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a 80% "Certified Fresh" rating based on 74 reviews, its consensus reading, "Claustrophobic and stylish, Europa Report is a slow-burning thriller that puts the science back into science fiction."[9] Review aggregation website Metacritic gives a rating of 68 out of 100 based on reviews from 25 critics, which indicates "generally favorable" reviews.[10]

Justin Chang, of Variety magazine, called the film "A reasonably plausible and impressively controlled achievement."[11] while space.com said the film was "One of the most thrilling and realistic depictions of space exploration since Moon or 2001: A Space Odyssey."[12] Fearnet said the film was "One of the most sincere, suspenseful and fascinating science fiction films of the past few years."[13]

The film was nominated for the Bradbury Award by the members of SFWA.[14]

References

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  11. Chang, Justin. Variety, film Review, Europa Report, June 21, 2013. Accessed: August 9, 2013.
  12. First Trailer for Europa Report unveiled, "Space.com", May 21, 2013.
  13. Fearnet Movie Review: Europa Report, "Fearnet", May 20, 2013
  14. 2013 Nebula Nominees Announced, SFWA, 02-25-2014.

External links