Space Cadet | |
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Directed by | Liz W. Garcia |
Written by | Liz W. Garcia |
Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | John G. Inwood |
Edited by | Oona Flaherty |
Music by | John Debney |
Production company | Stampede Ventures |
Distributed by | Amazon MGM Studios |
Release date |
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Running time | 111 minutes [1] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Space Cadet is a 2024 American comedy film written and directed by Liz W. Garcia. It stars Emma Roberts, Tom Hopper, Poppy Liu, and Gabrielle Union.
Rex, a Floridian with little more than a high school diploma, manages to almost complete the NASA space training program before her falsified resumé is exposed, but later redeems herself by becoming the only hope for the crew using her smarts, heart, and moxie.
The film was released internationally online on July 4, 2024.
Tiffany "Rex" Simpson is a Florida party girl who has always been fascinated with outer space. Although Rex is a gifted amateur inventor who earned a full scholarship to Georgia Tech, she dropped out following her mother's death to care for her father and now works as a bartender and alligator wrestler.
At her ten-year high school reunion, Rex encounters her childhood friend Toddrick Spencer, who is now a billionaire specializing in space tourism. After Toddrick tells Rex she was one of his inspirations, she decides to follow her dreams and apply to NASA to become an astronaut. Knowing Rex does not meet most of the requirements, her best friend Nadine heavily embellishes her resume without telling her, leading her to be accepted to an astronaut training program at the Johnson Space Center.
Although Rex is excited to be at NASA, her outfits and general demeanor initially raise skepticism among the other candidates. At an introductory interview with the NASA board, she realizes what Nadine has done, but manages to salvage the situation without revealing her lack of qualifications. When Rex's roommate Violet accidentally discovers her secret, they agree to help each other - Violet helps Rex catch up academically, while Rex helps Violet improve her physical fitness. Rex gradually wins over most of her fellow candidates, as well as program directors Pam Proctor and Logan O'Leary. Although Logan calls several of her application references, Nadine fakes them using voice acting, Google, and an office soundboard.
As the weeks pass, NASA begins cutting candidates, including Violet, who promises not to reveal Rex's secret, but warns her that it is unlikely to end well. The night before the final training exercise, Rex convinces Logan and most of the remaining candidates to go out to a karaoke bar. They end the evening in the Space Center planetarium, where she and Logan almost kiss.
Rex and her colleagues successfully complete the final exercise, a two-week Mars habitat simulation. However, after she begins flight training the next day, Logan discovers her falsified credentials when Nadine accidentally switches to video call while pretending to be a male reference. Although Rex successfully lands the plane, she is expelled from the program.
Ten months later, while Rex has returned to her normal life, her former colleagues head to the International Space Station, but their flight makes the news when meteorite debris becomes stuck in the station door and traps the astronauts inside. Rex presents a potential solution to Pam and Logan, who reluctantly allow her and Violet to pilot a rescue mission on Toddrick's spacecraft. Rex's unconventional thinking helps her figure out how to fix the door, and all the astronauts return to Earth safely.
In the epilogue, Rex reveals that she and Violet have become astronauts for Toddrick's company, the two of them and Nadine have started a "space camp" for young girls, and that she is now in a relationship with Logan.
Principal photography took place in New Jersey from August to October 2022. Union Beach stood in for Cocoa Beach. [2] Shooting occurred at the Bell Labs Holmdel Complex, Essex County Airport, and U.S. Space & Rocket Center. [2]
The film was released by Amazon MGM Studios through its streaming service Prime Video on July 4, 2024. [3]
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes , 27% of 30 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 3.8/10.The website's consensus reads: "Never achieving liftoff despite Emma Roberts' peppy performance, Space Cadet flunks out of the school of high-concept comedy." [4] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, gave the film a score of 40/100 based on ten critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews. [5]
The Guardian thought the film is "hopelessly muddled, a bitter first sip that proceeds to curdle". [6] The New York Times opined that "the jokes feel tired. The actors are mostly doing their best, but the screenplay too often leaves them mimicking comedy rather than performing it", and it is not "unwatchable, but it's the sort of movie that makes you want to go back and revisit the better versions." [7]
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