Aniara (2018) Poster

(2018)

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6/10
Very Difficult Movie to Grade.
jburtonprod-802-75902923 September 2019
On one level this movie is a success. It's an engaging, non-commercial Sci-fi film that is well acted, directed and produced. It held my attention and made me want to find out the fate of the ship and crew.

I knew nothing of the poem. I knew nothing other than what the trailer contained. It is incredibly difficult to adapt a poem which is tied more than any other literary form to the word, into a mostly visual medium. Since the screenwriter seemed to jettison the words of the poem what we are left with is an outline. That's where some problems begin. The poem was written in 1956, when space travel hadn't even started. So, it's pretty lame when a space ship the size of the Aniara doesn't have redundant power and a number of backup plans for when/if things go wrong. But hey, we're already in outer space, disbelief is suspended, so, shut the hell up. There's a bunch character driven scenes but none of character ever develop. The really all stay the same no matter what they've been through. Also Instead of a fully developed story we get inundated with a series of let downs which really come off as more of a drag than tragic. I mean would it really be that bad to be traveling through space? The filmmakers certainly seem sure it is. There's some poignant moments throughout, to be sure. The problem is it's all for a movie that just peters out. What may have had great resonance on the page doesn't make it through the translation to screen.

I think if they had stronger conclusion to what happens to the main character at the end the movie would've worked better. That way the ultimate ending would've become a post script. That didn't happen, so we're left with a movie that just stops on some sort of note about 'the vastness of space'.

All this makes 'Aniara' unsatisfying even though it's well done on many levels.
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5/10
So disappointed
rw-1560428 January 2019
I had... great expectations. The poem made a profound impression on me as a young boy when I read it the first time at around 12 or 13 years of age. The vision of the ship with its hapless passengers drifting endlessly across the infinite void, unable to change their ultimate destiny, descending into inevitable darkness struck a chord that still reverberates within me decades later.

Unfortunately the directors lost the ball. Instead of a much anticipated visual retelling of the epic poem we get bad acting and strange decisions on the cutting board. It seems to me the problem with the actors is that they seem to have been recruited more or less directly from the theatre, obviously a forum they are more comfortable with. The dialog is presented in a strange intonation making it stilted and unnatural. It feels false, recited rather than truly experienced. Neither are the characters given much room to become people in the eyes of the audience. Mostly they lack depth and feel more like paper cutouts, hastily put in place and given a token smear of storyline just enough to separate them from the others, rather than as real living people. Transitions between scenes ar... BLAM STOP BLACK SCREEN almost in the middle of a sentence and then a written text proclaiming the next chapter. So strange. So unnatural. So disruptive.

Yes, the movie had a limited budget which explains some of the shortcuts that had to be taken, but... 20 million actually is quite substantial sum as the story doesn't need much in the way of special effects or expensive sets, not really. The focus on the poem is not on the surroundings or the interior of the ship, but on the interactions between the people on board. No, lesbochock nudity and explicit orgies does not cover the vast rifts in the storytelling, though predicibly the attempt was made. The end result isn't bad, not really. It's worse, it's meh. Meh meh meh.

No, I am not a script writer, nor a director, in fact I have no experience with film making but... this could have been done better. So much better. So disappointed.
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7/10
Pure dread sci fi
marneyparadis-1335616 November 2021
This is a type of apocalyptic storytelling that is so beautiful. It doesn't hinge on false futurisms or morality - it is based on the sorrows that define our lives when we lose all hope. A slow burn that is so worth the indulgence.
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7/10
Lives up to it's name
emmett_mcgowan9 August 2019
The name Aniara comes from the ancient Greek for "sad and despairing" and it lives up to the title. I haven't read the poem that it is based on, but it is a really solid sci-fi. The acting is good throughout, and I never felt that I was watching a low budget movie. This is a perfect example of what independent films should be.
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6/10
What happens when a poem is filmed.
Shuggy1 August 2019
This is based on a much-loved poem in Swedish written in 1956 (when my school debating club seriously considered "That man will never reach the moon"). Bear that in mind and much makes sense - more sense than the poem ever did to me when I first tried to read it. Much that purports to be science is just poetry. The film-makers have made some attempt to update the plot and the setting, bearing in mind that we have all seen 2001: a Space Odyssey..

The science is still cheesy. The ship has lost all its fuel, but power is uninterrupted and water is abundant (there is not only an extended lesbian shower scene, but a 20m swimming pool!). The architecture of the ship is absurdly angular, but nothing ever springs a leak. The ship's interior has been compared to a shopping mall and a cruise ship, but manufactured goods never show any sign of running out, and the whole thing seems absurdly understaffed.

It's basically an exploration of how an isolated group of people copes when it is cut off from Earth, its memories and hope. The main characters are sufficiently well drawn to explore these themes in, for me, a satisfying way. On those terms, it does well and is worth watching, though you must fill the hints in the chapter headings with your own deductions.
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6/10
adrift in space
dromasca8 January 2021
'Aniara', the film made in 2018 by the Swedes Pella Kagerman and Hugo Lilja has the ambition of being a cosmic saga of proportions, a film in which a lot of talent, energy and hopes have been invested. The action takes place entirely on a spaceship, but not the exploration of space concerned the two authors (screenwriters and directors) of the film. Even though quite a lot has been invested in building a spaceship model that competes with similar ones in American movies, and even if the sets and props manage to create an interesting imaginary world, it is clear that the authors' attention has focused on the fate of some of the heroes and on the way they face an extreme situation, in which plans for the future are canceled or at best postponed, and the present becomes an infinite journey through a deserted space. 'Aniara' is at the same time a saga but also a story about people's reactions and the evolution of their relationships in extreme conditions.

The story of the film takes place in the near and foreseeable future in which the Earth has become either too small or uninhabitable for mankind, and a part of the population colonizes the planet Mars. Space ship Aniara is a kind of a Titanic of those times, a huge luxury space carrier, with all the comfort necessary for the three months of travel. The main heroine of the film, Mimaroben (or MR - Emelie Garbers) is the operator of a cyber salon (I am looking for a suitable term) called MIMA that combines virtual reality with artificial intelligence to offer passengers personalised experiences reminiscent of the natural ambience of the lost earthly paradise. The journey is suddenly disrupted by an incident caused by 'cosmic garbage' in which the huge space shuttle loses its ability to control the trajectory. Passengers are told that instead of three months the journey will take two years, but in fact this information is also inaccurate, because in reality the spacecraft is simply drifting in the infinite cosmic ocean. Thousands of passengers and crew members only gradually find out the truth and realize that their journey may take an eternity. The social environment that combines tourist efficiency with Scandinavian civilisation is gradually falling apart. MIMA transforms from escapist entertainment into a hallucinatory drug and object of worship. How long will the machines last? How long will people last? What happens to our civilisation when it is removed forever from the environment in which we were born?

What I liked. The film raises many interesting issues and opens up discussions worth undertaking. Emelie Garbers assumes excellently the lead role, with twists and turns of destiny that combine the collective experience with the personal one. The narrative construction is solid, even if the outcome is somewhat predictable. The sets of the impressing 'cosmic mall' traveling through space and degrading as hopes are shattered, civilisation disintegrates and violence, despair and superstition take over the survivors are presented gradually and interestingly. What I liked less. With the exception of MR, the rest of the characters are either schematically constructed (the captain of the expedition played by Arvin Kananian) or insufficiently psychologically justified (the heroine's partner - Bianca Cruzeiro). There is also a poetic thread (the film is based on a poem by a famous Swedish poet) that is lost, and the metaphor of the MIMA system (perhaps inspired by Stanislaw Lem and Tarkovsky's 'Solaris') fails to convince.

'Aniara' is an ambitious project that offers a space saga different from action movies, with less special effects and more ideas and directions for thougt and discussion. The heroes of the film are not space explorers but passengers, ordinary people like us, suddenly faced with the problems of existence and survival. Even if the execution is not perfect, even if many of the action threads are suddenly interrupted or lead nowhere, it is an interesting film for science fiction fans and not only for them.
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3/10
Disjointed and tiresome (mild spoilers)
kim_smoltz23 May 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Contains mild spoilers.

"Aniara" is an ambitious film project that attempts to bring Harry Martinson's eponymous poem to life on the big screen. At an unknown point in the future (likely several hundred years), Earth is no longer hospitable due to climate change, and humans have begun full colonization of Mars in an attempt to escape inevitable extinction. The method of transportation is a 3-week "space cruise" on the luxury craft Aniara. Sadly, the ship is knocked off course and is doomed to drift indefinitely until the ship runs into a celestial body, at which point they hope to use gravity to slingshot the ship back into orbit.

Full disclosure: I have not read Martinson's poem, or had even heard of it until this film was released. I am going to review this film solely on its own merits. Unfortunately, my work is cut out for me.

The plot is undeniably intriguing, especially to the sci-fi fan, or the dystopian future buffs. As it so happens, I fall into both categories, and I was really excited to see how this extremely limited release film would capture my attention.

80% of "Aniara" did the exact opposite of this, due to a few reasons. The most thrilling moment in this film is when the captain announces that the ship has gone off course, which is met with an audible gasp by the passengers. You can watch that in the trailer. After that, things sort of return to normal. People play mini golf, drink at trendy clubs, shop for suits, and have sex with each other. This served to completely remove me from the claustrophobic themes that are supposed to be present. In the very few scenes where people are shown to be in physical danger or in existential panic, things are resolved neatly and quickly, again cheapening the experience.

The film is divided into chapters (think Lars von Trier) that skip ahead several years each, and we are supposed to fill in the blanks of what goes on in between chapters. There are very few (maybe four?) main characters, whose story arcs are cheapened due to lack of character development caused by these giant jumps in time. I'm a fan of dividing films into chapters, but when it is a choice made at the expense of character and plot development, it falls on its face. This is made worse by the fact that the key interpersonal relationship in the film -- Mimaroben (Emelie Jonsson) and Isagel (Bianca Cruzeiro) -- seems to blossom without the audience giving a chance to learn about the characters. There is supposed to be a strong emotional impact based on this relationship, but I couldn't feel a thing because I knew next to nothing about them. There were so many moments in the film I wished I could rewind to a scene they never shot. I can't tell whether the characters are stale and one-dimensional, or if this was just a massive blunder on the directors' part.

More themes are introduced in each chapter, seemingly out of nowhere:

The most brazen example is a bizarre and completely unnecessary ritualistic orgy scene (pretty much ripped from Stanley Kubrick's "Eyes Wide Shut") that is never explained or mentioned again. Speaking of graphic sex and nudity, there's a ton of it, and none of it seemed to be relevant or necessary. It seemed to be shoe-horned in for a bit of eye candy, which is just annoying and stale to me.

Another great example is the idea of running out of food -- it's mentioned early on that eventually the passengers will need to survive solely on algae (yes, algae), and they recruit passengers to work on the algae farms, but there is no depiction of panic from running out of actual food. The movie just goes on, business as usual. Wouldn't that be a good thing to focus on in this movie that is supposedly supposed to be about a space disaster?

Yet another example is how an AI entity on board suddenly goes rogue for no reason, takes on a speaking personality, and then is shut down because it's malfunctioning. It's just never explained or mentioned again.

I could legitimately go on with several more examples, but you get the picture.

I hate when I start waiting for a film to end, but that's what happened to me and "Aniara." Eventually I just checked out. There are a bunch of quality sci-fi disaster films that deal with isolation, existentialism, and claustrophobia in a much better manner. You can skip this one.
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8/10
The poem is a masterpiece of esoteric science-fiction literature; and this is an unexpectedly impressive adaptation with a chilling dénouement
Bertaut19 September 2019
The transitory nature of human existence, especially when set against the infinity of space and time, has been the inspiration for countless science-fiction narratives. A theme which has only become more relevant as the years go by and we find ourselves in the midst of an increasingly certain man-made extinction event, a fine example is Harry Martinson's poem, Aniara: en revy om människan i tid och rum [trans. Aniara: fragments of time and space] (1956), which is about the crippling contemplation of meaninglessness that consumes the passengers of a vast spaceship (the eponymous Aniara) set adrift in the void of space. An adaptation of the poem, this exceptionally well made film is the debut feature from writers/directors Pella Kagerman and Hugo Lilja, and is in the tradition of such esoteric texts as 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), Solyaris (1972), Sunshine (2007), and High Life (2018). And yes, the characters are a little underdeveloped, with only a couple getting much of an arc, and yes, the science isn't exactly kosher, but irrespective of that, this is a provocative, morally complex, and existentially challenging film that I thoroughly enjoyed.

Set at an unspecified point in the future, Earth has reached a point of irreversible decay, and humanity is making a new home on Mars. The Aniara is a massive vessel that takes passengers on the three-week trip from a lunar docking station to the red planet. As the film begins, we meet the unnamed protagonist (Emelie Garbers). An employee on the Aniara, she is in charge of MIMA, (hence her job as a Mimarobe, or MR for short), a semi-sentient holodeck-like technology, that can scan people's thoughts, and allow them to experience whatever is best suited for their psyche (for example, we see MR exploring a vibrant forest). A week into the voyage, however, Captain Chefone (Arvin Kananian) is forced to jettison the vessel's nuclear core to avoid catastrophy after a minor collision with space debris. However, the ship is now off-course, and without the core, the crew have no way of turning her around, leaving them drifting into the darkness of space. And so, as months turn into years, with no hope of rescue, and as people find themselves unable to face reality, MIMA becomes essential for their mental well-being. However, MIMA wasn't designed to be exposed to so many negative emotions for such a prolonged time, and soon she starts to show signs of failing.

As mentioned, Aniara was written in 1956 by Swedish Nobel laureate Harry Martinson (the title is derived from the Ancient Greek word meaning "despairing"). The poem is more allegorical than the film, and was written, at least in part, as a reaction to the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the developing Cold War, Walter Baade's doubling of the estimated distance from the Milky Way to Andromeda in 1953, and Soviet suppression of the 1956 Hungarian revolution. The film is divided into nine chapters, which mark the passage of time. So, for example, the first three chapters are "Hour 1: Routine Voyage", "Week 3: Without a Map" and "Year 3: The Yurg". The titles of some of the later chapters contain pseudo-spoilers, so I won't mention them here, but when the title of the last chapter appeared on screen, I was so sure I'd misread it that I had to ask my friend for confirmation. Turned out I'd read it just fine; this last title contains all the existential dread and mind-bending contemplation of infinity that you could ever want. And it's an absolutely haunting way to end the film.

Much as is the case with the poem, the film looks at issues such as the possibility that we have already irreparably damaged the planet, the impermanence of human existence, and the sense of meaninglessness that can result when mankind is faced with the eternity of time and space. In relation to this, the film spends a good deal of time on the idea that human civilisation is essentially a construct that we use to shield us from the bleak reality that we are utterly insignificant, and when that construct is removed, we revert to barbarism. So, basically your typical multiplex stuff. The passengers on the Aniara become increasingly unable to stave off the encroaching malaise born from the hopelessness of their situation and the meaninglessness of their existence, and one of the most important lines in the film is when MR is told "everything we do is peripheral". Uplifting stuff.

One of the film's most interesting themes concerns MIMA, which is depicted as half-mind control, half-narcotic. As she becomes more important post-collision, it doesn't take long for people to become dependent on her, with large queues forming, and people at the back trying to bribe MR to get in early. Then, when MR hires another employee, she explains that she'll need to "teach them to resist the images", recalling the way people who work in pharmaceutical factories are randomly drug-tested. That's the narcotic element. At the same time, when a passenger proves unable to handle reality and becomes violent, he is forced to experience MIMA against his will and is rendered unconscious. That's the mind-control element. However, MIMA is also semi-sentient, and she soon proves reluctant to continue processing the never-ending onrush of negative emotions, with the passengers' sense of pointlessness and despair becoming overwhelming, to the point that she tells MR, in a surprisingly moving scene, "I want peace". HAL 9000 she is not; he'd have been able to suck it up.

Another theme, of course, is mankind's destruction of Earth. Whereas once, science fiction narratives focused on nuclear warfare as humanity's probable extinction event, in recent times, global warming and ecological disaster have become far more pervasive. Indeed, Martinson himself was something of a pioneer in this field, positing that we were destroying the planet long before climate change had entered the zeitgeist. In relation to this, the possibility that we may colonise other worlds is now seen not as something to facilitate exploration, but to facilitate survival. Of course, this is rendered all the more terrifying because it's not something only found in the realm of fiction - the planet is dying. But when you have a US president who ignores the scientific evidence of his own people, routinely rolls back environmental protections, and continually confuses weather and climate, the possibility of our changing course seems remote, just like the Aniara. This theme is never examined explicitly - we never learn the year in which the film is set, whether or not Earth has already died and is entirely uninhabitable or is simply on the way, nor what exactly it was that sent us into the cosmos - but it's touched on obliquely throughout and is a good example of how the film subtly engages with themes without necessarily foregrounding them.

Moving away from thematic concerns, the film's aesthetic is absolutely gorgeous. Made with a relatively small budget, the CGI is basic but highly effective. For the Aniara interiors, rather than building elaborate original sets, much of the film was shot in shopping malls and on ferries, which makes sense, as the Aniara is essentially a giant shopping mall/hotel, not unlike a luxury cruise ship. For the sets that were built from scratch, they are matched seamlessly to the location work, with the sleek minimalist post-modern (one might even say Ikea-like) style of Linnéa Pettersson and Maja-Stina Åsberg's production design working well to suggest rigid functionality.

In terms of problems, perhaps the most significant is the lack of character arcs (although this is also true of the poem). This is felt most in the lack of disparate viewpoints on the Aniara where it would have been interesting to meet characters with distinct beliefs, backgrounds, and denominations (although, having said that, the poem has no such characters). Does this leave the viewer with little with which to engage and no characters with whom to empathise? Yes, to a certain extent it does, but this is by design; the film isn't asking us to fall in love with a cast of well-rounded characters, it's asking us to engage with it at an esoteric level.

I will concede, however, that the science has some issues. Why, for example, would a ship the size of the Aniara be used as a short-distance transport vessel? It's mentioned several times that she wasn't built for long-term habitation, but if so, why are there so many amenities on board, why is the life-support system self-regulating, why are the algae farms designed to produce food indefinitely? And the practical nature of her size (4,750 meters long and 891 meters wide) throws up its own problems. Mars is (on average) 140 million miles from Earth, so for the Aniara to complete the journey in three weeks, she would need to travel at an average velocity of 277,777 miles per hour. Newton's second law of motion states that "force equals mass times acceleration"; in short, the greater the mass and the greater the speed, the more force it takes to slow down, and the power needed to slow something this big moving at such a speed is virtually unfathomable.

Nevertheless, the surrounding film is so accomplished, I can easily forgive the scientific inconsistencies. As aesthetically impressive as it is morally complex, as esoterically fascinating as it is unrelentingly despairing, this is a hugely impressive debut film. Equal parts haunting and provocative, the picture it paints of a humanity faced with its own extinction isn't a pretty one, but it is an urgent one, as we hurtle towards our own extinction, rapidly approaching the point where, like the Aniara, we will no longer have the capacity to turn around. And when we reach that point, our collective future will consist of nothing but the indifferent darkness and deafening silence of the infinite.
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7/10
Aniara
henry8-310 September 2020
Following the destruction of the earth , the spaceship Aniara transports thousands to their new home on Mars. Hit by space debris it is knocked off course and unable to resume its journey so must drift in space indefinitely requiring passengers to reconsider their lives.

Despite the lack of a Hollywood budget, you really do buy into this epic sci fi piece which is seen largely through the eyes of one woman who must over the course of the voyage take on many different responsibilities both professionally and personally. The effects are fine and the storyline which essentially tracks how life is redeveloped is realistically communicated and totally believable. A small gem for sci fi lovers to seek out.
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5/10
Great setup, but I don't think the film delivered
brianberta4 January 2021
The ideas for a great film are certainly here. A group of people attempting to form a society in a spaceship after they have no hope of making it back to civilization which is set against their deteriorating mental states is definitely an interesting concept. I mainly enjoyed seeing the various ways the passengers coped with this, such as cults or sex orgies popping up, or the Mima being heavily relied on by the passengers as a way to keep calm. I appreciated the undercurrents of escapism in these scenes and I responded the most to them. In that sense, the film is at its best when one views these scenes in a vacuum for their stylistic and sensory merits.

Skimming through some critical reviews, I noticed that a lot of people liked the production design. I enjoyed some elements of it such as the exterior shots of the ship or the framing of the Mima. Overall though, I wasn't a fan of it. While I didn't mind that the interior of the ship didn't look futuristic, I wish that more work would've been put into it as it felt like the film was mostly shot in a shopping center and a hotel. To a degree, this distracted me as I could feel its low budget.

Also, after finishing the film, I couldn't shake the feeling that, in spite of all its craft and ideas, it had ultimately failed to connect with me. For one, I wasn't a big fan of the pacing. The film operated at a high pace, leading to a handful of segments and some various scenes being glossed over, as if the film was always in a hurry to get to the next scene. This style of pacing clashed poorly with how mundane and uneventful life on the ship was, making it hard to get on the character's wavelengths. While I don't think that every film should represent sculpting in time, displaying such felt especially necessary for this film concerning its tone. I also felt like the pacing harmed a few character motivations since there wasn't enough breathing room to flesh the ideas out in them fully, like the Astronomer's or Isagel's final scenes in the film.

Overall, I wasn't too impressed by this film. The groundwork for a great film is certainly here and the film managed to work a couple wonders out of its script, but ultimately, I don't think the film delivered on its promising setup and it ultimately left me cold.
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8/10
Bergman in space?
Groverdox5 March 2020
Toward the end of "Aniara" I kept thinking: thank god Bergman never made a science fiction movie. If you think Mother Earth is bleak, wait until you get lost in space, like the characters in "Aniara" do. And you truly do feel as though you're lost with them.

There are few ideas more appalling than drifting inexorably through the infinite blackness of space, not knowing if you're ever going to stop. "Aniara" provides a bleak portrait of people losing their minds as this goes on, resorting to cults, orgies and suicide.

It's a bit like "2001: A Space Odyssey" in reverse. That was about the development of the human species from pre-sapien species to our becoming one with the stars. "Aniara" begins with the stars, rejects oneness, and shows our utter devolution in space.

I say check it out.
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7/10
Space titanic without the cheesyness. 100% Recommend!!
jonerez20 July 2019
Warning: Spoilers
After checking the trailer for this feature I was kinda intrigued. I expected some big depressing narrative with random sex scenes sprinkled for good measure (which I got) and a mature sci-fi focused on hero thrown into space (which was way off). At the end however the positives outnumbered the negatives, and I can say the movie does in fact offer very interesting perspectives into themes like determinism and group thinking.

This is definitely not an emotional film. Cero focus on our protagonist motivations, any traditional character arcs, or building any kind of personal connection with what we are seeing. However is a fascinating study of the psychology of trauma at large:, how those stuck in this spaceship try to cope with the horror of being imprisoned in an eternal trip into nothingness. I think the movie does a fantastic job at keeping up things real in that regard.

The movie looked good, the editing was nice, the soundtrack was ok to boring, and I thought it was very refreshing to finally have a movie without any kind of explanatory moments where all the characters detail their motivations plans and fears to the void for no reason. The time jumping functioned really well and the movie managed to move forward with very little to no action. I never felt like the movie dragged, except for that scene...

Yes, the orgy scene is gratuitous. Of course religious sex rituals exist in real life when traumatized people try to get connection and meaning, but the oysho moment comes out of nowhere, as others have said. If we're going to take the 'it just happened' approach, at least make obvious the motivations behind it for our characters. Do they want more sex to numb themselves? to get a spiritual experience? intimacy? no idea.

It also bugged me that no one cared about the logistics of algae surviving, oxygen purifying, infinite water and alcohol generating boat with zero communication systems. Is not the focus of the movie, of course, but reducing everything to 'it's the future' to go straight into the social engineering was very weird. Apart from that, the whole MIMA-AI consciousness plot was very interesting.I was not expecting the 'suicide', the cult-following or the attempts to replicate it, and I left the movie thinking a lot about it.

This doesn't get 8 stars though because of the ending. Wasn't expecting any kind of epic twist or anything, but lazy is the best adjective I could find for it .Overall this didn't stop me from enjoying the film, but it made it feel amateur when it was obvious there was decent production behind it and a strong concept.
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4/10
Dire look at life through a thinly-veiled metaphor
blott2319-121 August 2020
One thing I can say for certain is that Aniara sucks you into its story. I was entranced by this film early on, and intrigued to see how it would all unfold. From the beginning, it is truly masterful at world-buildiing without needing too much expositioin to set things up. As things start to go wrong, the film becomes a fascinating look at the different things that drive and inspire society (and also the way people view existence.) You can definitely see the direct thematic correlation between the main characters in this film and different people in our own world who all take unique perspectives on the meaning of life. However, as time wore on, this film started to wear on me. I feel their point was made earlier, and yet we continue to watch as things spiral downwards for our main character and all those around her. The novelty of being on this spaceship disappears, the people aboard the Aniara begin to devolve, and the depressing tone of the story becomes almost impossible to tolerate. I understood the message the writer/directors were making about halfway through and yet things continued to drag on for another hour. By the end, I simply felt miserable and wondered why I had sat through it all. That's not to say that the film is ineffective. In fact, it nails the tone, and takes you on this oppressive journey through the desperation of life without meaning. I simply hated the experience because I prefer to cling to hope in real life and when watching a movie.
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6/10
Super unscientific? Sure, but that's not what broke it
lamieur23 October 2019
I don't consider this a spoiler - especially if you're in the reviews section, you already know this is very very loose sci-fi. You have 3 weeks Earth to Mars journey, you have artificial gravity at all times... except the exact moment when there's actual gravity and the film shows zero gravity instead. But if you're like me, you know not all sci-fi is hard, sometimes you can have a movie with engine sound in space (this one has that, even though the whole premise is that the ship has no engines running, take that, Star Wars!).

So that's all acceptable. Sci-fi doesn't need to be about physics. I did ask myself how come a ship with full power, working telescopes and radiotelescopes (we even see antennas turning to point at objects, everything works) couldn't establish communication with Earth or Mars bases. BUT! The only reason why I was even allowed time to ask myself this was because there was nothing else to take my mind off it.

You see, the movie is about being stranded in space. I'm a sci-fi fan, I enjoy books and movies that include stuff that's completely anti-science, but is used as background to a good story.

Problem is, this has no good story. Premise is good, many things are omitted that should happen, but again - should be no problem, as long as the omissions lead to showing something else.

Except nothing leads to anything. Whole movie is built around stuff that can't happen even in the movie's fictional universe (explained above), but even there, people do stuff they wouldn't actually do. There's some promise in second act, I was really enjoying those things (again - no spoilers), but nothing leads to anything.

And the ending, oh, the ending! Not only it makes no sense in a physical universe, but it simply scratches everything that happened in the 100 minutes up to that point, on every level!

This is still not a spoiler, but the ending is a sequence that is all done in post. My hypothesis: a test group gave an earlier cut of the movie bad notes because it wasn't what they hoped it would be / they didn't like the ending. So someone decided they will add an ending that should satisfy... I don't even know who. No one who is ever going to see a film like this will be happy with this ending. It's beyond ridiculous, scientifically bankrupt (think: actual magic) and it was made in CGI after the movie was filmed.

Absurd.

TL;DR: see it on your own responsibility. It's not hard SF, it's not psychology, it's not character development, it's nothing that you thought it would be. And it has so little nudity or sex that I think people who talk about it in reviews are actually trying to sell it to others (disclaimer: I'm European, I don't need to pretend I haven't seen a girl's breast before)
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6/10
A difficult film to rate, but interesting nonetheless
asandor30 December 2019
Aniara is an interesting science fiction film about a Swedish spaceship transporting colonists to Mars, that is knocked off course ad drifts off into space. The film revolves around a number of characters and how they cope with the vastness and emptiness of space, and the difficulty with facing ones own imminent death.

Aniara is an oddity ,and difficult to fully examine, in my opinion. The film looks quite good, and has a great, science fiction soundtrack. The acting is quite good in many ways, with solid performances all around. Some of the science fiction here is interesting as well, as the film grapples with surviving in space, and all the issues that might entail. However, some of the plot points are quite silly, and the general collapse that the colonists experience feels somewhat forced or odd in certain circumstances. The film has a cerebral aspect to it, which can come across as without substance. Some aspects are interesting, some are mediocre, and some rather tame or silly.

That being said, I still enjoyed my time with this film. As the title states, this is a difficult film to rate, and transcended a like or dislike in my mind. It was certanily interesting to watch, with engaging visuals, solid acting, and an appropriate soundtrack. On the other hand, the directionless feeling of the film, and some of the quirky plot choices are a detraction. This film garners a 6/10 from me, meaning it is overall enjoyable, with a number of aspects that detract from a higher score in my mind.
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An Interesting Movie For People Who Like Their Sci-Fi Deep
amoore-210 September 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Overall I enjoyed the movie. However it left many questions unanswered and introduced plot lines that were suddenly dropped and never spoken again in the next epoch. These include the cults and The Spear. I also would have liked to see a resolution to the captain having to atone for his crimes. Finally, we are told that the ship has lost the ability to maneuver, except they later on maneuver the ship in order to dock with The Spear. I'd also say a lot more interesting story happened between year 10 and year 24 but we didn't get to see that.

But after that, there is so many things that the film does right- the space elevator; many of the characters are physically disfigured due to the climate catastrophe on earth; the long, slow drudgery of what it would be like cooped up in a starship, year after year (albeit a massive starship). Even the passengers wish to escape, even if by artificial means (the MIMA) and the eventual self-destruction of same when the AI realises that humans are to blame for everything and no longer wants to have anything to do with them- a great invert to the whole HAL trope.

This is definitely a film with flaws but one I would recommend to anyone who loves their sci-fi deep.
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7/10
Finally
p0t8027 January 2022
A movie that manages to pay respect to the vastness of space. Great story. Super important and interesting theme and story, that I wish would be covered by more movies or series. Well done.
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4/10
Could have been.
jamalking1518 October 2019
Warning: Spoilers
The utter nonsense of living , futility, fatalism, and meaningless, were the themes of this depressing communal society floating endlessly.

Could have been so much more. The love story did not work, and was difficult to find a character to care about. Even the heroine MR could not draw in your sympathy.

Parallels to earth on the ship was attempted, but since the poem was written 60 years ago, it should have been remodeled to reflect a more promising outlook.
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8/10
5,981,407
SilverOrlov9 February 2021
One of those spot films that have an undeservedly low rating. Not just "well, it could have been higher," but precisely "why the hell is it so low?" For 2018, the graphics are probably not the best where it is needed, and the staging of the entire action of the film a little bit falls, but this is not Hollywood either. For Sweden, I think this is a very, very high level of the film. But this is so small thing... in comparison with the most important thing in that film: the story itself. It's great. Saturated with an extremely correct vision of what would happen to people if they were in a similar situation. And the end, although it was expected, but... The last scene was just very dense and strong.
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7/10
Aniara is a category B film and more importantly, it was shot by Europeans with their views on cinema
eva3si0n16 October 2021
Aniara is a category B film and more importantly, it was shot by Europeans with their views on cinema. For the average viewer, Aniara will seem very boring and cheap. Yes, the budget of the film is poor, it is difficult to call the film a space opera against the background of docorations. But the ending of the film and the hopelessness of the situation distinguish the film among others. I advise you to look at those people who love space operas, but are already tired of the typical framework of the history of this genre.
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3/10
Unrealistic Sci-fi
keithomusic14 November 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Warning Major Spoilers There is very little of the drama that should have been there and absolutely no tension, these people are drifting in space with no way to control their ship, there should be all kinds of tension. We are never emotionally invested in any of the characters, most of the actors seem to be just reciting their lines.

This could have been a decent movie, and I could have suspended my disbelief for it, but it is in no way realistic. There are just so many things wrong with this. First of all, where did that debris come from? They seem to have made this trip regularly, if some other ship on that same route had been damaged wouldn't they be aware of it? They lost all the fuel, yet always had enough power to heat and light the entire ship? And they have enough food on board for 2 years but it's only a 3 week trip? And in year 3 there was still enough alcohol to party with? And there were no murders or riots, I'm pretty sure that after 2 years of drifting through space people are gonna get crazy. There are things that happen in one chapter and are never mentioned again, like one chapter they have an epidemic of suicides, but that is never mentioned again. in another chapter they capture some sort of probe that turns out to be alien technology, so they can't figure it out and afterwards it's never mentioned again. Nothing is connecting these chapters together not even the few main characters. There is no way that people would have lasted 7 years in space. let alone the 24 this movie implies, and it is unlikely that the spaceship would have lasted the 5 million years it took to get to a star system in the Lyra constellation.

And there is some nudity and a bit of simulated sex, but only about 5 minutes total. Who cares about the poem this is based on, until I read the reviews I was unaware of it, and I have no desire to read it.
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8/10
A long journey
kosmasp28 October 2021
I have to admit, after watching the 1960 version, also based on the same source, this was a breath of fresh air! No pun intended, although air itself is not really a problem here. Staying sane on the other hand ... that is an issue.

If you take on a trip, you plan on how long you'll be away and when you'll be back. Even if you plan that there may be complications, you could not calculate what happens here. And while you may wonder and think about science - I would advise you not too! Because the movie itself is above that and cares more about the humans and what happens to them. Now it could be displayed a bit better, there always could also be more enticing and gripping depictions of individuals ... but as it is, the movie is more than able to give us the fear and terror, while trying to stay optimistic and sane at the same time.

The pacing may be a problem with some, but it is quite the update to the 1960 version! Of course they had more money here, technology improved and so much more. This also is way more explicit when it comes to nudity and sexuality. Obviously something that could not have been done in the 60s. If you like Science Fiction that gives you food for thought (again no pun intended), this may be for you. As I said on the other movie, I have not read the source this is based on.
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7/10
Space is really big and we all die
robertsjason5510 October 2019
Warning: Spoilers
I just watched High Life two days before I watched this. I think I've seen enough European* Existential Space Movies for one week. But at least the sex scenes aren't nearly as disturbing as High Life.

I did like this one. I wouldn't recommend thinking about the science too much** By the end of it I was feeling claustrophobic, depressed and desperate, but in a good way.

* yes I know High Life is English language, but the director is French. And it feels like it.

** no extra fuel rods in storage or auxiliary rockets? How can they keep the ship powered up for years but have no power to steer the ship? No way to abandon the ship when it went off course? Why does a virtual reality type device have consciousness? Would it really use this consciousness to commit suicide? Why did they have so much algae again, other than as a plot device to explain feeding everyone when the ship sent off course? Wouldn't they run out of booze after about 2 months? Can you ferment algae booze?
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4/10
So much to say
Roemming14 November 2019
Warning: Spoilers
I don't even know where to start.

I LOVE space movies, and when i saw the movie was Swedish together with Viaplay, i knew i had to watch it.

But. what the F.... The effects was great i, so it seemed like they had everything to make a great space blockbuster movie. Yet the plot, it seemed solid from what i read on Viaplay.

Boy was i wrong, i mean, it wasn't a disaster. But as a HUGE space movie fanatic, this was kind of a disappointment and it hurts to say, it really does.

So, we have a reactor failure, and are then forced to eject the fuel rods. "Because for some reason in the future space travel, we couldn't find a better energy source, and the fact that, how it worked with the engines wasn't addressed annoys me." After ejecting the rods, there is apparently no more left on the ship. Because backup is overrated, am i right?

Also only one reactor? I mean, a normal power plant as far as i know, has at least two or more reactors.

Why is no one out there assessing the damage? Surely a ship that size must have more than one engine, just look at big container ships, or big airplanes, every single one has more that one engine. And if a ship is stranded in the ocean, people can still get to it. So why is BIGGER safety precautions not being in place regarding space flight? And why aren't they contacting others for help???

Anyway, this Mima. Great idea, some sort of VR and augmented reality in one, loved it. But why, just why would you put feelings in to the equation of the AI, and why would an escape reality sim, have an AI in the first place? Seems kinda weird..

And then the rogue captain, seriously what a cliche.. This makes me feel so angry watching people in high positions making these absolute dumb decisions.. The fact that he refuses to listen to and under stand his co-workers, when they're a special engineer in the field. (I'm talking about 'Mimaroben'") And then have the guts to be this bad ass in the gym and act all mighty is just so ridiculous, what kind of captain with this mentality would even get close to a job like this? And then lying to the entire ship about the situation- Just why... Who would do that? You didn't have to say the exact state of the problem, but could say something like, "yes we have a problem, and we are assessing the damage, we will return with further information" Its like none and the captain too, didn't have any training in a situation like this, and also none in crowd control under distress situations.. Again, what the F.. This is really where the plot has holes and or doesn't connect.

They can spot a probe very far away, but not a piece of junk flying towards them, before its to late? Really? all this high tech...

The gabbling operators, why are they new? Where is the crew? Why is there no one in the crew who can and are already trained?

Where is all the alcohol coming from, and why do they have more liqueur than fuel?

What provides this much power when the reactor is down? And why is this power not directed towards the engines, assuming they run on power? Also, why waste power on parties and such.

Now whats with the people and the way they act. I don't even know what to say about it, its so far from reality as it could be.. No one in a almost plane crash, is gonna tell the captain during hes speech, 'I told my son i was gonna be there for hes 4th birthday' As if she didn't understand the seriousness of the situation...

Also look at festivals, and how many people are attending contrary to how few guards there is, this proves that crowd control can be done correctly, with the right education. Or riots.

It was fine overall, i try to see everything from different perspectives, but there was so many things that annoyed me about the plot. There is not many movies like this here in Scandinavia, so it saddens me that the plot feel so rushed, and if no one actually thought about the must simple and common things. It wasn't ready and the people who wrote it, should have had some help from someone professional who could guide them in the right direction of common sense, even in a fantasy-fiction space movie. Hell, the first doom movie has a better and more solid plot..

So to me the plot is holding the movie back for me. Not the effects or the acting. It would all have been better under a more "controlled" Script..

And there for it only get a 4 from me..

I apologize for the long review, but i had to get this out. I Really hope we here in Scandinavia can make more movies of this sort, and be on the level with the bigger studios.
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Swedish sci-fi has some intersting notions, if a bit muddled in the telling
gortx21 May 2019
Warning: Spoilers
In an era where sci-fi films are most often an action picture with a couple of science fiction elements tossed in to qualify, ANIARA stands apart, even if its not nearly as successful as one would wish. Unsurprisingly, it's an overseas production based in Sweden (inspired by a poem from that country). Written and Directed collaboratively by Pella Kagerman & Hugo Lilja ANIARA tells the tale of a fateful voyage on a ship of the same name. Decked out to resemble a giant boat cruise ship, it's a mission to Mars. We are told it's a "routine" three week voyage. When an accident occurs, the ship is tossed off course and they become a band of castaways (sorry, couldn't resist the Gilligan's Island references - "A three week tour, a three week tour..."). At this point, it must be said that the viewer is asked to accept a couple of galaxy sized plot holes (I will save it for a small spoiler section, clearly marked, at the end). The movie is broken up into several chapters, but, our principle character is Mimaroben (Emelie Jonsson) a sort of psychic healer (a position which becomes more and more important as the crew drifts aimlessly in space). It's through her eyes and interactions that traverse space and time over the journey. Her bunk-mate is a crusty astronomer (Anneli Martini) who's knowledge of science makes her more and more bitter about the mission's outcome. Mimaroben eventually falls for one of the ship's navigators Isagel (Bianca Cruzeiro). But, 'plot' isn't at the heart of ANIARA. The central point of the excursion to Mars becomes irrelevant to that of simple survival. And, endurance. The grand cruise ship with its opulent restaurants, mall style stores and bowling alleys becomes a contained world all its own. As with any contained society, the span of human emotions and behavior rears its head. While it never dissolves into a Lord Of The Flies type situation, breakdowns are inevitable. Again, if one can get past the plot holes, ANIARA does build up some interest over time. It has an intelligence and determination to follow through on its vision. The production design is quite good for a modestly produced picture, even if one doesn't fully buy that the interior matches the wide exterior views of the craft. As stated at the outset, it's a welcome departure from most mainstream sci-fi releases. Still, the mood is relentlessly grim and the dulled acceptance on the part of the passengers comes much too quickly. Push back against the crew is meek and, frankly, unbelievably so. The screenplay also exhibits much too much mysticism (shades of Danny Boyle's similarly disappointing SUNSHINE). If you can make it past all that, the final few sequences do land with a certain wistful and meaningful impact. And, that's something most sci-fi movies currently can't hold claim to.

**********MINOR SPOILERS************

As I noted, the Mission to Mars is termed "routine" at the beginning of the movie. Yet, we are to believe that there is no backup plan whatsoever? No rescue ships? No space lifeboats? Nothing? And, contact with earth isn't maintained? Yes, the earth is in apparent shambles seen in stock footage flashbacks, but, then how is this a 'routine mission'? If this is some kind of space Noah's ark, why isn't there panic to get aboard? It simply doesn't add up.
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