Sunshine, directed by Danny Boyle, has a new trailer up;
Watch it here
(the trailer has music by Six by Seven, wooh, plus the obligatory piece by Kronos Quartet that every trailer ever made must use)
"Fifty years in the future, the sun is dying, and the earth and its inhabitants are dying with it. Seven years have passed since several crewmembers on board the “Icarus” disappeared without a trace while on a mission to save the planet. Eight scientists on board the “Icarus II,” some from America, the rest from China, represent the earth’s final hope. They are carrying a massive bomb, the size of Kansas, which will be used to reignite a part of the dying sun. Deep into their journey, with radio contact far out of reach, the group begins to make critical mistakes. Their voyage becomes even stranger when they pick up a distress signal from the original “Icarus.” Suddenly, they must struggle to keep their sanity if they hope to have a chance to complete their mission."
Starring Chris Evans and Cillian Murphy.

Been waiting for this.
Article in the new Uncut about it.
Another collaboration with Alex Garland
Ahhh, didn't know it was written by Garland...sweet!
Release dates for Sunshine (2007)
UK 6 April 2007
Australia 12 April 2007
IMDb
looks truly terrifying; i found "28 days later" jump-off-the-edge-of-the-couch worthy.
didn't six by seven break up? they were great.
They did, but just announced this month that the original line-up is back together! Woooh!
Starring Chris Evans and #Cillian Murphy.#
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^worth it all the way. moreover, it sounds great.
Cillian Murphy scares me.
he's one of my man crushes!
I want to see this movie so fucking badly it hurts.
Good collection of talent, dodgy premise - isn't this The Core in outer space?
28 Weeks Later - the 28 Days Later sequel - is out in a few months as well.
Friends who've been to advance UK screenings say it's a bit weak and cobbled together.
But you know, fuck them. They're sci-fi nerds who wouldn't be pleased with anything, frankly.
Trailer looks great. I hope it doesn't contain 90% of the Awesome Moments this film contains.
is "28 weeks later" a boyle/garland co-production?
trailer looks great. trailer for "300" looks even better.
The sun is the star
The sci-fi thriller Sunshine sees director Danny Boyle continue his love affair with genre films. But, he tells Patrick Barkham, he's no 'Star Wars geek'
Friday March 23, 2007
The Guardian
Briilllliiaaaannnttt! Danny Boyle in full flow bears more than a passing resemblance to the Fast Show's boundlessly enthusiastic teenager, Brilliant Kid. Today the director of Trainspotting is mostly raving about the sun, Kenny from South Park, student digs, acrobatic planes, CGI hamsters, cordless kettles, Dr Brian Cox, D:Ream, the God particle and Hugh Grant. Grant apart, these things all play a role in Sunshine, Boyle's new film and his first foray into science fiction.
"I am a sci-fi fan," says Boyle, whose boyish lust for life knocks a decade off his 50 years. "I'm not a Star Wars geek. I like the hardcore stuff, the Nasa stuff. But I hadn't thought, 'Oh I must do a sci-fi film.'" Then he read the script for Sunshine by Alex Garland, his collaborator on 28 Days Later and The Beach. "I thought it was brilliant. What a great starting point: eight astronauts strapped to the back of this massive bomb, behind a shield, flying towards the sun. Fantastic. I'd go and watch that."
Set half a century in the future, Sunshine, which cost £20m to make, is not as much of a boys-only affair as it first appears. The hero of this claustrophobic thriller is the slight Irish actor Cillian Murphy, all hooded eyes and sloping shoulders. The sun is dying, the earth in permanent winter and Murphy is the physicist in an eight-strong Asian-American team of astronauts 16 months into a mission to reignite the sun with a nuclear bomb the size of Manhattan.
Boyle reckons Sunshine is the first sci-fi film with the sun as its star, probably because until now we haven't had the computer-generated wizardry to represent its molten fury in flaming close-up. In keeping with his genre-hopping reputation, Sunshine appears a world away from Trainspotting. But it does share one small motif: the CGI sun is "very, very trippy", according to Boyle. "That was one of the briefs to the CGI people - it should feel like hallucinations towards the end."
Three years in the making, the director began by dumping his international cast - including the Australian Rose Byrne, American Chris Evans and more established Asian talents Michelle Yeoh and Hiroyuki Sanada - in a student dorm in Mile End, east London. "They've got some very nice student digs there but it ain't the Dorchester. Actors want to impress at the beginning," Boyle chuckles, "so you take advantage of that by suddenly saying, 'Right, you're here for two weeks.' What you're doing is creating a siege mentality. It's just like football managers. You're making them feel like it's eight of them, alone, against the world. At the start of the film, the characters have been together for 16 months and you've got to make some gesture towards that."
The film's premise may strain credibility, but Boyle devoted his energies to making his actors convince as astronauts in the claustrophobic corridors of a space ship. He took them scubadiving, introduced them to the work of Richard Seymour, a futurologist who invented the cordless kettle, and put them in a 747 flight simulator.
Then Boyle dragged them into an acrobatic plane. "They put a glove on the dashboard and there's a moment of zero-G where the glove just floats off. It's fantastic. It's so they could experience things that they hadn't in their last film. You don't want them bringing that film with them. You want to pop the actor's bubble and let them be part of this film."
Finally, he brought in Dr Brian Cox from Cern, the particle physics laboratory in Geneva, as their scientific adviser. "He somehow makes it accessible and puts it in human terms," says Boyle. "When you begin to learn about the science, it makes your mind swell."
Scientists may scoff at Sunshine's most bonkers bits and may also feel that Murphy is too young (he's 30) and good-looking to save the world. Boyle will have none of it. Take Cox, he says. He is a proper scientist "who is very handsome and used to be in D:Ream. He's one of the backing musicians on Things Can Only Get Better. And he looks like Cillian."
Boyle gave Murphy his big break on 28 Days Later, his 2002 zombie movie. "He's a reluctant hero, that's what's good about him. He's next door actually." Murphy is being interviewed in the adjoining hotel room. Boyle adopts a conspiratorial whisper. "He's quite modest as a person, and he has to be pushed into the centre of the film a bit. He kind of turns away from the camera. I saw him doing that in the Ken Loach film [The Wind that Shakes the Barley] as well. He has to be eased in there and that's really appealing. It stops it being too obviously heroic."
Boyle shrugs off his reputation for uncovering young actors. Shallow Grave saw Ewan McGregor, Christopher Eccleston and Peter Mullan enter the mainstream, while Trainspotting made names of a generation of actors from Robert Carlyle to Kelly Macdonald. Does that make him a great talent spotter? "Huh huh huh. It makes me out to be Simon Cowell. I trained in the theatre. A lot of film directors are quite scared of actors. They are a bit of a nightmare sometimes, but I like them. It looks like cunning, but you try to get extra things from them all the time, by stealth, by making them feel confident, so they trust you and you can push a bit."
As well as deploying natural cunning to create a cast of characters under siege, Boyle ramped up the claustrophobia in Sunshine by refusing to cut back to shots of our planet as "earth jeopardy" films usually do. Most of the action is within the space ship, Icarus II, and he increased the sense of confinement by resisting the urge to frequently show off its magnificent outside ("It's good, isn't it?" he says proudly of the twirling, enormous CGI ship, before explaining that the designers who built it are known in the trade as "hamsters"). Adding to the sensory deprivation are shots of Murphy from inside the helmet of his gold space suit. "We came up with this idea of a Kenny funnel shape for the helmet. South Park was one of the drawings we used as a reference point," he laughs.
Sunshine may mirror the apocalyptic tone of current debates over climate change but Garland, says Boyle, deliberately chose an alternative future: the earth getting colder and science as a saviour. Boyle, however, agrees his film is about the hubris of science. He tried to imbue his actors with the "uncompromising, cold eye" of scientists. He lowers his voice again. "Brian Cox is the nicest guy, but he's so arrogant. I used to tell the actors to watch the way he'll just go 'no'. He works at Cern, where they are looking for this particle they nickname the God particle. There is a tiny, tiny chance that when they collide these protons they'll create a black hole into which we'll all disappear. I said, 'You're still going ahead with it?' He said, 'Don't worry about it, you won't know anything about it [if it happens].' Everything will be gone!
"We had this argument in the bar last night. He said it's absolutely critical we use nuclear power and Cillian said, 'What about the Irish sea? It's so polluted and there's all these leukaemia clusters.' And Cox went, 'If we use nuclear power we can give light and food to a million people in Africa and you're worried about a few hundred people in Ireland?'"
In keeping with his habit of hopping between completely contrasting projects, Boyle's next scheduled film is Slum Dog Millionaire, based on a true story about a boy who wins the Indian version of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire but faces the widespread suspicion that he cheated. Boyle has just come back from a scouting trip to Mumbai, where it sounds like the pace of life would suit his kinetic film-making.
Before the sun burns out, Boyle, slightly surprisingly, says he'd like to work with Hugh Grant. He also hopes to team up with McGregor again. The pair fell out badly when the director refused to cast his usual leading man in The Beach. They have only spoken a couple of times since and, momentarily, Boyle's enthusiasm dims. "I don't really hang out with actors. You can't really be top friends with actors as a director because you are often judging them about something they want to do and you won't give them."
Although some years back McGregor publicly dismissed talk of a sequel to Trainspotting in the form of Irvine Welsh's novel Porno, Boyle still holds out hope. "I'm sure we will get back together again, I hope we can, because we had a really good run. He's one of those guys who can do it, who has got that magic thing that people love. You don't come across it very often."
The script for Porno "starts with this amazing premise. Begbie is in jail for 17 years for manslaughter." Boyle sounds perky again. "He gets this guy to stab him so he can go into hospital and break out and this guy stabs him in the wrong place, in the kidney." He doubles up, chuckling. "You can feel the characters straightaway. We just need the [Trainspotting] actors to feel a bit older. They look like they're in a spa every weekend rather than a bar. But when age hits them we'll be there, waiting."
Sunshine is released Mar 30
rose byrne makes me happy on the inside.
Released in Aus now?
Guess so
3 and half stars in the age today
Margaret and David gave it four each.
I'm looking forward to it.
cillian!!!
rosie!!!
i might be seeing this tonight!
POWER UP.
does a little dance
this is really fucking good!!
yes cobbled together and a bit slow to start, but a fucking amazing exploitation of fucked up audio and video experimentation. kind of 2001 with a bit more story. scary as fucking shit. a great cubesque physics meltdown at the end. definitely worth the cinema experience if only for the sound of the sun. wow.
and totally worth it for chris fucking evans oozing gorgeous machismo all over the screen.
Awesome film. I haven't been scared like that in a cinema in a long time. There was so much dread throughout, I was completely exhausted by the end of it. Visually amazing too.
Lane, I agree Chris Evan's was very good; they should have sent eight clones of him on the most important mission in human history, rather than the seven other flakes; but then it wouldn't have been such a good film.....
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This movie was shit. Boring and shit.
Wrong on both counts.
NAH
I bet you didn't like The Fountain either.
Soundtrack available yet?
Dear Blake:
I liked this film, except agree the burnt up guy was a bit stupid. The spinning scalpel to the back was sweet though.
This film = 15 million new and interesting ways to kill people in Space
I disliked it.
good concept that could have pushed a lot harder rather than retreating to 'trapped on a ship with a killer' territory..ala aliens, it could have been done as poetically as 'the abyss' and expanded more on the philosophical and quasi-religious bent.
Why does anything even remotely funded by Hollywood have to have stars that look like models??
I did enjoy it tho, and did find it scary. Sun-man didn't bother me and I like his ramble about communing with god for 7 years. Also the visual treatment on him was ace.
Messy shit, this movie was.
great initial concept, awesome ship. the effects were ace too. the last 30-35 minutes were very silly though.
The effects to keep the old captain out of focus were pretty cool.
I really really enjoyed it.
plot hole alert:
SKIN CANCER
plus he would be blind
plus if his flesh was weakened enough to be torn by hand it would be weak enough to slough off during movement
yeah well, it doesn't proclaim to be a 'science fact' film, which is why it's listed as 'fiction.' did you sit there and deliberate why a monolith makes monkies angry and floats through space in 2001? no, probably not, although you could have, and you probably got a pain in the brain like i did. though i can understand that some semblance of plausibility to help ground the film in reality can make it less alienating and more involving.
anyway, i didnt come here to type that junk above. what i meant to say was;
Soundtrack available yet?
still not available...
nah tagomago, there's a difference between the two scenarios
good science fiction posits a possible different world and then examines the things that flow from that difference, for instance the monolith you mention from 2001.
this was just a bit of weak writing. note that i have no complaint about the time/space/physics bending stuff when they arrive at the sun. i just have a problem with the guy who is miraculously able to see and walk despite being basically a human casserole for 7-odd years
soundtrack?
stunning film, although parts of it did feel like it was straight out of red dwarf. i <3 rose
Nope, still not available...
I've got a bootleg download of a few of the tracks, probably just ripped from the DVD...
Hmmm
That was a shame
Really great the way it just leapt in and let you fill in the gaps
Then it went all Event Horizon with a psycho on board
It really wasn't needed
The whole quandary of the individual life verses the greater good could have held it together.
BTW, final shots.
With the Sydney Opera House in shot, did winter destroy all the buildings of suburbia?