Well, the wife and I saw Project Hail Mary last night on Amazon Prime (it just got there this month, after its release in theaters in March) and I liked Project Hail Mary a lot more than Disclosure Day. Which is not to say I didn't like Disclosure Day, and the two are not exactly the same exact genre, so maybe the comparison is unfair. But they do have a lot in common: humans and interstellar intelligences, unlikely heroes, oddball humor, life and death situations on the planetary level.
But Project Hail Mary has a lot more soul in the story, more humanity in the best sense of the word, and a more memorable, lovable interstellar intelligence. Ryland Grace (Ryan Gosling) is one of the best human emissaries to the stars -- Tau Ceti, in this case -- in all the movies and TV shows I've seen on that topic over the years, beginning with Captain Video and His Video Rangers in the 1950s on the shortly lived Dumont Channel. Grace surprises us at numerous junctures, as does Rocky (James Ortiz), the intelligent being from Tau Ceti e (the planet named Adrian in the movie) that doesn't have a face, though if you look at Rocky carefully at certain times from certain angles, it almost seems he does (I say "he" because Ortiz does Rocky's voice).
Drew Goddard wrote the screenplay from Andy Weir's novel, not surprising given the excellent job they did with The Martian. Like that movie, Project Hail Mary is a fine piece of science fiction that plays with the limits of scientific plausibility. Indeed, because the threats and solutions in Project Hail Mary are interstellar, far wider in scope than Mars and Earth, its connection to science is stretched pretty far and thin. But in the end -- and in the beginning and middle, too -- I felt I was seeing a riveting story that Isaac Asimov or Robert Heinlein could have written, unlike a central element of Disclosure Day which felt more in the province of Walt Disney.
I also had no idea about how Project Hail Mary would end, until the very end, which is always a big plus in a movie. This derives from the complex, unusual character of Ryland Grace, astutely written and perfectly acted. In addition, the cinematography was otherworldly convincing and topnotch. If you're in the mood for a movie in which Earth is threatened by something from outer space, in a situation that unfurls in a way that Hugo Gernsback would have really enjoyed, you can't go wrong with Project Hail Mary.

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