Let's be real: this is the kind of movie you scroll past on Netflix multiple times before finally clicking out of curiosity, then regret 20 minutes in.
The premise—astronauts learning Earth has been destroyed—could be compelling in skilled hands. But with a 4.5/10 on IMDb and 2.3/5 on Letterboxd, this is universally considered a miss. It's not 'so bad it's good,' it's just... slow, derivative, and depressing without the storytelling chops to make the depression meaningful.
For families? Absolutely not. It's rated 17+ for good reason—mass extinction, psychological breakdowns, and crushing existential dread aren't exactly dinner conversation material. But even for adults looking for thoughtful sci-fi, there are dozens of better options (Moon, Sunshine, The Martian, even Interstellar if you want the space-isolation vibe).
Unless you're doing a film studies project on 'How Not to Make a Space Thriller,' skip this one. Life's too short for 4.5-rated movies about the end of humanity.



