Directed by Frant Gwo, The Wandering Earth is an epic disaster film in every sense of the word, based on the novella of the same name, by award-winning author Liu Cixin, it tells the thrilling tale of mankind’s greatest achievement in the face of ultimate disaster as it tries to save itself from extinction. The basic premise to The Wandering Earth is that the sun has reached the point in its lifecycle where it is about to become a red giant, which means that sometime within the next hundred years, the Earth will become a charred cinder, so mankind must put aside their differences if the human race is going to survive. Now, that’s not even the crazy part — Danny Boyle’s science fiction film Sunshine dealt with a similar threat (with the sun dying and mankind’s last ditch effort being to jump-start the thing with some well-placed nuclear bombs), which was pretty crazy, yet maybe somewhat plausible — but with The Wandering Earth, the plan is to construct 10,000 enormous thruster engines across the planet, running on fusion power, to propel the Earth to another solar system.
The Wandering Earth is China’s first real science fiction blockbuster, one with a good deal of money spent on an array of stunning visual effects that will surely make many a viewers' jaws drop, but with all that money spent on making this the most impressive-looking science fiction action-packed disaster epic, it would have been nice if a little more time and money had been spent on the screenplay. The first few minutes of the movie throws a ton of information at the viewer — the doomed destiny of the Earth, the Sun already wreaking havoc on the global climate, the plan to build massive engines to halt the planet’s orbit and then propel it out of the solar system on its 2,500 year journey to a new home in Alpha Centauri, the massive tsunamis caused by the stopping of the Earth’s rotation, wiping out 75% of the Earth’s population, and giant underground cities constructed below each of these colossal engines to keep what's left of humanity safe — all of this is before we get to learn anything about the film’s group of protagonists.
"Just sit right back and you'll hear a tale, a tale of a fateful trip."
We are first introduced to Liu Peiqiang (Jing Wu), an astronaut who will be part of the flight crew aboard “The Navigational Platform International Space Station,” which will be guiding the Earth on its long journey to Alpha Centauri. Unfortunately, Liu’s first shift is seventeen years long, so this means abandoning his young son Liu Qi to the care of his father-in-law Han Zi'ang (Man-Tat Ng). When the film jumps ahead seventeen years later, we find his now grown son (Chuxiao Qu) has become a rebellious, resentful young man, furious with his father for not only leaving him, but also blaming him for the death of his mother — her dying of some undefined illness and thus not being eligible for the lottery that picked people to occupy the underground cities. So one day Liu Qi decides to take his adoptive sister Han Duoduo (Jin Mai Jaho) to the planet’s surface, which requires getting a black market environment suit from nefarious criminals, and it’s after getting arrested for joy-riding in his grandfather’s massive truck, that disaster strikes."Tonight on Ice Road Truckers."
The Earth was supposed to use Jupiter’s gravity to assist her exit from our solar system, but when a gravitational spike from the gas giant causes devastating earthquakes, which disables many of the thrusters located across the globe, it starts to pull the Earth towards it. With mere hours to get those thrusters back online, or see the Earth collide with Jupiter, all truckers are recruited to transport a lighter core (an engine component to restart the nearest planetary thruster engine). Joy-riders Liu Qi and Han Duoduo are basically press-ganged into the mission — with Liu Qi being a selfish dick about it long enough for us to really come to hate him — until eventually it comes down to just this one plucky group standing between the Earth’s survival or its utter destruction.What follows is an action-packed thrill ride that is as fun to watch as it is impossible to believe, and if the whole premise of a “Wandering Earth” seems ludicrous to you — which, to be fair, will mostly likely be everyone watching this thing — the complete lack of actual science in this science fiction movie will break you. If you start questioning things like “How does the Earth retain its gravity while traveling through space?” or “Can a frozen planet, one that is hurtling through space, retain an atmosphere?” you may find yourself being yanked out of the narrative, but director Frant Gwo does his best to keep the action flying fast and furious so as not to give the viewer too much time to think of how ridiculous it all is.
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