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Info The Aeronauts is a movie starring Felicity Jones, Eddie Redmayne, and Himesh Patel. Pilot Amelia Rennes (Felicity Jones) and scientist James Glaisher (Eddie Redmayne) find themselves in an epic fight for survival while attempting to Release Date 2019 Writer Jack Thorne Adventure runtime 100 M. Les aéronautes Watch stream. This movie gave me about 5 heart attacks lol I thought it was good.

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Oooh how fun seeing the humanoids being all flown away……like leaves…. Amazon Studios will release The Aeronauts in theaters on December 6th. The film will be available on Prime Video December 20th. Welcome to prestige pic season, when a parade of biopics will be launched in hopes of scoring critical praise soaring into the Academy Awards. Felicity Jones and Eddie Redmayne are no strangers to the tribulations and exhilaration of award season, having earned matching Academy Award nominations for the Stephen Hawking biopic The Theory of Everything. Redmayne even went on to win. So, perhaps they hoped lightning would strike twice as they reteamed for The Aeronauts, another historical drama of human triumph and scientific endeavor. However, this one is a major misfire, stretching the bounds of patience as well as the legitimacy of "based on real events. " Written by Jack Thorne with a "story by" credit going to director Tom Harper, The Aeronauts centers on hot air balloonist Amelia Wren (Jones) and pioneering meteorologist James Glaisher (Redmayne). In 1862 London, one was heralded for her daredevil antics in the high skies, while the other was considered a loon for suggesting weather could be predicted through studying those skies. Yet together, this odd couple goes on a fateful flight that tested their bodies, minds, and spirits as they faced dizzying altitude, freezing temperatures, and complications that demanded life-threatening remedies. All this for science! Yet this isn't just a tale of science, but one of the growing bond between an unlikely pair of allies. Redmayne leans into the flustered posh boy shtick perfected by Hugh Grant in the '90s to play the bookish Glaisher, who has a brilliant mind but a fumbling tongue. He speaks passionately about science and discovery, but all with an attitude that's vaguely apologetic, as if he worries he's being a bother. By contrast, Wren is a free spirit who not only isn't afraid to make a scene, but much prefers it. Before their big flight, he focuses on equipment and readings, while she caters to the gathered audience by wearing a colorful costume and pancake make-up, doing acrobatics, delivering a speech, and offering a parachuting puppy as a spectacular sidekick. Watch the trailer for The Aeronauts below: Her passion is flying and the freedom she feels among the clouds. So, the two seem poised for an opposites-attract rom-com arc, where he'll learn to loosen up and she'll learn to grow up and then kisses and marriage and presumably off-screen babies are to be had. But The Aeronauts never quite settles into this cliché. The main thrust of this film is the flight, in which the two grow close through sharing stories of their lives and sharing a love of the skies. Flashbacks usher us back to their meet-cute at a ball where both were misfits, then through flirtations and down the rocky road to this pivotal launch. However, romantic sparks only flicker. This is in part because Glaisher's true love is his work, and in part because Wren is presented as a widow still heartbroken over the loss of her co-pilot/husband. Frankly, I was relieved the film didn't end with a kiss, as there are not enough sparks to justify such a thing. Besides, not every leading man and leading lady must fall in love in 90 minutes or less. Still, the film's indecisiveness about the nature of this relationship is equal parts distracting and confounding. Far more interesting is the incredible risks the pair had to take when they'd flown seven miles high. When the frigid temperatures freeze the release valve, the ballon will not warm its rise. So, it's up to Wren to scale to the top of the massive, miles-high balloon to get them back to Earth. It's a sequence that is harrowing in concept and enthusiastically explored with Jones army-crawling like an action hero, her hands raw and bloody from cruel cold and remorseless ropes. Then a final climactic action sequence aims for heart-racing as they maneuver an unsuspecting landing. With such action, why does The Aeronauts feel so thoroughly dull? Amazon Spotlight: November 2019 Earlier this year, director Harper earned praise for Wild Rose, a drama about a single mom who aspires to be a country singer. It was a riveting film in which every frame was alive with emotion and passion. Frankly, it confounds me that his follow-up feels so woefully lifeless. The muted color palette flattens a world on the brink of discovery. The characters are flat caricatures, one a man of science with no passion for anything but science. The other is a plucky "strong female character" defined chiefly by not being like the other girls, what with their living husbands, children, and fear of being "free. " The performances feel safe, offering little beyond earnestness and stiff-upper-lip British posturing. Admittedly, Jones has often proved underwhelming to me. Even when she's playing a rebel, it seems she's ever asking for permission to cut loose. But Redmayne has reached for extraordinary before, and I wonder if the pans over his diva-turn in Jupiter Ascending have scared him away from taking more risks onscreen. Whatever you might think of his portrayal of a space tyrant who speaks only in screams and whispers, you could not accuse that performance of being boring. When it comes to the clunky chemistry and restrained performances, one might argue that Thorne and Harper were hemmed in by the responsibility of telling a true story. One would be wrong, as the central relationship of this supposed biopic is absolute fiction. There was no Amelia Wren. The aeronaut who took Glaisher on this epic flight was aeronaut Henry Coxwell. But presumably, the filmmakers thought a man might look less enchanting in ball gowns dancing opposite Redmayne, in flower-covered costumes doing cartwheels, or bravely swinging about the ropes of an out-of-control balloon to rescue the leading man. Yet the romance angle never takes flight. So why make this change? Though reportedly based on a real balloonist named Sophie Blanchard, Wren feels paper-thin, as if crafted from a checklist of "strong female character" traits. Tragic backstory? Check. Outspoken? Check. Pretty, romantically available, and strong enough to appease female audience members but not so strong that she might turn off male audience members? Check. Check. Blech. In the end, Amelia Wren feels like a contrivance, not a character. So what was the point of her?! Verdict The Aeronauts is a film flawed from its first concept. By blending fact and fiction so freely, Thorne and Harper turned a story of scientific discovery into a muddling romantic adventure that crashes and burns. Their acclaimed cast is wasted in roles that never rise beyond the expected. While the action sequences are engaging, little else in this bumbling historical fiction is. Which leaves me to wonder why make all these changes in the first place? As is, the would-be biopic of James Glaisher wildly reinvents his story to make a Manic Pixie Dream Girl his co-pilot. It completely erases his actual co-pilot, and plays half-hearted tribute to another unrelated aeronaut, thereby muddling her story too. All this to make a film that feels first and foremost like a compromise, then ultimately mediocre and forgettable.

Ugh logan really opened the gates to “gritty, realistic fantasy”. Expect 15 of these films exploring the same thing over and over. Les aÃronautes Watch stream new. Les aéronautes Watch streaming sur internet. Les aÃronautes Watch stream.nbcolympics. 51 million people clicked on this video because of the thumbnail Edit: This video has gone up 4 million views in 5 days.

Strong woomans. That last bit of the trailer 😱. Wish Amazon hadn't cancelled the IMAX run. Can you imagine that on a gigantic screen. THEY'RE DOING A MOVIE TOGETHER AFTER THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING. sign me tf up. Finally. Something original. Interesting period piece with a unique subject matter. No guns or villains. Will definitely watch this. This gave me The Gravity vibes. and i liked it.

Felicity Jones and Eddie Redmayne have teamed up once again, and this time they're in a giant balloon. The two The Theory of Everything stars are taking to the skies in The Aeronauts (in theaters Dec. 6 and on Amazon Prime Dec. 20), which tells the story of a risk-taking balloon pilot and a scientist as they attempt to fly higher in a gas balloon than anyone ever has before. The film is influenced by multiple true stories, so the accuracy of The Aeronauts depends on which character you're looking at, as one is real and one is fictional. The Aeronauts cinematographer George Steel initially pitched the idea to director Tom Harper ( War and Peace, Wild Rose) after reading an excerpt from Falling Upwards: How We Took to the Air, a history of ballooning by Richard Holmes. But once Harper got his hands on the book and found the section Steel was referring to about a 1862 flight by meteorologist James Glaisher, he didn't think it was intriguing enough of a story to tell on screen. "It was extraordinary, but much of the flight was quite boring, " Harper told Screen Daily. "James Glaisher was a meticulous scientist, [but] he spent the entire time taking measurements and he didn’t really say very much. " Harper soon realized that perhaps Glaisher's story could be combined with those of some of the other balloon flights in the book to create a compelling amalgamation of stories. Amazon Prime Video on YouTube What ended up happening through collaboration with screenwriter Jack Thorne is that Glaisher (Redmayne) is one of the main characters, but his partner on the 1862 flight, Henry Coxwell, is replaced by Amelia Wren (Jones), a fictional character inspired by French balloonist Sophie Blanchard. Blanchard was married to another well-known aeronaut, Jean-Pierre Blanchard, and became the first woman aeronaut. She was known for putting on shows where she would take balloon flights at night while fireworks went off. (In the film, Amelia is the showy one, in contrast to James' serious demeanor. ) Blanchard died in 1819 when her balloon caught fire during one of her shows. Aside from the task of building the characters, the filmmakers also had to build the gas balloon itself. Harper believed that if a replica of Glaisher and Coxwell's balloon, called The Mammoth, could be made, then it should (the real Mammoth is still intact). The production built the world's first true replica of an 1800s gas balloon, and Jones and Redmayne actually filmed while flying in it. Of course, certain scenes with stunts would involve, for instance, Jones filming with the balloon in a studio, while her stunt double would film with the balloon up in the air. As for other changes in the movie, according to the BBC, the real flight with Glaisher and Coxwell wasn't quite as dramatic as the one shown in the film, though they did reach an altitude — peaking at 37, 000 feet — that meant they experienced a lack of oxygen and frostbite. "I'll be interested to see how much science is actually in the film, " Glaisher's great-great-great niece Ali Glaisher told the BBC. "To replace Mr. Coxwell, who was a balloon expert, with an attractive widow character, I can understand why they've done it. " She added, however, that her great-great-great uncle was married, so he wouldn't "be going off with any widow. " For viewers who don't know anything about 19th century ballooning, the film still serves an introduction into this world. As Harper told the BBC, "We pulled from so many different flights to create the narrative of the film and hope that those collections of achievements serve as a basis for inspiration to all genders and all ages. ".

Les aéronautes Watch streaming. Why is this movie so boring? It's not bro. Les aéronautes Watch streams. 0:18 virtually every fan-service scene in anime. Love Rose Byrne. Her cover of the classical song !Ring around the Rosie is a masterpiece. Les aÃronautes Watch stream new albums. He Will become Jack Sparrow now? Ksksks. Rachel: Beth dies. Joey: 😟. Combination Sci-Fi, Fantasy and Crime-Action-Drama to produce GREAT CHEMISTRY. I liked this Action. Than other Superpower movies...

 

Looking for movie tickets? Tell us where you are. ENTER CITY, STATE OR ZIP CODE GO Need a refund or exchange? It's easy with our worry-free tickets. Here's what's included with every worry-free ticket purchase: Peace of mind of a guaranteed ticket. We know life happens. You may exchange or request a refund for your entire order, less the convenience fee, through Fandango up until the posted showtime. You'll have to complete your refund and exchange before the posted showtime indicated on your ticket. We'll refund your credit card or we can credit your Fandango account to use for another movie. Your choice. Released December 6, 2019 PG-13, 1 hr 41 min Action/Adventure Drama Sign up for a FANALERT® and be the first to know when tickets and other exclusives are available in your area. Also sign me up for FanMail to get updates on all things movies: tickets, special offers, screenings + more.

Movies | ‘The Aeronauts’ Review: High Anxiety Critic’s Pick Felicity Jones and Eddie Redmayne reach for the skies in this charming Victorian ballooning adventure. Credit... Amazon Studios The Aeronauts NYT Critic's Pick Directed by Tom Harper Action, Adventure, Biography, Drama, Romance PG-13 1h 40m More Information To call “The Aeronauts” uplifting would be an understatement for a movie that shoots us into the sky in a gas-filled balloon with little preamble and a breathtaking array of special effects. Gorgeous and goofy, fanciful and unrepentantly old-fashioned, this Victorian adventure (it’s set in 1862) delights much more when its head is in the clouds than when its feet are on the ground. The wellspring of the movie’s joie de vivre is Amelia Wren (a wonderful Felicity Jones), a fearless balloonist with a tragic past and a gift for exhibitionism. The movie opens with a rush as she arrives at a launch site astride the roof of a carriage, her peacock-hued frock and feathered headdress fluttering gaily. The crowd is ecstatic as she cartwheels around the waiting balloon under the disapproving gaze of her flight partner, the meteorologist James Glaisher ( Eddie Redmayne). Glaisher is taking the trip to test his theories of weather prediction — this being London, those mostly amount to determining the likelihood of a drizzle versus a downpour — and Amelia’s carnival antics annoy him. He’s even more miffed when, after liftoff, she flings her little dog, Posey, out of the basket, accompanied by a spray of fireworks. Calm yourself, James: Posey has a parachute. Swiftly establishing a stuffy-scientist-meets-sexy-daredevil dynamic, the director, Tom Harper, and his screenwriter, Jack Thorne, proceed to upend our gender expectations. While James fusses awkwardly with his pressure and altitude readings, Amelia is busily keeping them alive. The star of the movie in every way, she’s skilled and practical and brave: She’s the one with the common sense to bring oilskins and to recognize the dangers in the plummeting temperature and thinning air. That she also understands the benefits of publicity and showmanship is only a plus. A composite of several real-life balloon trips ( Glaisher is real and Wren is fictitious, but likely based on the flamboyant French balloonist Sophie Blanchard), “The Aeronauts” has a natural buoyancy that mostly resists the drag of its earthbound flashbacks. Stuffy scenes between James and his parents ( Tom Courtenay and Anne Reid) alternate with his entreaties for money from the Royal Society, where his bewhiskered fellow scientists think he’s a hoot. After a few of these interludes, neither we nor the movie can wait to get back in that basket with Amelia. Structural road blocks aside, “The Aeronauts” is that rare adventure movie to celebrate the silence in which its wonders unfold. The cloud of butterflies that magically appears, and the flakes of snow that hover, seemingly stationary, around the balloon during its too-swift descent, are permitted to linger quietly on the screen and in the mind. At one point — in the film’s most terrifying sequence — as Amelia climbs up the balloon’s exterior to release a perilously frozen gas valve, George Steel’s cinematography has such a hushed and blinding beauty that it would be a crime to close your eyes. Equal parts dizzying and dippy, “The Aeronauts” is family entertainment at its most charming and chaste. By and by, you realize you’ve been watching a romance blossom without a single kiss, but that shouldn’t be a surprise: What James and Amelia are really in love with is the sky. The Aeronauts Rated PG-13. Vertigo medication all around. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes.

Looks like a good film, shame that Felicity Jones is playing Henry Coxwell in a dress #forceddiversity. The Aeronauts: The story of a famous balloon flight in 1862 which broke flight altitude records and enabled important discoveries about the layers of the atmosphere. i'm afraid the story here is romanticised as two male scientists carried out the ascent but film is the better for thus subterfuge. Amelia Rennes (Felicity Jones) is a balloon pilot who has given up the trade after losing her husband in a tragedy bound flight. James Glaisger (Eddie Remayne) is an astronomer and meteorologist who persuades Amelia to fly once again so that he may prove his theories and break the altitude record. The flight sets off from a fairground, made into a spectacle to raise necessary finance. Amelia is the artiste turning cartwheels to delight the crowd tossing a dog on a parachute out of the balloon basket. Glaisher is very much the staid scientist.
Flashbacks show how Amelia lost her husband and the lead up to the flight. Glaisher's theories are mocked at the Royal Society (stock scene of whiskered elderlry men laughing at young scientist) andhe is refused funding for experiments. Some great aerial scenes tension is maintained throughout, with some shots literally heart-stopping. Also a little dark humour, Glaisher sends off homing pigeons at various stages of the ascent, eventually at too high an altitude a pigeon plummets when he tosses it in the air. A great adventure story directed and co-written by Tom Harper (Wild Rose) who acknowledges the book Falling Upwards by Richard Holmes as an inspiration for the film. 8/10.

Love these two together 😍😍.

 

Omg they going to do a new movie together. Why does this remind me so hard for saints row. I feel like Im gonna leave the theatre crying 😂😂. Damn i realy need to not see it, i couldn't even watch the entire trailer xd. I'm not gonna lie, I effing loved this film. I signed up to watch gigantic monsters fight and that's what I got. I had a blast. Mmm. yeah! 0:17 0:23 0:48. Les aeronautics watch streaming. Cleopatra.

The national treasure. Les aÃronautes Watch stream online. Les aÃronautes Watch. Yep The timeline changed. Wow this looks like a R. Scott type film! Alien meets Deep Star Six! Then the PG-13 rating. dreams are dashed away once again 🙄. Nice beaver in the thumbnail. Les aÃronautes Watch stream of consciousness.

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