Review: "Stowaway" on Netflix
Saturday, May 1, 2021 at 11:00PM
Matt St.Clair in Anna Kendrick, Daniel Dae Kim, Netflix, Reviews, Shamier Anderson, Toni Collette, sci-fi fantasy, streaming

by Matt St Clair

Shamier Anderson is the titular "Stowaway"

One common trope in space movies is daddy issues. Whether it involves trying to find one’s dad in space or a sad father dealing family issues, as this 2019 Vulture article points out, it's a constant in outer-space movies. That's been especially true of this last decade with First Man, Interstellar, Ad Astra, and Netflix’s very recent space venture The Midnight Sky. But a surprise development! The new space movie Stowaway, from writer/director Joe Penna, is the rare film to abandon that trend altogether. The central quartet have struggles but not one of them is a daddy issue. 

Commander Marina Barnett (Toni Collette), botanist David Kim (Daniel Dae Kim), and medical researcher Zoe Levensen (Anna Kendrick) barely touch on their respective home lives as they make their way to Mars for a two-year space mission...


Instead of reeling from the personal sacrifices they make by leaving their loved ones, they're focused on ensuring they’re able to survive their way to Mars once the discovery of Michael (Shamier Anderson), a stowaway, causes drastic complications. Michael has accidentally destroyed a carbon dioxide scrubber as the crew discover him. There won't be enough oxygen for all four people to live through the mission.

Despite Michael being an easy-going person who helps the crew whenever he can, Marina and David view him as a liability. Meanwhile, Zoe tries convincing them to spare his life any way they can because even if it’s not something her fellow crew members are eager to do, she’s still aghast that they’re willing to take someone’s life. Thanks to the solicitous performances from Anna Kendrick and Shamier Anderson, the Zoe and Michael scenes are highlights. Their casual interactions and Michael's own backstory give the fateful decision the crew must make even more tension. 

Minus a thrilling stepping out into space sequence, the entire picture has all four characters confined into one portion of the ship. As they engage in heated arguments within that small space, Stowaway becomes a fretfully claustrophobic experience. One that benefits from being a strict morality tale as opposed to a film like the aforementioned The Midnight Sky which, in addition to its copout twist to fit the “daddy issues” trope, faltered by attempting to find a medium between being a meditative survival story and an adrenaline-fueled visual spectacle when it worked more as the former. 

That being said, Stowaway still suffers from a disappointingly abrupt ending. Toni Collette has the most underwritten character. Collette is customarily terrific even if she’s stuck playing an archetypal hard-ass captain who has to make all the tough decisions in times of crisis. Daniel Dae Kim is in similar amazing form as David Kim, letting his warring eyes show that David at constant odds with his crew’s plan. If one has to pick an MVP from this in-sync acting quartet, it's arguably Kim.

His performance is a fine embodiment of the compelling moral ambiguity of the film. With no hero or villain, Stowaway is an exemplary exercise in ethicality that’ll please those who love intimate science fiction and the performers involved as well as anyone who may want a break from films with celestial paternal troubles. B+

 

Article originally appeared on The Film Experience (http://thefilmexperience.net/).
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