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Writed by - Jack Thorne
UK
2019
Drama
Audience score - 11096 vote

The aeronauts movie song. The Aeronauts Theatrical release poster Directed by Tom Harper Produced by Todd Lieberman David Hoberman Tom Harper Screenplay by Jack Thorne Story by Jack Thorne Based on Falling Upwards: How We Took to the Air by Richard Holmes Starring Felicity Jones Eddie Redmayne Himesh Patel Tom Courtenay Music by Steven Price Cinematography George Steel Edited by Mark Eckersley Production company Mandeville Films FilmNation Entertainment Distributed by eOne (United Kingdom) Amazon Studios (United States) 1] Release date 30 August 2019 ( Telluride) 4 November 2019 (United Kingdom) 6 December 2019 (United States) Running time 100 minutes [2] Country United Kingdom United States Language English Budget 40 million [3] Box office 3. 2 million [4] 5] The Aeronauts is a 2019 biographical adventure film directed by Tom Harper and written by Jack Thorne, from a story co-written by Thorne and Harper. The film is based on the 2013 book Falling Upwards: How We Took to the Air by Richard Holmes. [6] Produced by Todd Lieberman, David Hoberman, and Harper, the film stars Felicity Jones, Eddie Redmayne, Himesh Patel and Tom Courtenay. [7] The film had its world premiere at the Telluride Film Festival on 30 August 2019, followed by a showing at the 2019 Toronto International Film Festival. [8] 9] It was released in the United Kingdom on 4 November 2019, and in the United States on 6 December 2019. Plot [ edit] In 1862 London, pilots James Glaisher and Amelia arrive for the balloon launch. Despite being haunted by a vision of her late husband Pierre, Amelia keeps up the brave front and the balloon launches. In a flashback, James appears before the Royal Society and explains his theory that the weather can be predicted but he is laughed out of the building. Returning home, he talks to his parents, who try to persuade him to pursue another avenue of science. On the balloon, James and Amelia start rising through the cloud layer. They soon run into a violent storm which sends the balloon spinning. In a flashback, Antonia persuades her sister, Amelia, to attend a society function. There, Amelia is approached by James and he asks if she would be willing to be his pilot while he attempts to prove his theories to which she agrees. After a close brush with death, with James suffering a head injury, they make it through the storm and continue rising. James releases the first of five pigeons carrying messages stating the current altitude along with other scientific readings in case they don't survive. They discover an air current which is home to a group of butterflies, confirming one of the theories of James' friend John Trew, a theory that James had always disputed. In a flashback, as James practices for the flight, Amelia approaches and tells him shes changed her mind. At this, John goes to see Amelia to convince her. Amelia goes to Pierres grave to reflect. When it begins to snow, as James had predicted, she decides to go with him after all. Eventually, the balloon exceeds 23, 000 feet (7. 0 km) beating the record for the highest altitude. Amelia finds out James didnt bring any clothes suitable for the rapidly decreasing temperature and decides to start descending. James refuses, and the two argue. Amelia agrees to keep rising, but makes it clear to James that theyll have to start descending soon. James starts experiencing hypoxia from the altitude as they ascend and insists they continue. The two get into a scuffle. That is when Amelia tells him the story of how Pierre sacrificed himself to save her during a balloon flight. This convinces James to descend. Amelia discovers the gas release valve on top of the balloon is frozen. As James falls unconscious, she has no choice but to climb up the outside of the balloon and open the valve from the top. With frostbite setting in on her hands, she struggles to wedge her boot in the valve, causing a slow release of the gas. Amelia loses consciousness and topples over the side but is saved by her rope tether. When she awakens, Amelia manages to swing back to the balloon and wakes James. As they continue to descend, snow begins to hover around them, and they realize the balloon is collapsing from the loss of too much gas. They manage to close the gas release but it is not enough to slow their descent, so they throw everything they can over the side. When this doesnt work, they climb into the framework and release the basket. Amelia then prepares to sacrifice herself to save James, but James convinces her that they can use the balloon as a parachute, which slows their descent. They crash through trees and hit the ground hard, with Amelia being dragged along behind the balloon. She wakes and calls for James, who staggers towards her. Both are injured, but euphoric that they managed to survive, setting a new human flight altitude record of 37, 000 feet (11. 3 km. Jamess findings eventually paved the way for the first weather forecasts. James and Amelia go on another balloon flight together. Cast [ edit] Production [ edit] In December 2016, Amazon Studios purchased the film rights to Jack Thorne 's spec script. [10] In mid-2018, Felicity Jones and Eddie Redmayne were confirmed to star in the film. [11] 12] They were reunited after 2014's The Theory of Everything, directed by James Marsh, as their past work and real-life friendship would help them in this new collaboration. [13] Filming commenced in early August, in West London Film Studios. [14] Filming locations in England included the Royal Naval College, Greenwich, Regent's Park, London, Claydon House, Buckinghamshire, the Bodleian Library in Oxford, and Wrotham Park, London. [14] Key action sequences in The Aeronauts were designed for IMAX and feature an expanded aspect ratio for both IMAX and select Premium Large Format cinemas. [15] Historical accuracy [ edit] The film is based on an amalgam of the flights detailed in Richard Holmes ' 2013 book Falling Upwards: How We Took to the Air ( ISBN   978-0-00-738692-5. 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. 16] However, while Glaisher appears in the film, Coxwell has been replaced by Amelia, a fictional character. [17] A report in the Daily Telegraph quotes Keith Moore, Head of Library at the Royal Society, as saying, It's a great shame that Henry [Coxwell] isn't portrayed because he performed very well and saved the life of a leading scientist. Moore then criticised the film's fictional female protagonist, stating “There were so many deserving female scientists of that period who haven't had films made about them. Why not do that instead. 18] In an interview with The List, Harper explained that whilst the film was inspired by a number of historical flights, the intention was never to make a documentary and he wanted the film to be reflective of a contemporary audience. He also commented on a gender bias in science, stating "There were female scientists around at the time, but not in the Royal Society. to this day, only eight percent of the Royal Society is female. 19] 20] Other critics of the film have praised Amelia as an important, aspirational female character. Sasha Stone of Awards Daily wrote that The Aeronauts "inspires young girls and nudges the perspectives of young boys. proving) that women can be just as excited about taking a hero's journey as any man can. 21] In addition to Coxwell, actual individuals who compose Amelia's character include: Sophie Blanchard, the first woman to work as a professional balloonist, who became a celebrated aeronaut following her husband's death. Felicity Jones has stated that Blanchard was the inspiration for her character. [22] Margaret Graham, a British aeronaut and entertainer. Amelia's relationship with husband Pierre is chiefly based on Sophie Blanchard's flights with husband Jean-Pierre Blanchard, while Pierre's death is inspired by that of Thomas Harris on 25 May 1824. [23] Release [ edit] The film had its world premiere at the Telluride Film Festival on 30 August 2019. [24] It also screened at the 2019 Toronto International Film Festival on 8 September 2019. [25] Entertainment One gave the film a full theatrical release in the United Kingdom on 4 November, including screenings in 4DX and IMAX. [26] Amazon Studios released the film in the United States on 6 December for a limited theatrical run, before debuting it on Amazon Prime Video outside of the United Kingdom on 20 December 2019. [27] In October 2019, it was announced that The Aeronauts would screen at the IMAX TCL Chinese Theatre as part of AFI Fest. [28] Streaming [ edit] Although Amazon do not release exact streaming figures, Jennifer Salke, Head of Amazon Studios said in an interview with Deadline Hollywood that as of January 2020 The Aeronauts was the most viewed movie of all time on Amazon Prime. [29] Reception [ edit] Box office [ edit] The Aeronauts has grossed an estimated 340, 000 in North America and 2. 86 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of 3. 2 million, 4] 30] 5] against a production budget of 40 million. [3] As with its other fall release The Report, Amazon did not publicly release box office results for the film. However, 48 of the 186 theaters that did screen it in its opening weekend (6 December 2019) reported a combined gross of around 30, 000. [31] IndieWire estimated the film made a total of 185, 000 in its opening weekend, an average of 1, 000 per-venue. [32] It then made an estimated 100, 000 from 85 theaters in its second weekend [5] before its 20 December streaming debut on Amazon Prime. Critical response [ edit] On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 72% based on 177 reviews, with an average rating of 6. 42/10. The website's critics consensus states: Thrilling visuals and the substantial chemistry of its well-matched leads make The Aeronauts an adventure well worth taking. 33] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 60 out of 100, based on reviews from 36 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews. 34] Todd McCarthy of The Hollywood Reporter wrote. The Aeronauts achieves impressive elevation as a bracing and sympathetic account of two early and very different aviators who together reached literal new heights in a perilous field of endeavor. 35] Fionnuala Halligan of Screen International wrote about the chemistry of the lead actors and the great craft on display in the film: With the widest of wide-screens, the most vertiginous of vistas, this hot air balloon takes to the skies and soars. 36] Tomris Laffly of Variety praised the visuals and the lead performers: The duo [of Redmayne and Jones] hand-in-hand elevates The Aeronauts... a flimsy action-adventure to something worth watching on the biggest possible screen, even if it operates on a handful of clichés with little character-based substance to speak of. 37] Many critics also applauded the film's special effects and visuals. Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian noted the film's "terrific special effects" and "high-anxiety suspense. 38] Eric John of IndieWire wrote: When so many supersized blockbusters take the potential of CGI action for granted, The Aeronauts finds a fresh use for it by turning the exhilaration of discovery into a real visual treat. 39] In a generally positive review, critic Bob Mondello showed special enthusiasm for the airborne scenes, writing: I cannot say strongly enough that if you can see it in IMAX, you should see it in IMAX, where if you're even a little bit afraid of heights, it will likely scare you shoutless. 40] Accolades [ edit] Notes [ edit] Rennes and Wren are both stated as the last name of the lead, Amelia. The character is credited as "Amelia Wren" although in the film Amelia is shown looking at a handbill with the notice "The aeronaut and his bride, Pierre and Amelia Rennes, 14th September 1856" and we see Amelia at her husband's graveside which bears the inscription "In loving memory Pierre Rennes. References [ edit] Boland, Hannah (31 December 2018. Amazon in talks to release original films in Imax cinemas in 2019. The Daily Telegraph. Telegraph Media Group. Retrieved 19 January 2019. ^ The Aeronauts (2019. British Board of Film Classification. Retrieved 13 January 2020. ^ a b Gant, Charles (7 October 2019. How Tom Harper ensured the 40m 'The Aeronauts' took flight with Amazon Studios. Screen Daily. Media Business Insight. Retrieved 25 October 2019. ^ a b "The Aeronauts (2019. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 21 January 2020. ^ a b c Brueggemann, Tom (15 December 2019. Uncut Gems' and 'Bombshell' Soar, Malick's 'A Hidden Life' Drags. IndieWire. Penske Media Corporation. Retrieved 15 December 2019. ^ Bricker, Tierney (6 December 2019. How The Aeronauts Drastically Changed the Real-Life Story. E! Online. Retrieved 23 December 2019. ^ Paur, Joey (16 August 2018. Felicity Jones and Eddie Redmayne Featured in First Photo From Amazon's 'The Aeronauts. Geek Tyrant. Retrieved 6 November 2018. ^ McIntosh, Steven (9 September 2019. Redmayne and Jones on 'wonderful' screen reunion. BBC News. Retrieved 9 September 2019. ^ The Aeronauts. Toronto International Film Festival. ^ Lodderhose, Diana; Fleming Jr., Mike (8 December 2016. Amazon Studios Takes Flight With Hot Package 'The Aeronauts. Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved 13 August 2019. ^ Pearson, Ben (15 August 2018. The Aeronauts' First Look: Felicity Jones and Eddie Redmayne Reunite 2, 000 Feet in the Sky. Film. Retrieved 6 November 2018. ^ Heath, Paul (15 August 2018. First Look At Eddie Redmayne & Felicity Jones In Amazon's 'The Aeronauts. The Hollywood News. Retrieved 6 November 2018. ^ White, Abbey (12 May 2019. How Felicity Jones and Eddie Redmayne's Rapport Was Key to 'Aeronauts' Dynamic. The Hollywood Reporter. Valence Media. Retrieved 1 January 2020. ^ a b O'Byrne, Audrey (22 August 2018. U. K. Now Filming: Amazon's Star-Studded 'The Aeronauts. Backstage. Retrieved 6 November 2018. ^ Petski, Denise (14 May 2019. The Aeronauts' Will Have One-Week Imax Run In October. Retrieved 24 October 2019. ^ Two aeronauts break world record for altitude in a balloon 5 September 1862. History. Retrieved 30 August 2019. ^ Malvern, Jack. "Ballooning hero becomes a woman for new Eddie Redmayne film The Aeronauts. The Times. ISSN   0140-0460. Retrieved 14 August 2019. (subscription required) Bodkin, Henry (15 August 2018. Ballooning hero 'airbrushed' from history to make way for female character in Eddie Redmayne film. UK: Telegraph Media Group. Retrieved 24 August 2019. ^ Mottram, James. "Tom Harper: They were taking these extraordinary risks to further human knowledge and to see the world differently. The List. Retrieved 11 November 2019. ^ Holmes, Richard (21 November 2010. The Royal Society's lost women scientists. The Observer. ISSN   0029-7712. Retrieved 24 October 2019. ^ Stone, Sasha. "The Aeronauts – A Flight of Fancy With a Great Performance by Felicity Jones. Awards Daily. ^ Scott, Walter (21 December 2018. Felicity Jones on Meeting Ruth Bader Ginsburg & Why She Joined Star Wars. Parade. AMG/Parade. Retrieved 27 August 2019. ^ Winchester, Simon (25 October 2013. Book Review: Falling Upwards' by Richard Holmes. The Wall Street Journal. ISSN   0099-9660. Retrieved 28 May 2019. (subscription required) Hammond, Pete (29 August 2019. Telluride Film Festival: Ford V Ferrari. Judy. Motherless Brooklyn' Weinstein-Inspired Drama 'The Assistant' Among Premieres Headed To 46th Edition – Full List. Retrieved 29 August 2019. ^ Fleming Jr., Mike (13 August 2019. Toronto Adds 'The Aeronauts. Mosul. Seberg. More To Festival Slate. Retrieved 13 August 2019. ^ Grater, Tom. The Aeronauts' to get full UK theatrical window despite Amazon strategy shift (exclusive. ScreenDaily. ^ Wiseman, Andreas (23 July 2019. Amazon Shifts Release Date & Cuts Theatrical Window For Potential Awards Pic 'The Aeronauts' With Eddie Redmayne & Felicity Jones. Retrieved 23 July 2019. ^ Hipes, Patrick. "AFI Fest Rounds Out Gala Slate With 'The Aeronauts. The Two Popes' Alan J. Pakula Getting Tribute. Retrieved 23 October 2019. ^ Fleming Jr., Mike (23 January 2020. Last Sundance's Top Buyer Amazon Is All In At Park City: Jennifer Salke Q&A. Retrieved 24 January 2020. ^ The Aeronauts (2019. The Numbers. Retrieved 21 January 2019. ^ D'Alessandro, Anthony (8 December 2019. Frozen 2' Leads Dreary December Weekend With 34M. Playmobil' Plunges To 670K – Sunday Update. Retrieved 8 December 2019. ^ Brueggemann, Tom (8 December 2019. Neon's 'Portrait of a Lady on Fire' Grabs Arthouse Crowd, Amazon's 'The Aeronauts' Deflates. Retrieved 8 December 2019... The Aeronauts (2019. Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved 29 January 2020... The Aeronauts Reviews. Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 11 December 2019. ^ McCarthy, Todd (1 September 2019. The Aeronauts' Film Review, Telluride 2019. Valence Media. ^ Halligan, Fionnuala. The Aeronauts' Review. Retrieved 24 October 2019. ^ Laffly, Tomris (4 September 2019. Telluride Film Review: The Aeronauts. Variety. Retrieved 23 September 2019. ^ Bradshaw, Peter (10 September 2019. The Aeronauts review – charming balloon adventure way up where the air is clear. The Guardian. UK: Guardian Media Group. Retrieved 10 September 2019. ^ Kohn, Eric (1 September 2019. The Aeronauts' Review: Gravity' Meets 'Free Solo' in Gripping Hot-Air Balloon Adventure. Retrieved 1 September 2019. ^ Mondello, Bob (5 December 2019. Movie Review: The Aeronauts. Retrieved 6 December 2019. ^ Hipes, Patrick (7 January 2020. VES Awards Nominations: The Lion King. Alita: Battle Angel. The Mandalorian. GoT' Top List. Retrieved 7 January 2020. External links [ edit.

Hold up! Youre telling me Felicity and Eddie are starring in another movie together after The Theory of Everything? Well then take my money because Im here for it. Movie trailer the aeronauts. Movie the aeronauts near me. How is this song not more popular :O. Let them fight Club is genius. Enter the characters you see below Sorry, we just need to make sure you're not a robot. For best results, please make sure your browser is accepting cookies. Type the characters you see in this image: Try different image Conditions of Use Privacy Policy 1996-2014, Inc. or its affiliates.

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At first, I thought this was going to be an Amelia Earhart movie

Diary of a NPC: the last straw. Why is this movie so boring? It's not bro. What the imma be frozen to and let someone discover me after150 yrs. Movie The aéronautiques. Free movie the aeronauts 2019. The aeronauts movie in hindi. How much of the movie the aeronauts is true. What do you say about a 19th-century ballooning movie that looks great in the air but doesnt stick the emotional landing? Thats the problem with The Aeronauts, one of those “based on a true story” undertakings that are only partly true. The film reunites Eddie Redmayne and Felicity Jones, who previously costarred as Stephen Hawking and his wife Jane in The Theory of Everything (both were nominated for an Oscar; only he won the trophy. Redmayne plays real-life British meteorologist James Glaisher, who thinks he can defy the skeptics and advance his research in weather by going up, up and away in a hot-air balloon. Since he knows nothing about the perils of the mission, James teams up with Amelia Wren (Jones) who has turned the process into a profitable circus act by playing up to the crowd — doing handstands before climbing into the balloons wicker basket and taking along her tiny dog to milk applause. Amelia, sadly, is a figment of the imagination of screenwriter Jack Thorne, who wrote Harry Potter and the Cursed Child for the stage. And Thornes knack for fantasy is goosed by director Tom Harper, of TVs Peaky Blinders and War and Peace. The actual 1862 balloon flight into the London skies saw Glaisher accompanied by the decidedly less sexy Henry Coxwell, a noted British aeronaut who risked danger, numbing cold and loss of consciousness by ascending more than 37, 000 feet, a record at the time, and saving Glaishers life in the process. Here, Amelia gets to do the heroics. In commercial terms, its a breathlessly entertaining trade-off. In terms of documented fact, however, the film takes one liberty after another. Theose interested in the real story should grab the 2013 book, Falling Upwards: How We Took to the Air, in which historian Richard Holmes detailed the flight of Glaisher and the not-ready-for-primetime Coxwell, whose considerable contributions are apparently deemed fake news when it comes to boosting the box-office. If you can swallow the gender fudging, the movie comes through admirably as a rousing adventure. Redmayne and Jones have enormous charm and fully commit to the demands of their roles. When James and Amelia suffer the effects of hypoxia from the thinness of oxygen in the air, you sweat it out with them. Credit the filmmakers for not drumming up a bogus romance between the two, though they do exchange a few longing looks between the sharing of backstories. Flashbacks show Glaisher beating his head against the wall of scientific indifference to his theories and the worsening case of dementia afflicting his father (Tom Courtenay. And Wren, a composite of several female balloonists of the period, is a widow who still mourns the death of her husband (Vincent Perez) and must fight to be taken seriously in a mans game. The film is visually stunning thanks to the computer-generated effects in the air and the artistry of cinematographer George Steel and production designers David Hindle and Christian Huband. You might ask why our aeronauts are so poorly dressed for the flight, lacking gloves, hats and warm clothing to protect them from freezing temperatures. Though the details are scarcely addressed, the optics speak volumes. In a startling sequence in which Amelia climbs to the top of the balloon to unscrew a frozen valve and release air for descent, her bleeding, frostbitten hands speak to the enormity of the task at hand. Still, The Aeronauts is hobbled time and again by the attempt to add the juice of fiction to a story that could and should have stood on its own. The truth, in Hollywood terms, is never enough.

5 nominations. See more awards  » Learn more More Like This Biography, Crime Drama 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 7. 2 / 10 X Idealistic Senate staffer Daniel J. Jones, tasked by his boss to lead an investigation into the CIA's post 9/11 Detention and Interrogation Program, uncovers shocking secrets. Director: Scott Z. Burns Stars: Adam Driver, Annette Bening, Jon Hamm Thriller 6. 5 / 10 An ex-convict working undercover intentionally gets himself incarcerated again in order to infiltrate the mob at a maximum security prison. Andrea Di Stefano Ana de Armas, Rosamund Pike, Joel Kinnaman Mystery 6. 9 / 10 In 1950s New York, a lonely private detective afflicted with Tourette's Syndrome ventures to solve the murder of his mentor and only friend. Edward Norton Edward Norton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Alec Baldwin Action Adventure Sci-Fi 6. 3 / 10 An augmented human and Sarah Connor must stop an advanced liquid Terminator, from hunting down a young girl, whose fate is critical to the human race. Tim Miller Linda Hamilton, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Mackenzie Davis History 6. 8 / 10 The story of the Battle of Midway, told by the leaders and the sailors who fought it. Roland Emmerich Ed Skrein, Patrick Wilson, Woody Harrelson Romance 7 / 10 Legendary performer Judy Garland (Renée Zellweger) arrives in London in the winter of 1968 to perform a series of sold-out concerts. Rupert Goold Renée Zellweger, Jessie Buckley, Finn Wittrock Consummate con man Roy Courtnay has set his sights on his latest mark: the recently widowed Betty McLeish, worth millions. But this time, what should have been a simple swindle escalates into a cat-and-mouse game with the ultimate stakes. Bill Condon Helen Mirren, Ian McKellen, Russell Tovey 6. 2 / 10 A boy in New York is taken in by a wealthy Upper East Side family after his mother is killed in a bombing at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. John Crowley Oakes Fegley, Ansel Elgort, Nicole Kidman Fantasy Horror 7. 5 / 10 Years following the events of "The Shining. a now-adult Dan Torrance must protect a young girl with similar powers from a cult known as The True Knot, who prey on children with powers to remain immortal. Mike Flanagan Ewan McGregor, Rebecca Ferguson, Kyliegh Curran 7. 3 / 10 The true story of a British whistleblower who leaked information to the press about an illegal NSA spy operation designed to push the UN Security Council into sanctioning the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Gavin Hood Keira Knightley, Matt Smith, Matthew Goode Comedy Kate is a young woman subscribed to bad decisions. Working as an elf in a year round Christmas store is not good for the wannabe singer. However, she meets Tom there. Her life takes a new turn. For Kate, it seems too good to be true. Paul Feig Madison Ingoldsby, Emma Thompson, Boris Isakovic 6. 1 / 10 A super-powered construction worker falls in with a group of criminals in order to raise the funds to help his ill mother. Jeff Chan Stephen Amell, Robbie Amell, Kari Matchett Edit Storyline In 1862, pioneering meteorologist James Glaisher (Eddie Redmayne) teams up with daredevil balloon pilot Amelia Rennes (Felicity Jones) to advance human knowledge of the weather and fly higher than anyone in history. While their voyage to the very edge of existence helps the unlikely pair find their place in the world, they face physical and emotional challenges in the thin air, as the ascent becomes a fight for survival. Plot Summary Add Synopsis Taglines: Inspired by a True Adventure Details Release Date: 6 December 2019 (USA) See more  » Also Known As: The Aeronauts Box Office Cumulative Worldwide Gross: 2, 860, 993 See more on IMDbPro  » Company Credits Technical Specs See full technical specs  » Did You Know? Trivia The flight takes place in real time in the movie. See more » Goofs Amelia Wren pronounces "caelum certe" with hard C's. This is the current, reconstructed Classical" pronunciation; however, in the 1860s the standard Latin pronunciation used would have been with soft C's. See more » Quotes James Glaisher: You are the only person who could fly us higher than anyone has ever been. See more » Crazy Credits During the opening credits, many of the Os in people's names slowly rise, as if symbolizing a balloon elevating. See more » Soundtracks Home to You Written by Sigrid and Steve Mac Performed by Sigrid See more ».

Funny part is: Reggie's probably 30 years old for real at this point. The movie the aeronauts.

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. Movie the aeronauts imdb. Movie preview the aeronauts. Can we like crowd fund this? I would totally pitch in. A long time coming on the Eli Cohen story. Strategic information on perfecting timed airstrikes by the Israel Airforce came as a result of his work. Pee wee herminator 2019. Eddie redmayne movie the aeronauts.

 

Good little film, very entertaining and great visually. Acting was good and all round good movie for the whole family... Movie the aeronauts trailer. 👀👀👀👀😍. Stop watching this trailer eveytime Maybe so sir but not today. The cinematic possibilities of this whimsical mode of travel are sky-high. We offer a closer look. Credit. Amazon Studios Published Dec. 17, 2019 Updated Dec. 18, 2019 In August 1783, at the future site of the Eiffel Tower, Benjamin Franklin watched two brothers launch the first hydrogen balloon. It breezed north for 45 minutes and plummeted in the hamlet of Gonesse where frightened peasants attacked the contraption with rocks, knives and pitchforks before dragging the monsters wheezing remains through town on a horse. The villagers werent entirely wrong. Balloons are the dominion of misfits who dont belong on earth, or even on other modes of sky travel like rockets, helicopters, or airplanes, whose seats are commandeered by the rational, the heroic, or the rest of us just trying to get from Atlanta to Des Moines. To choose to travel by basket and balloon requires two personality traits: ingenuity and recklessness. As in, not only does someone have to somehow get their hands on one — which often means designing it themselves — but theyre capricious enough to let Mother Nature steer. Naturally, hot air balloons were the prison escape vehicle for both Lex Luthor and Paddington Bear. On film, balloons give a character more character. Theyve encouraged athletes like Buster Keaton and Pearl White of “The Perils of Pauline” to prove their mettle. Thanks to the traditional bottle of champagne packed to appease bystanders, a wicker basket can also be a cozy setting for cranks to realize theyre safe being vulnerable, as when Bill Murray opens up about his divorce in “The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou, ” or in the climax of the noxiously gassy romantic comedy “The Ugly Truth, ” when the worst love scene in Hollywood history is redeemed by the audiences relief that this aggravating couple is sequestered 1, 000 feet in the air. In Tom Harpers “The Aeronauts, ” now in theaters and on Amazon Prime Video Dec. 20, the Victorian meteorologist James Glaisher (Eddie Redmayne) escapes the confines of Londons Royal Society to embark on a record-breaking ascent so treacherous that his colleagues consider him a loon. In a hot-air balloon, even a quick-thinker like James Bond is adrift. The 007s in “Octopussy" and “The World is Not Enough” find their choices reduced to leaping off, hanging on or becoming a wrecking ball. When Dorothy asks the Wizard of Oz if he was frightened when he lost control of his balloon, he yelped, “You are talking to a man who has laughed in the face of death, sneered at doom, and chuckled at catastrophe! I was petrified. ” Above all, however, balloons literalize how humans can merely grapple with — not commandeer — the direction of their lives, from the overdue exploits of Carl, the 78-year-old widower in the Pixar film “Up” to the quirky 2004 drama “Enduring Love, ” in which a pre-Bond Daniel Craig is about to propose marriage in a meadow when the moment is interrupted by a crash-landing hot-air balloon that drags with it death, scandal and a stalker (Rhys Ifans) who insists that the very absurdity of the mishap must carry spiritual significance. As for non-humans, the lucky Jellicle who ascends to rebirth in Tom Hoopers film version of “Cats” no longer hovers on a floating tire, it gusts away under a parachute of silk. Yet, though their cinematic possibilities are sky-high, balloons have mostly been used by filmmakers as float-on cameos, a novelty slapped on a poster to make a movie look like a madcap epic, but in actuality given only a few minutes of screen time. Films guilty of such misdirection include “The Adventures of Baron Munchausen” and “Police Academy 4: Citizens on Patrol. ” (“Unfortunately, the film never takes flight itself, ” sniffed a critic of the latter in The Los Angeles Times. Image Credit. Columbia Pictures, via Everett Collection Image Credit. Warner Bros., via Everett Collection “The Aeronauts” is the rare film that spends most of its running time in flight. In 1862, the real-life James Glaisher shot seven miles up in the air — far past the previous ceiling — to witness atmospheric movements that could only be seen above the clouds. Harper is passionate about the romance of discovery and just plain romance, via Felicity Joness pilot Amelia Wren, a flagrantly named amalgamation of several real-life daredevils including the French stuntwoman Sophie Blanchard, who was widowed when her husband suffered a heart attack and fell out of their basket over The Hague, and her flamboyant predecessor Élisabeth Thible, the first untethered female balloonist, who took off from Lyon costumed as the goddess Minerva. “The Aeronauts” is fascinated by the ominous silence of the sky, the creak-crack of frozen ropes scuffing against silk. Yet, the film cant resist cranking up the volume with a dramatic electrical storm, out-clamored only by dialogue that thunders with thematic resonance, be it rebellion (“We are creatures of the sky! ”) escapism (“You cant just fly away from your problems! ”) or fate (“Trust the wind to decide! ”. Blanchard herself died when her balloon caught fire over Tivoli. In “Sad Tales and Glad Tales” the poet Grenville Mellen tutted, “A woman in a balloon is either out of her element or too high in it. ” Jules Verne was a little more empathetic. In his 1863 debut novel “Five Weeks in a Balloon, ” a fictional travelogue about a trans-African flight, one passenger comforts another by noting that Blanchard “would not have been killed, probably, had not her car dashed against a chimney and precipitated her to the ground. ” “Five Weeks in a Balloon” was a financial success that afforded Verne the freedom to quit his job as a stockbroker and launch his Extraordinary Travels series that would go on to include “Journey to the Center of the Earth, ” “Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea” and “The Mysterious Island, ” tales of derring-do that would become the foundation of science fiction and fantasy filmmaking, from Georges Mélièss “A Trip to the Moon” to todays audiences hooting as Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson straddles a giant bee. Yet, while Verne embraced all manner of misadventures, even conceptualizing future inventions such as, yes, rockets and helicopters, he distrusted hot-air balloons. Contrary to popular belief, when the idea of balloon travel pops up in Vernes classic, “Around the World in Eighty Days, ” its quickly shot down as “not being capable of being put in practice. ” This was a surprise to the producer Mike Todd, who upon receiving the script for his lavish 1956 adaptation of Vernes book, blurted, “Wheres the balloon? ” Upon learning that the novel, in fact, had no balloon, Todd replied, “That was Vernes mistake. I want a balloon. ” He got one, leading to a lovely four-minute sequence of the stars David Niven and Cantinflas drifting in the air that added pizazz to the poster, and an extra half-million dollars to the already overinflated budget. Shortly after, when Todd died in a plane crash, there was a sense that the showman had, like many of the 19th century explorers he admired, flown too close to the sun. At least Todds splurge, appropriately named La Coquette, beautifully wed Hollywoods flirtation with the hot-air balloon to the generation of great minds who took it from scientific curiosity to fictional razzle-dazzle at the speed of imagination — and now, with “The Aeronauts” honoring the pioneers who inspired Jules Verne, this buoyant symbol of foolhardy bravery has finally flown around the world and arrived back home.

Love at. In 1862, pioneering meteorologist James Glaisher (Eddie Redmayne) teams up with daredevil balloon pilot Amelia Wren (Felicity Jones) to advance human knowledge of the weather and fly higher than anyone in history. While their voyage to the very edge of existence helps the unlikely pair find their place in the world, they face physical and emotional challenges in the thin air, as the ascent becomes a fight for survival. Plot twist they both die. Principal Cast: Felicity Jones, Eddie Redmayne, Phoebe Fox, Himesh Patel, Rebecca Front, Robert Glenister, Vincent Perez, Anne Reid, Tom Courtenay, Lewin Lloyd, Tim McInnerny, Lisa Jackson, Synopsis: Balloon pilot Amelia Rennes and scientist James Glaisher find themselves in an epic fight for survival while attempting to make discoveries in a gas balloon in the 1860s... Based on true people and events, sprinkled with just enough post-modern sexual equality subtext to captivate the masses, and told with a sense of magic and wonder (as well as terrifying danger) Tom Harpers semi-biographical account of 19th Century scientist and meteorologist James Glaishers ascent into the clouds via a balloon to discover more about our world is a curious thing indeed. The films main draw is its two leads, a bullish Eddie Redmayne and a strong-willed Felicity Jones, who play people at competing odds with the mission but whom come to recognise each others strengths as Jones balloon pilot continues to deal with the tragic death of her husband some time earlier. The film refuses to be pigeonholed as a specific genre of film: one part biography, the film doesnt feel very biographical with its rewriting of history, and another part adventure thats less adventurous than it appears, The Aeronauts is a curiously enthralling but strangely ambivalent adventure film lacking a central theme to pivot on but containing multitudes of breathtaking sky-high visual effects. In 1862 London, young scientist and meteorologist James Glaisher (Redmayne) plans to ascend into the heavens to discover more about out atmosphere, under the proposition that weather can be predicted if enough information is gathered. He recruits renowned balloon pilot Amelia Rennes (Jones) herself subsumed by grief at the tragic death of her husband (Vincent Perez) in a ballooning accident years before, and the pair form an unlikely partnership. Glaishers friend John Trew (Himesh Patel) and Amelias sister Antonia (Phoebe Fox) are reticent to fully support the venture, whilst Glaishers collegiate associates at the Royal Society scoff and ridicule the young scientist for his perceived insanity. However, once the pair take off into the clouds on their silken balloon, they soon discover far more adventure, beauty and danger than either of them bargained for. Its one thing to have a good time with a film you know almost nothing about, its another to have a good time with it despite recognising some crucial flaws that prevent it from, if youll pardon the pun, reaching the heights it so richly deserved. On the surface The Aeronauts is a fairly competent adventure film, with the aerial antics far surpassing the staid and stilted story on the ground. Its fair to say that when Redmayne and Jones fly aloft the film… takes off. Heh heh. You dont get this kind of humour at other websites, folks. Ahem. Written by Wonder scribe Jack Thorne from a story by Thorne and director Jack Harper, and based upon Richard Holmes non-fiction book “Falling Upwards”, The Aeronauts tries to balance historical accuracy and modern big-screen adventure and makes some really bad mistakes that hindered my enjoyment. For a start, Felicity Jones character Amelia Rennes is entirely fictional, reputedly a composition of several notable female scientists of the era (including Margaret Graham and Sophie Blanchard) which wouldnt be such an issue had the writers not excluded completely Glaishers real-life friend and fellow aeronaut Henry Coxwell from the story. Coxwell played an integral part of the scientific discoveries alongside Glaisher but hes not even mentioned here, replaced by what is obviously a creative choice to get more women into the film. Lets face it, women were woefully underrepresented in the scientific community back in the 19th Century, but to replace a key figure in the meteorological theme just for the sake of having a strong female lead seems counter-intuitive to the truth of the story itself. The film has very few female roles anyway, left mainly to the Glaishers dutiful sister and mother left below to worry and fret over the fate of their sibling, but replacing a key figure in the story just to promote the idea of a female balloon pilot with a tragic history doesnt sit well with me. That said, the film does try and give Amelia a strong sense of feminist purpose, a woman of skill living at a time when women were meant to be seen and married off, rather than escaping onto dangerous adventures, so for that I give it credit. Its a good thing so see women represented in film, but The Aeronauts badly misjudges the reliance of contemporary requirements that women have larger roles to play; had Harper replaced Coxwell with a real-life female scientist of historical note, that would have been far and away the better thing to do. To replace him with a complete fiction? Hmmm, not so much. That aside, The Aeronauts feels a bit limited with the way its put together. The story of Glaisher and Amelia isnt interesting at all when theyre on the ground, what with the prejudice to his theories and lack of respect within the scientific community, and her grief over losing her husband. The film features a lot of flashbacks that I guess are intended to reveal more about both Amelia and Glaisher at key moments of the film, but theyre muddled and dont work well, feeling underdeveloped within the breathtaking accomplishment of balloon flight. The development between the two leads is also insufficient, unable to bridge the gap between pure historical narrative and grand human adventure, offering a middling mix of confused angst and grief that underwhelms. Redmayne plays Glaisher with a rigid sense of purpose thats obviously of-the-period and the actor carries it off well, yet his persistence – nay, obsession – with his theories is given glib lip-service without really feeling it. The character of Amelia and her history of tragedy with ballooning is not quite the obvious choice for Glaishers mission: exactly why he would choose her above so many others (maybe its because hes a laughing stock and nobody will back him? Cool… but where is the development of this to warrant the choice. isnt given enough room to breathe. Instead, were treated to a combative, near-antagonistic relationship without the script doing the work to make it believable. But, and this is a huge but, the films visual effects and cinematography of its vast aerial sequences are, and I cannot emphasise this enough, incredible. Harper does for stratospheric adventure what Alfonso Cuaron did for orbital flight in Gravity: The Aeronauts depicts early balloon flight into the upper atmosphere as a heady, beautiful and understandably dangerous adventure, with changes in air pressure, temperature and the relatively simplistic technical advancements of the day playing a key role in making the film as white-knuckle as it is. The ballooning sequences are wonderful, truly awesome filmmaking and George Steels cinematography during these moments is absolutely first-rate. As our two leads fly higher into the sky, reaching altitudes that would make early jet airliners whimper, the stakes become more and more palpable as ice and lack of oxygen threaten to overwhelm the adventurers. For all the weaknesses in story and character development, the aerial sequences are more than worth their price of admission, spectacularly rendered with mind-blowing visual effects and compelling editing by Mark Eckersley to generate some truly scintillating tension. Will Amelia throw herself out of the basket to save them both? Will Glaisher continue to flinging homing pigeons back to Earth to “ner ner ner” his disbelieving scientific colleagues? A Although the creative choices around the central characters are difficult to parse with the historical aspects of the story, and the development of both Glaisher and Amelia flounders poorly within the framework of the adventure, theres enough spectacular storytelling here to outweigh many of the problems I had with the movie. Redmayne and Jones are excellent with the limited material they have, and I found the indistinct development around their relationship and the relationship with the ill-used supporting players frustrating, but for a glimpse of a little-known period in scientific discovery that probably needed a more straightforward telling I found The Aeronauts engaging enough to warrant recommendation. Albeit with caveats in place. 2020, Rodney Twelftree. All rights reserved.

2019 movie the aeronauts. Monica Castillo December 6, 2019 Tom Harper s “The Aeronauts” begins just as Amelia ( Felicity Jones) a balloon pilot, and James ( Eddie Redmayne) a scientist desperate to prove his theories about the weather, take off on their 19th century vertical adventure in front of a large crowd to much fanfare. In flashbacks, “The Aeronauts” explains more about their tenuous relationship beyond pilot and scientist: how she lost her husband in a ballooning accident and how James had been laughed at by his colleagues for his outlandish ideas. Eventually, James decides to prove his findings and hires a still-grieving Amelia to lead the journey—a generous offer shes hesitant to accept. Back in the present ascent of their balloon, Amelia and James face many more dangers and setbacks as they shatter the height record and put their lives at risk for science. Advertisement Although its stuffed with many cliches, “The Aeronauts” can feel like a rather enjoyable bit of historical fantasy. Redmaynes character is based on James Glaisher, a real British scientist who did break that height record in his day, but his partner on this expedition, Henry Coxwell, has been replaced with Jones character, who herself is an amalgamation of several balloonists including Coxwell, for his heroics during his expedition with Glaisher, and Sophie Blanchard, one of the few women in the field of aeronauts and someone who continued to balloon after her husbands death in an accident.  Harper, who co-wrote the script with Jack Thorne, introduces Amelia and James as a kind of “Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus” pair of polar opposites. Amelia has an adventurous, outgoing spirit with a sense of understanding of playing to a crowd and entertaining others. James is more of a solemn soul who wants so desperately to be taken seriously as a scientist, he almost doesnt see Amelias anguish as she deliberates going up in a balloon after her husbands fall or the dangers he might put them in because he wants to push beyond the balloons limits. Although Amelia is clearly a strong female character, the writers thankfully dont saddle her with the weight of needing to represent all women. Shes an aeronaut because she wants to be one, not because its the right thing to do. Theyre almost cartoonish in their differences, which thankfully, doesnt last too long as they're the only characters were stuck with for the majority of the film. Jones and Redmayne strike up a flirty rapport that makes the movie even more interesting as the stakes (and the balloon) grow higher. Might she find love after loss? Will he find the results hes looking for? It will all be for naught if their balloon crashes.  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. There is a lot of CGI in this film, all in the effort of putting on a good show. Beyond the unglamorous but realistic mess inside the basket of a hot air balloon lies CGI landscapes of 19th century England, which the digital camera seems to soak in as if it were another viewer along for the ride. There are also these grand, majestic shots of our heroes up-in-the-air hundreds and thousands of feet above the earth that work as both artful breaks from the cramped space where the characters are and terrifying reminders that this whole thing can go down at any minute. These shots are composed so convincingly, that there were many sharp gasps in my audience. That response intensified the higher the balloon climbed, the lower the oxygen became and the colder it got for our heroes. The tense “will they or wont they make it” scenes work so well that the movie can be forgiven for its clumsier earthbound moments. And with the help of Redmayne and Jones charming performances, they keep the movie light and their characters somewhat tolerable even though theyre thinly written. “The Aeronauts” is built around the spectacle of its historically accurate vistas and its depiction of the beautiful but potentially deadly skies (which plays better on an expansive screen.  What begins as a cutesy showdown between the sexes solidifies into a genuine struggle to return to the ground in one piece. Reveal Comments comments powered by.

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The aeronauts movie scenes. Those 3 jets going Super-sonic over the water was Awesome to see. It made the hairs on neck stand up. A thrilling adventure where Amelia Earhart will be brought to the screen by tolerated actor Tom Cruise, the celebrated pilot renamed Adam Menflight due to artistic concerns. Come along as he and his attractive navigator Carrie-Mei Bigman span the globe only to vanish under mysterious circumstances. They will defeat the robots by accusing them of sexual harassment. The Aeronaughts replays an historical event where James Glaisher and Henry Coxwell take a balloon higher than any other men to study the atmosphere.
Coxwell has been replaced by Amelia Rennes who plays a very over the top extrovert balloonist. After her initial introduction to the plot, I found her character so out of place and poorly written that I said to my kids, I hope She doesn't survive. Sorry Amelia. your acting was fine though.
Probably what annoyed me most about the plot, is the hollywood white man bad (James has a meltdown) woman amazing (performs superhuman physical acts. It's bad enough changing the gender of a historical character, but to overlay woke agendas diminishes the film.
The cinematography and costuming are great. The script slow and plodding. Our stream of this kept changing the film aspect ratio from 16:9 to CinemaScope multiple times: big boo boo by whomever mastered the film for release. Kids might find it a bit slow and adults might get a bit annoyed.

 

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