Brilliant story behind Ryan Gosling’s new hit film, Project Hail Mary | Films | Entertainment | EUROtoday

Ryan Gosling stars in Project Hail Mary based mostly on Andy Weir’s bestseller (Image: AP / Amazon MGM Studios)
- First printed in Daily Express on May 8, 2021.
Science-Fiction author Andy Weir, whose debut novel The Martian offered 5 million copies and have become successful film starring Matt Damon, is making an attempt to elucidate particle physics to me when he breaks into track: “Just remember that you’re standing on a planet that’s evolving, and revolving at 900 miles an hour, that’s orbiting at 19 miles a second, so it’s reckoned, a sun that is the source of all our power…”
It’s not that Weir’s personal rationalization of the universe as an ever-inflating balloon with a diameter of 93 billion mild years is tough to comply with – it’s, regardless of his greatest efforts. It’s that channelling Eric Idle from Monty Python’s iconic Meaning Of Life film is definitely the proper means of summing up his brilliantly entertaining, humorous and meticulously-researched books. Indeed, Weir has been on the forefront of bringing the historically area of interest style of sci-fi to a mainstream viewers in recent times.
“It’s one thing to read a murder mystery and think, ‘This could happen and here’s this clever detective’, it’s another thing to have a fantastical world,” he explains. “It takes a little more suspension of disbelief to enjoy science fiction and fantasy.” Now the self-proclaimed science geek has revisited his best-selling mixture of physics, maths, chemistry and seat-of-your pants journey for a brand new novel, Project Hail Mary, coming to the large display subsequent Thursday (March 19) starring Ryan Gosling.

Weir at NASA’s Johnson Space Center (Image: Courtesy James Blair / NASA)
Read extra: Rest is History star on ‘bonkers dream’, nailing masterpieces and BBC fails
It’s a “what-if” thriller based mostly across the premise the solar is dimming, placing life on earth vulnerable to extinction. Despite the existential risk to humanity imagined by Weir, it is gloriously optimistic, darkly humorous and packed to the brim with actual science.
Weir, who grew up studying Isaac Asimov, Robert Heinlein and Arthur C Clarke, doesn’t consider the long run is the dystopian, fascist dictatorship envisioned by many writers. “Usually sci-fi is action or thriller, that’s what it’s come to be known as,” says the likeable 53-year-old from the house he shares with spouse Keri, their canine, Cocoa, and cats, JoJo and Demi, in Saratoga, California.
“I do feel like sci-fi has been hijacked by these stories about bleak, fascist dystopias of the future and only teenagers doing weird s*** can save the day. You don’t have to explain a lot to the reader, they immediately get that concept. I’m an optimist, a bit of a Pollyanna even, but it seems clear the future is always better than the past. If you look at earth’s history, we’re constantly making the world a better place for humans to live in.
“Pick any 12 months in historical past and picture that 12 months and the 12 months 100 years previous to that, which one would you slightly reside in? While I feel we are able to agree that 2020 form of sucked, I’d slightly reside by means of 2020 once more than 1920.”
Born in California, Weir clearly had science in his blood, the only child of a physicist father and an electrical engineer mother. He studied computer science and, having tried and failed to write in his 20s, settled down to life as a computer programmer. Then, in 2009, he began posting chapters from what would eventually become The Martian online, going on to sell 35,000 copies via Kindle in a few months before finally signing lucrative traditional publishing and movie contracts.
The resulting Ridley Scott film, featuring Matt Damon as Mark Watney, an astronaut stranded on Mars with only his own ingenuity and some cobbled together technology to rely on for survival, was a major box office hit and was nominated for seven Oscars. Much of the story’s joy came from Watney’s never-say-die optimism and unerring ability to find credible solutions to life-or-death challenges without resorting to make-believe.
Weir scrupulously researched everything from oxygen consumption, space biology and how many daily calories his protagonist would require to stay alive. So does he find that easy? After all, just thinking about quantum physics, space travel and Einstein’s theory of relativity is enough to give most headache of us a headache. “I’ve to work at it however my favorite a part of writing is analysis,” he laughs. “I’ve seven totally different Excel spreadsheets open and 5 web pages in search of what I have to determine one thing out.

Matt Damon as stranded astronaut Mark Watney in Ridley Scott’s The Martian, based mostly on Weir’s e-book (Image: Giles Keyte/twentieth Century Fox)

Author Andy Weir with former Apollo moonlander Buzz Aldrin (Image: Unknown)
“I just love that stuff. I put in about five per cent of what I learn into the book; maybe someone reading for fun doesn’t need a detailed explanation for how quantum tunnelling works.”
In half because of its factual accuracy, The Martian shortly grew to become required studying at Nasa and followers embody Tesla and SpaceX billionaire Elon Musk, although Weir modestly insists: “I’m sure they enjoyed it, but I’m not going to teach Nasa or SpaceX anything they didn’t know.”
Given the large success of his debut, it was “frustrating” that the follow-up, Artemis, that includes the primary metropolis on the Moon and a younger Muslim girl, Jazz, as its heroine, did not take off in fairly the identical means.
“I feel like if I’d made Artemis in a vacuum, people would have maybe been able to enjoy it a bit more,” says Weir, who based mostly Watney and Jazz on elements of his personal character. “Watney is all of the bits I like with none of my flaws. In Artemis, I wanted to make a flawed character, but I think I went too far and made her so flawed people had a hard time rooting for her. I think I made Jazz an unlikeable character.”
He is not making the identical mistake together with his new hero, Ryland Grace.
“This time my protagonist is a very likeable guy, his flaws are things people can empathise with, he’s scared,” says Weir. “He’s kind of innocent, he’s a bit goody two shoes. We learn he’s a coward more or less, ruled by his fear.”
If Grace is Watney-like, Project Hail Mary can also be nearer to The Martian than Artemis in theme and tone. But the inspiration for all three happened in an analogous method. “Both of my other books started off with me speculating. Thinking about how we could do a human to Mars mission in the real world led to me coming up with the idea for The Martian,” he says.
With Project Hail Mary, Weir was questioning what essentially the most environment friendly rocket gas could be. “Theoretically it would be something that turns matter into light and shines it out of the back of your ship. Light has momentum.When you turn on your torch, it actually has a little bit of kick, not that you’d feel it.”
His musings led him to create a fictional organism he calls “astrophage” – “a thing that eats stars” in Greek – an interstellar lifeform that lives and breeds on the floor of stars by consuming their power. He explains: “My original plan was astrophage exists and we get hold of it and it’s about the scientific advancements we get from it. And I thought, ‘We’d have to be real careful not to let that get into our sun, that would be disastrous’, and then I was like, ‘Wait a minute, disaster is where stories come from?'”

Gosling performs Ryland Grace, a schoolteacher who goes into house (Image: AP / Amazon MGN Studios)

Gosling’s Ryland Grace is solid into the unknown… and should depend on his wits and intellgience (Image: AP / Amazon MGN Studios)
Thus the brand new novel, cannibalised partly from an unpublished work, Zhek, begins with Grace waking up with amnesia on board a spacecraft, the Hail Mary, the only survivor of an interstellar mission to see what humanity can be taught from Tau Ceti, a star in one other system that seems unaffected by the organism.
Despite being endlessly creative, Grace will solely survive if he can beat his fears. His creator’s participating optimism extends to actual life, even the coronavirus pandemic.
“I would say it’s a huge tragedy but, as a species, our response to it has been pretty impressive. Over the course of basically one year we developed a vaccine. And not just a vaccine but an entirely new technology of vaccine – mRNA vaccines – and those are a game changer. With mRNA vaccines you can hand the lab a virus and it can hand back a vaccine in three weeks.”
In an “insanely optimistic claim” (his phrases), he says: “I think Covid-19 is going to be the last pandemic in human history, because now we have the technology to stop one in its tracks.”
In current weeks, for sure, Weir has been watching with curiosity as Nasa’s Curiosity rover explores Mars. “It already proved a bunch of stuff I wrote wrong,” he laughs. “For instance, there’s an enormous amount of water ice in the Martian soil so all that stuff Mark Watney did to make water, he wouldn’t have needed to do that.”
Huge success seems to have modified Weir little. With his cash from The Martian, he splashed out $10,000 on a real Martian meteorite the dimensions of a walnut – certainly one of just a few hundred to have been discovered on Earth.
“Mars gets hit by meteors and has a thin atmosphere, so sometimes it gets hit so hard it kicks rocks out of Mars’s gravity well and they wander around the solar system for a while and some fall to Earth.”

Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir has been become a spectacular Ryan Gosling film (Image: Cornerstone)
As for humanity’s interstellar ambitions, he is not satisfied we’ll get to Mars in his lifetime. Nor does he fear about non-public corporations run by billionaires like Musk, Jeff Bezos of Amazon and even Richard Branson being gatekeepers to the celebrities.
“These people are all ultimately guided by a desire to do a for-profit industry and they’re in competition with each other,” he says. “If a government is the gatekeeper on whether or not you can get to space it becomes political stuff that decides whether or not they’ll let you. If a company is in charge it’s whether or not you can afford the ticket, it’s democratised.”
But would Weir, who famously hates even flying, pay to enter house? “No, no, no? I would not go into space even if it were free.” So what if somebody supplied him a flight?
He laughs: “I’d say, ‘Thank you, I really appreciate it, and good luck, but no thank you?'”
- Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir (Cornerstone, £9.99) is out now. The movie adaptation starring Ryan Gosling is in cinemas from March 19
https://www.express.co.uk/entertainment/films/2181875/andy-weir-project-hail-mary-gosling