Toronto Review: ‘The Aeronauts’ is well-crafted with a winning performance by Felicity Jones

Published by
Share
Courtesy of TIFF

Tom Harper’s epic film is a mixed bag of elegance and emptiness

Following his well-received Wild Rose, Tom Harper goes for a more epic adventure in THE AERONAUTS. Technically elegant but narratively flawed, this is an entertaining picture that delivers some thrills but never amounts to a true knockout.

London, 1862. At a balloon launch site, meteorologist James Glaisher (an underused Eddie Redmayne) anxiously waits for pilot Amelia Wren (Felicity Jones). Together, they will embark on what they hope would be an altitude-breaker and a key journey to help predict weather conditions at a time when meteorology was not seriously regarded. As the duo get higher, weather conditions get more and more severe, turning their journey into a life-threatening, uncalculated risk that could very well be their last.

As Wren, Jones delivers a winning performance as a women who is looking for healing, redemption and hope from an incredibly risky journey. She balances Wren’s vulnerability and steely determination perfectly well and provides the film’s key narrative hook, albeit a faint one. Redmayne, however, plays second fiddle to Jones, delivering a fine performance as an ambitious scientist who has weathered criticism from the community at large and yet retained his love for adventure and his strong belief in the vitality of weather predictive techniques. But this is Jones’ story – and the narrative lends her more room for development.

While the film dazzles in a few air sequences, the overall impact is bogged down by a fairly conventional story that fails to truly hook. It is not an issue of execution as much as it’s in the film’s low stakes. Despite a few sequences in which the duo struggle to stay alive amidst a series of unexpected mishaps, the film stills feels predictable and somewhat safe.

Exquisitely shot with stunningly beautiful and haunting cinematography that lends the film some scope and atmosphere, excellent costume design and aided by an adequate soundtrack used in the right places to heighten excitement and create a sense of escapism, the film is wonderful to look at – particularly the air scenes where clouds embrace the air balloon and the world beneath completely vanishes. Whenever the film stays in the air, it soars – but as it keeps going to flashbacks in the real world beneath, it doesn’t stick the landing.

The film’s flaws will not stop mainstream audiences from likely enjoying the ride. Entertaining and engaging, even if superficially, THE AERONAUTS features two charismatic actors convincingly playing their parts and a simple enough premise that will easily cross over to general audiences looking for quality entertainment. And the final third succeeds in creating some solid tension and sharp, dizzying moments of terror. But those looking for higher stakes, layered story or more depth throughout may end up underwhelmed.

Verdict: THE AERONAUTS is a well-crafted, low-stakes picture that delivers an engaging enough premise that may boost its commercial prospects but unlikely to be regarded as a groundbreaking nor truly memorable adventure. Safe, simplistic but beautiful to look at, it’s a visually striking, entertaining piece of work. 

Grade: B-

Mina Takla

Mina Takla is a foreign correspondent for AwardsWatch and the co-founder of The Syndicate, an online news agency that offers original content services to several film brands including Empire Magazine’s Middle East edition and the Dubai Film Festival. Takla has attended, covered and written for multiple film festivals online including the Dubai International Film Festival, Abu Dhabi Film Festival, Cannes, Venice, Berlin and Annecy Film Festivals. He has been following the Oscar race since 2000 with accurate, office-pool winning predictions year after year. He writes monthly in Empire Arabia, the Arabic version of the world’s top cinema magazine and conducts press junkets with Hollywood stars in the UK and the US. He holds a Master’s degree in Strategic Marketing from Australia’s Wollongong University and is currently based in Dubai, UAE.

Recent Posts

‘Sugarcane,’ ‘The Teacher’ Earn Awards at 67th San Francisco International Film Festival as SFFILM Enters a State of Change

SFFILM announced the winners of the juried Golden Gate Awards competition and the Audience Awards at the 67th San Francisco International… Read More

May 1, 2024

AppleTV+ Unveils ‘Presumed Innocent’ Trailer from David E. Kelley Starring Jake Gyllenhaal

Apple TV+ today debuted the teaser for Presumed Innocent, the upcoming, eight-part limited series starring… Read More

May 1, 2024

48th San Francisco International LGBTQ+ Film Festival to Kickoff with ‘Young Hearts’ and Juneteenth Celebration

Frameline48, the largest LGBTQ+ cinema showcase in California, runs June 19-29, 2024 and will announce… Read More

April 30, 2024

May the Force Be With You: Ranking All 11 Live-Action Star Wars Films

In what feels like a long time ago, in our own galaxy not far, far… Read More

April 30, 2024

2024 Tony Nominations: ‘Stereophonic,’ Breaks Play Record, Ties Musical ‘Hell’s Kitchen’ to Lead with 13 Each

Two music artist-driven shows found themselves on the top of the Tony nominations this morning… Read More

April 30, 2024

This website uses cookies.