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Passage to Mars (2016)

Avaliações de usuários

Passage to Mars

33 avaliações
4/10

Boring and disappointing

Very disappointing documentary of a crew going through the North passage in the Arctic to Devon island (where they set up a Mars camp) to recreate a Mars style expedition. What almost put me to sleep was Zachary Quinto (the new Spock). His voice is extremly monotonous, he's no Leonard Nimoy that's for sure. He narrates on behalf of the crew or leader of the expedition. We see no interviews with any of the crew which I think was a missed opportunity. No interviews with Nasa people or Mars specialists. They went for a celebrity as a narrator. Also I found the narration and the music/songs used to be overdramatic and at times laughable (do humvees dream of diesel sheep? ... ugh). I think this would have worked better as a 50 minute documentary on National Geographic instead of 90 minutes of boredom. Skip it, there are better documentaries about Mars out there. This adds nothing new. But do watch if you can't sleep. You'll doze off in no time.
  • zaltman_bleros
  • 28 de dez. de 2018
  • Link permanente
6/10

Journey to Mars but not through space..

Mars Temperature: -200°F to 68°F Arctic Temperature: -5°F to -50°F (Winter) Mars Terrain: dry, rocky, canyons, craters Arctic Terrain: snow, thin ice, water, crevasses Mars Challenges: sandstorms, dormant volcanos Arctic Challenges: snowstorms As these parallels mimic the conditions on Mars, NASA sent a crew of explorer, engineer, analyst, photographer and recorder to test-drive of a prototype Humvee called the Haughton-Mars Project (HMP) Okarian across the frozen ground of arctic to the inhibited Devon Island through the Northern Passage. A rover simulator for mock Mars missions.

Though this documentary does not offer an immersive experience but spectacular imagery, stark details of harsh arctic climate, unembellished storytelling make it compelling and a good watch.
  • samabc-31952
  • 22 de nov. de 2021
  • Link permanente
4/10

Artificially dramatic

Frozen landscapes and views of dead Martian rocks are beautiful - so are they on YouTube; the comparison, although not new, was not a bad idea, but that is about all.

All right, it is supposed to simulate what explorers of the planet mars can expect to live through. But every picture of Mars this movie shows is about red dust in a cold rocky desert, and you'd expect NASA to plan its space expeditions a little better.

I found the movie extremely boring due to the background commentary from a member of the crew telling us every minute how the crew risks to die at every instant. After all, *they* decided to cross the arctic at the wrong season and at the most dangerous place without a backup plan, so they better either be enthusiastic about it or not go. It makes me think of all these horror movies where a family goes purposely spend a week in a haunted house just to see if they can make it out, except these don't sound depressed before even entering the house.

Is is even a documentary or a survival drama? Where is the suspense if a technical problem happens: they have about a week to fix their low-budget van, you know the film stops if the cameraman sinks, and you do want this voice to sink anyway so that you can finally admire the gorgeous landscapes in the natural silence these people went to disturb.
  • muraveill
  • 21 de out. de 2016
  • Link permanente
3/10

Boring

  • bgar-80932
  • 17 de fev. de 2020
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3/10

Boring pseudo documentary

  • chuckxx
  • 15 de mai. de 2020
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3/10

CGI

Great computer graphic about the space and the planets. Nothing else. I stopped to watch it after half video. Moreover the narration isn't useful at all but full of nonsense logic. It was pretty better without any narration.
  • pts2201
  • 17 de set. de 2020
  • Link permanente
1/10

Passage to Nasa incompetence

  • nova369F
  • 4 de jan. de 2017
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Totally Bogus

  • genemcmechen
  • 6 de jul. de 2021
  • Link permanente
2/10

A minority sport

Granted all those nice and exciting things as mentioned by other viewers (e.g. astronauts, engineers etc), but this is not even within a mile near anywhere that I would describe as 'film entertainment' because the story is a series of challenges (of survival) that you might expect in the north pole. Don't get me wrong that this is not a serious attempt to create an interesting story. It is.

If this is the type of documentary you want to see, fair enough. I thought I should give it a go too, but I was wrong about myself and what might engage me. I was bored stiff and desperately contemplating to press the stop button on the remote. Half way into the film, I did - had enough.
  • Looking_for_a_thrill
  • 21 de dez. de 2016
  • Link permanente
7/10

Exciting, strangely poetic road movie

Filmmakers and NASA explorers take us to the remote corners of Earth and Mars.

A Humvee, the Okarian, must cross 2,000 miles on frozen ocean to reach a NASA outpost where they train to explore the red planet!

It's real, I had no idea such a place even existed. so we're on a road trip. Dangerous, uncertain. The ship seems no match for the challenge, but the crew never gives up.

What got me here is the immersive poetry of the film, taking our mind to remote places of our imagination. This film is no so much about Mars than about ourselves and our vivid curiosity for the unknown. Stunning.
  • samuelstein
  • 9 de out. de 2016
  • Link permanente
1/10

Woooooowwww this is so BORING!

I have an avid interest in in understanding how the training is achieved. But this is unbelievably boring. The narrator has one slow monotone throughout the entire film. The intro takes almost 12 minutes and has more credits, than any other film I've ever seen in my life. The people in the room "watching" this film were so bored, they kept stretching and trying to stay awake. Eventually they started talking to each other and completely ignored the movie. Very disappointed.
  • mapj-52311
  • 10 de set. de 2021
  • Link permanente
8/10

Brilliant, fun and magnetic.

We are now so much immersed into science fiction and fantasy material that we've lost touch with real space adventure. Passage to Mars gives us a glimpse at it. This NASA expedition is not only how we prepare for our Martian treks. it explores why. Why we must go there. And this is when the movie really takes off for me, playing with jaw-dropping concepts about extraterrestrial life and our own small existence. Out of this Arctic survival trip, jumping from Earth to Mars, the film becomes almost a dream, driving through ethereal Arctic snow and at times drifting Martian sands.

Quinto's narration is right and subtle, reading the original "shiplog" of the Okarian, the experimental Humvee-rover. The film successfully accomplishes the most important thing: capturing our imagination, keeping us intrigued constantly. Brilliant and immersive. Beautiful and inspired!
  • derrickgomez
  • 9 de out. de 2016
  • Link permanente
1/10

embarrassing

as other reviews have stated ,some nice shots , but passage to mars ? If anything it shows why were never going anywhere as single point failures abound ,and that's on Earth , add no atmosphere and no air supplies and ...

Its a shame they didn't have to suit up every time they went outside and carry there own air and co2 scrubbers . And a diesel vehicle ? and at least show they were doing more science than drilling a hole to see how thick the ice was and how old ..duh !.

How did they go to the toilet ? Did they save up there waste in case they had to grow potatoes on Devon island ??? So many interesting things were left unexplored ,even there own thoughts and fears were sort of disneyfied .

Oh dear.
  • pter-06481
  • 9 de dez. de 2016
  • Link permanente
2/10

Would have worked better as a Gif

If you wish to be bored out of your mind then please do watch this documentary, a few people climb into an arctic vehicle and plod along the snow and ice, break down a couple of times and carry on.

That's it that's all that happens, you get a few shots of Mars but nothing out of the ordinary.

If you have to watch a something featuring vehicles and snow then watch the Top Gear Polar Special instead, it's so much more entertaining than this.

Fair play to them for putting up with the conditions of working out there but it does not make for entertaining viewing, I just couldn't wait for it to finish, if they had to make an episode out of it then they should have cut it down to 30 minutes.
  • iwalker11
  • 8 de nov. de 2016
  • Link permanente
1/10

NASA will be soon broke with expeditions like this

  • bedencic
  • 5 de out. de 2016
  • Link permanente
3/10

Nothing really happens

This is movie is about the difficulties and every day life of a small crew that wants to travel across the Arctic in order to realize what it's like to travel on Mars.

That itself, is not very exciting.

And on top of that, nothing really happens in the movie. It's just a very odd thing to show to people because it's more or less pointless. You almost never here the crew talking to each other, just the narrative voice-over. You get to know the characters a little, but not enough to care what happens to them.

Avoid this, do something else with you free time. It's a very boring movie.
  • folofolo
  • 5 de out. de 2016
  • Link permanente
3/10

Just Pass

The ambitious documentary Passage to Mars, while visually striking and undeniably passionate in its subject matter, ultimately delivers a mixed bag for viewers. On one hand, its breathtaking cinematography, particularly the stunning aerial shots and the immersive recreation of the Martian landscape, is a true highlight. The film successfully conveys the immense scale and potential of a human mission to the red planet, igniting a sense of wonder and excitement about future space exploration. Dr. Robert Zubrin's unwavering enthusiasm for his Mars Direct plan is palpable, and his dedication to the cause is genuinely inspiring. The inclusion of the Arctic expedition, serving as a terrestrial analogue for Martian conditions, offers a unique and intriguing perspective, effectively showcasing the challenges and triumphs inherent in such an endeavor.

However, the film's narrative structure at times feels somewhat disjointed, oscillating between a scientific exposition, a personal journey, and an almost promotional piece for Zubrin's specific vision. While his advocacy is understandable given his role, the lack of substantial counterarguments or alternative perspectives on Mars exploration methods can make the film feel a bit one-sided. Some viewers might find the pacing uneven, with moments of captivating insight punctuated by stretches that lean more towards extended infomercial than balanced documentary. Furthermore, while the personal element of the Arctic team's journey is meant to add a human touch, it occasionally overshadows the broader scientific implications, making it difficult to fully grasp the intricacies of the proposed mission beyond the immediate challenges faced by the explorers. Despite these shortcomings, Passage to Mars remains a valuable contribution to the conversation about humanity's future in space, offering a glimpse into the passionate pursuit of an audacious dream, even if its execution isn't always perfectly aligned with its grand aspirations.
  • TexasHippie915
  • 19 de jul. de 2025
  • Link permanente
1/10

7 min intro?

Sorry, but this documentary film believes it is a blockbuster movie. And it's attempt at pulling that off is less than sophomoric.

Next time, the intro should be done in 1 min. Just get to the point. We all know Mars... you don't have to take 7 mins to explain it to us with dramatic music and very slow dialog. Slowest credit role in history. Again, just get to the subject... you're a documentary (and a boring one), not the next Avengers movie.

The music was overly dramatic for the subject. It was no March of the Penguins.

Hats off to those that did the trek, the photographers, Zachary that did the narration. But the editor should be sent to Mars... it fails in edit on so many levels.
  • ngvinr
  • 25 de abr. de 2022
  • Link permanente
10/10

As an astronaut, I give two thumbs up. Striking doc. The real deal.

I'm an astronaut. Flew several times to the ISS. I love this film. It's the real stuff. A suspense winner in Arctic adventure and a lesson for future humans on Mars. The goal, the team and the engagement are key. Such battle against the Arctic cold and harsh terrain is definitely the gate to getting ready for Mars expeditions I wish I were there with them feeling like on Mars with its challenges, doubts and joy. On this tough journey in the Arctic we feel like being already on Mars. it's tough, it's cold, it's unknown...

The film translates so well the reality of being on a confined space travel. We don't speak, we survive, we plan, we think, we hope and we work. We think of home. A very rare film. Striking.
  • spaceclervoy
  • 6 de out. de 2016
  • Link permanente
10/10

Magnificent and complex, innovative filmmaking. Very entertaining.

Director Jeauffre uses the fascinating landscape and the quest of a NASA crew to create an unusual tale of poetry, cinematography and humanity.

A festival of subtle sensations and mind-blowing thoughts on our place in the universe. The blend of action, suspense and scary moments with ethereal drift into the unknown, both on Earth and Mars, makes you feel you are on board this epic extraterrestrial adventure.

Balance of nature is restored in this refined, lavish film. Complex, much is hiding under the ice layers, beneath the apparent bold Arctic-Martian road trip: references to our past as a species of explorers, the fine line between science and fiction (smart references to HG Wells - and the haunting voices from O. Welles famous 'War of the Worlds' radio show, Neil Armstrong, JFK... resonate in space discretely like from drifting radio waves. Ray Bradbury, through a moving voice appearance by Charlotte Rampling, quoting over Mars river beds ghostly Martian reflections.

"Passage to Mars", beneath and above the icy crusts of its alien worlds, celebrate a once lost spirit of adventure. More, much more than a "doc" about a NASA endeavor, the film reflects on our capacity to go beyond our natural frontiers to search for crucial answers, in a beautiful concert of emotions that all of us can connect with. Magnificent.
  • barbaralew
  • 10 de out. de 2016
  • Link permanente
8/10

Loaded with magic and si-fi references. Stylish and powerful.

If you're a space buff - as I am - this is for you! This doc is out of this world. Super loaded with hidden references and wrapped with pure beauty. Not sure NASA realized what the filmmakers did - I guess it was approved - but the film breaks out from the formatted genre and takes it to a new level: complex and emotional narration, dimensional layers, both in storytelling and visually (the back and forth between Earth and Mars are stunning and so smartly executed).

The director definitely pushed the envelop. To a point that it's hard to call it a documentary. It's a movie, tracking with an impossible true-life road trip - and it's the first movie of this kind I see.

Watched it twice to make up my mind. First I was just got caught up, blending in the Arctic and other crazy shots (spectacular). Then got deeper into the reflection. Powerful. This film stays with you like a great wine.
  • francisemos
  • 10 de out. de 2016
  • Link permanente
10/10

If you need 90 minutes on another planet, watch this!

Astonishing documentary. Hard to call it "documentary" though. Let's say a film, a tale, documenting a NASA adventure. It's more than a doc, as it triggers emotions and appeals to our imagination, senses. It's an experience, with a complex narrative mode (the voice by Zachary Quinto is the actual expedition's journals). if it had been in 3D, the immersion would have been complete. The characters are simple guys, obviously unwilling to fake the usual TV reality shows dramas. They get along, do the job - you feel the humility and the tension as they face the predicaments of merciless Arctic milieu. The whole goal of the expedition is fascinating: a 2,000 miles crossing on the sea ice on board an experimental Humvee to simulate a Martian long range road trip. Great concept both for a scientific experiment and a movie. if you need 90 minutes on another planet, just watch this!
  • jamesparks-86598
  • 8 de out. de 2016
  • Link permanente
10/10

Stunning and sometimes scary. A invitation to explore.

Saw this doc. with my two young sons on a big screen. I had the feeling to really take them to another planet. What we loved is that it's a real adventure. The landscape, the story, the narration, and above all, those actual images of Mars that I had never seen before. The film took me off guard. I din't know what to expect. The style is both cutting edge and classic. Classic because the story telling reminded me of some old epic adventure movies. This expedition journals, keep you on track with dates, temperatures and locations with amazing, beautiful animated maps, adding to the feeling of being on board with these NASA guys. The Mars imagery is stunning (I wish there were more, it's just fascinating), but after all, they are preparing the Martian journey here, on Earth, in what seems to be the next most hostile environment after Mars: the high Arctic. Also, loved the characters. They don't speak much, they are in their world, and we are invited to share their world. You learn many things about Mars and yet, what stays with you, is the beauty and the mystery of it all. It makes you want to go there, to be an explorer. Stunning and sometimes scary. Just bought it again on Amazon for the kids.
  • jessmeyer-61373
  • 5 de out. de 2016
  • Link permanente
10/10

You are on board with the crew, immersed. Incredible documentary. See it on the big screen if you can!

What a fantastic movie! It had me on the edge of my seat right from the beginning. Plus, those incredibly beautiful shots. This doc sounds and looks like a fiction (neat cinematography and sound), but this is the real deal. A true-life adventure. Thought-provoking, epic, haunting. The film stays with long after. The narration is unusual. Zachary Quinto reads the expedition log of NASA mission leader (Pascal Lee) as he would write it out loud. Purely engaging and intriguing. The parallel journey between the Arctic and Mars is very subtle and brings those worlds together in an almost surreal manner. There is more poetry than science - even though you learn bunch of new things about Mars. You are on board with the crew, immersed. Incredible documentary. See it on the big screen if you can!
  • dukejrod
  • 5 de out. de 2016
  • Link permanente
8/10

Arty and outside the box. Breaking documentary rules. Inspiring.!

Loved the elements in this film, the snow, the ice, the wind, the glittering stars passing by when we travel through space, the Mars sand dunes, the storms, the red dust... The sounds, or the quietness of it all, in space or on the ice. A film calling for our senses. including fear.

Very spectacular and magnetic. It won't please everybody, cause this doc. breaks many rules and might confuse the routine of some viewers. It's nothing like the classic, formatted TV doc. It's a "movie movie" of its own, arty and outside the box.

I loved it. Very sensible and inspirational. Some science, not much, just enough for me. Enough to understand I actually knew very little about Mars (there's is not only water there, but snow, four seasons, and a day last 24 hour like here, a dust storm can cover the entire planet... But above all, there might be life there, and that's what we are looking for).

but the science is not what stays with you for days after. You just don't watch the sky in the same manner. You feel very small. But you feel puzzled to be surrounded by so much life, when there is so little of it all around Earth. Very sensible and inspiring movie.
  • kristinapaget
  • 9 de out. de 2016
  • Link permanente

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