The Midnight Sky
There's a universe between all of us.
A lone scientist in the Arctic races to contact a crew of astronauts returning home to a mysterious global catastrophe.
Trailers & Videos

The Midnight Sky | Final Trailer | George Clooney | Netflix

THE MIDNIGHT SKY starring George Clooney | Official Trailer | Netflix

THE MIDNIGHT SKY starring George Clooney | Date Announcement | Netflix
Cast

George Clooney
Augustine Lofthouse

Felicity Jones
Sully

David Oyelowo
Adewole

Kyle Chandler
Mitchell

Demián Bichir
Sanchez

Tiffany Boone
Maya

Sophie Rundle
Jean

Ethan Peck
Young Augustine

Tim Russ
Mason Mosley

Miriam Shor
Mitchell's Wife

Lilja Nótt Þórarinsdóttir
Frantic Woman - Katherine

Hanna María Karlsdóttir
Older Woman

Atli Óskar Fjalarsson
Soldier

Tia Bannon
Jasmine

Grant Crookes
Scientific Beneficiary (uncredited)
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Reviews
Peter McGinn
Okay, I get it: I have seen many critiques about this movie relying upon inaccurate science and featuring plot holes here and there. I admit to a bell going off in my head when our main hero Augustus seems to exhibit no death-like characteristics after diving into frigid arctic waters. But I have a tendency to suspend my disbelief in science fiction movies if the characters, the dialogue and the general story keep my interest.
What kept me connected to the action was not the spaceship stuff, but rather the faltering, slowly developing interaction and relationship between Augustus and Iris, the girl left behind during the evacuation. It is handled patiently and believably. I found myself quite invested in them becoming close. (And I am setting aside the odd hints that Iris might not even exist outside Augustus’s own mind.)
The scenes on board the spaceship Augustus is trying to contact were less compelling for me. My, those folks were consummate professionals, weren’t they? They bantered back and forth, but where were their emotions for the most part, except under extreme duress? Besides Maya, I wouldn’t have been shocked to learn they were androids.
The Midnight Sky was entertaining enough to keep my interest, but it seemed to leave several questions in my mind, not the least of which was: it is well and good to send Adam and Eve to populate a new planet, but outside of serious incest, how are they to get past the first generation?
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