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The Aeronauts:A Gripping Fact-based Adventure Movie

Sukanya reviews a fact-based adventure movie, The Aeronauts. An exlusive for Different Truths.

The Aeronauts is a 2019 fact-based adventure movie directed by Tom Harper and penned by Jack Thorne, from an anecdote co-written by Thorne and Harper. The movie is based on the 2013 novel, Falling Upwards: How We Took to the Air by Richard Holmes. Produced by Todd Lieberman, David Hoberman, and Harper, the film features Felicity Jones, Eddie Redmayne, Himesh Patel and Tom Courtenay.

The movie is based on the 2013 novel, Falling Upwards: How We Took to the Air by Richard Holmes. Produced by Todd Lieberman, David Hoberman, and Harper, the film features Felicity Jones, Eddie Redmayne, Himesh Patel and Tom Courtenay.

In 1862, London, aviators James Glaisher and Amelia arrive for the balloon launch. Despite being haunted by an illusion of her late husband Pierre, Amelia keeps up the brave pretense and the balloon launches.

As far as the historical accuracy is concerned, the most significant balloon flight depicted in The Aeronauts is based on the 5 September 1862, flight of British aeronauts James Glaisher and Henry Coxwell whose coal gas filled balloon broke the world flight altitude record, reaching 9,000 to 11,000 m (30,000 to 36,000 ft). However, while Glaisher appears in the movie, Coxwell has been supplanted by Amelia, an imaginary identity.

The Aeronauts is exhilarating to watch. It may hit some of the indistinguishable emotional beats as other movies and though it periodically adheres to the standard biopic recipe, but the discovery considering the sky, and the resolution to unearth reasonable scientific analysis to begin indicating the climate, does put a new and raw viewpoint

In a generation of movie buffs, endlessly captivated by space expeditions, it seems that there is at least one major awards player a year centered on astronauts. The Aeronauts is exhilarating to watch. It may hit some of the indistinguishable emotional beats as other movies and though it periodically adheres to the standard biopic recipe, but the discovery considering the sky, and the resolution to unearth reasonable scientific analysis to begin indicating the climate, does put a new and raw viewpoint to a storytelling path routinely travelled.

As far as the acting is concerned, the chemistry of Eddie Redmayne and Felicity Jones

from The Theory of Everything is still intact. They actually perform even better this time, yet given the cliché emotional fair but without piles of cloying romantic melodrama.

The visuals are spectacular, the entire filming process must have been challenging.

rogerebert.com on that note declares, “The thrill of The Aeronauts lies in its death-defying stunts. The actors may be safe, but the movie makes us forget that with the use of cinematographer George Steel’s clever camera angles and tensioned-filled shots and Mark Eckersley’s quick editing,” said Monica Castillo, December 6, 2019.

There is a huge portion of CGI in this film, all in the effort of putting on a respectable spectacle. Beyond the low-key but truthful mess inside the basket of a gas balloon lays CGI sceneries of 19th century England, which the digital camera seems to marinade in as if it were another eyewitness along for the ride.

There is a huge portion of CGI in this film, all in the effort of putting on a respectable

spectacle. Beyond the low-key but truthful mess inside the basket of a gas balloon lays CGI sceneries of 19th century England, which the digital camera seems to marinade in as if it were another eyewitness along for the ride. Had the whole thing been based on the book, the magic wouldn’t really happen. The sound design is unbelievably good, flickeringmyth.com stated, “ …It also must be stressed that the sound design is incredible (keep in mind, this is not even a review of the IMAX version); you feel the pummeling of the wind, the frigid temperature, and every painful burst of sudden contact against the balloon.

Likewise, the score from Steven Price (especially during the life-threatening third act) amplifies the urgency and danger of the proceedings….” ~ Movie Review – The Aeronauts (2019), November 8, 2019, by Robert Kojder.

Photos from the Internet

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Sukanya Basu Mallik
Sukanya Basu Mallik is a renowned Indian writer, known for her works in various publications and for winning Best Manuscript Awards for fiction & non-fiction categories (Mumbai Litofest, 2018). She is currently pursuing a PhD at IIT Madras, focusing on organisational behaviour and art-based therapies for enhancing teaching-learning effectiveness using immersive technologies. She was recognised for her short story 'Healing of Wounds' at NCLF, led by Ruskin Bond.

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