Moon (2009) episode artwork

EPISODE · Dec 8, 2025 · 1H 4M

Moon (2009)

from Regular or Menthol: Kino Movies Podcast · host regularormenthol

Wake up, Sam. This week we're orbiting one of the most quietly stunning, deeply human, and criminally underappreciated science fiction films of the 21st century. Moon (2009) is a film that does more with less than almost anything else in the genre — and if you haven't seen it, we're about to change your life.The feature film directorial debut of Duncan Jones — yes, David Bowie's son — Moon was specifically written as a vehicle for Sam Rockwell, and what Rockwell delivers here is nothing short of one of the greatest one-man performances in modern cinema. The film follows Sam Bell, a man nearing the end of a three-year solitary stint mining helium-3 on the far side of the Moon for a corporation called Lunar Industries, with only an AI assistant named GERTY — voiced with quietly unsettling warmth by Kevin Spacey — for company. With two weeks left on his contract and his mind beginning to fracture under the weight of three years of total isolation, Sam makes a discovery that unravels everything he thought he knew about himself, his mission, and his life back on Earth.We're going deep on everything: how Rockwell essentially acts opposite himself for the majority of the film in a technical and emotional tour de force that somehow never received an Oscar nomination, Duncan Jones' extraordinary debut that pays loving homage to the great cerebral sci-fi films of the late 70s and early 80s — Silent Running, Alien, Outland — while being entirely its own devastating thing, the film's brilliant use of practical effects over CGI, a production shot in just 33 days on a budget of $5 million that looks and feels like a major studio production, and Clint Mansell's hauntingly beautiful score. We're also talking about the film's rich thematic core — corporate ethics, identity, cloning, what it means to be human — and why Moon belongs in the conversation alongside 2001: A Space Odyssey and Solaris as one of the great philosophical science fiction films ever made.Whether you're a hard sci-fi devotee, a Sam Rockwell fanatic, a Duncan Jones admirer, a fan of slow-burn psychological drama, someone who loves films that trust their audience to think, or just a viewer who wants to be profoundly moved by something both intimate and cosmic — this episode is essential.Topics covered: Moon 2009 | Sam Rockwell | Duncan Jones | Kevin Spacey | GERTY | helium-3 | one man film | best sci-fi films of the 21st century | best sci-fi films ever made | psychological science fiction | cloning movies | identity crisis films | cerebral sci-fi | indie sci-fi | best directorial debuts | Duncan Jones David Bowie son | Clint Mansell score | practical effects sci-fi | best performances never nominated for Oscar | Sam Rockwell best films | philosophical sci-fi | corporate dystopia films | isolation movies | best films of 2009 | movie review podcast | film analysis | 2001 A Space Odyssey influence | Solaris comparison | best low budget films | BAFTA nominated films | Hugo Award winnerSubscribe, rate, and leave us a review — and tell us: where does Moon rank in your all-time sci-fi list? And does Sam Rockwell's performance here belong among the greatest ever put on screen?YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@RegularorMentholContact us: [email protected]

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Moon (2009)

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This episode is 1 hour and 4 minutes long.

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This episode was published on December 8, 2025.

What is this episode about?

Wake up, Sam. This week we're orbiting one of the most quietly stunning, deeply human, and criminally underappreciated science fiction films of the 21st century. Moon (2009) is a film that does more with less than almost anything else in the genre —...

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