SFX

MOON

IT WAS A PERFECT LITTLE GEM,” SMILES director Duncan Jones, remembering the creation and runaway success of his 2009 debut Moon. “It was small and intimate and we all knew what we wanted to make – I don’t think I’ve ever felt like a project has been as pure.” Ten years on, if you ask Jones and his long-time producing partner Stuart Fenegan what the key factors behind their inaugural cinematic outing were, ambition, drive and a healthy dose of naivety will no-doubt crop up. Having cut their teeth on commercial shoots, the duo’s determination to break onto the big-screen saw them aim for the stars to tell a visually distinctive tale that combined the aesthetics of hard ’70s sci-fi with everprevalent themes of isolation and disconnection. It was a smart and taut first feature that boasted an emotionally charged turn from an always-compelling Sam Rockwell – but as the duo tell SFX, their trip to the moon happened almost by accident.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from SFX

SFX2 min read
Captain’s Log
There’s supposed to be a picture of me in the TARDIS here, but they’ve got lost in the space/time vortex somewhere… Regardless, here we go again – we’re on the cusp of a new-new-new era of Doctor Who and it’s very exciting! While everyone waits for 1
SFX3 min read
Earth’s Deathliest Heroes
NOT ONLY MARVEL’S biggest summer crossover for several years, Blood Hunt is also set to be the goriest ever, with writer Jed MacKay and artist Pepe Larraz producing not only the standard five-parter but also expanded, polybagged Red Band editions, wh
SFX1 min read
Also Out
There’s plenty more books that we couldn’t quite fit in. MANIA (out now, The Borough Press) is the latest by Lionel Shriver, author of We Need To Talk About Kevin. In this satirical alternate-world tale, the rise of the Mental Parity Movement has mad

Related