A beloved sci-fi franchise hit rock bottom with a sequel that kills fan favorites, wastes its hero, and turns a tense saga into a slog.
Project Hail Mary' is everything a great sci-fi film should be: thrilling, hilarious, and anchored by a career-best Gosling.
Phil Lord and Christopher Miller have confirmed that the Project Hail Mary no greenscreen approach was absolute, not aspirational. Not a single green or blue screen shot appears in the entire film.
Project Hail Mary, 2026. Directed by Phil Lord and Chris Miller. Starring Ryan Gosling, James Ortiz, Sandra Hüller, Lionel Boyce, Ken Leung, Milana Vayntrub, Liz Kingsman, Orion Lee, Priya Kansara, ...
Ryan Gosling became a “Saturday Night Live” four-timer on Saturday, joining the show as host ahead of the release of his ...
Co-director Christopher Miller reveals why Project Hail Mary used zero green screens, opting for practical sets and "black screen" for realism.
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Project Hail Mary first clip released as director explains 'no green screen' confusion
The new sci-fi movie Project Hail Mary is getting attention after its first clip was released online. Along with the footage, co-director Chris Miller spoke about how the movie was filmed and ...
In interviews with the press, Miller, who directed Project Hail Mary alongside collaborator Phil Lord, said there is no green ...
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Project Hail Mary’s "No green screen" claim, explained
Chris Miller, co-director of Project Hail Mary, made a claim about using green screens and practical effects that confused a ...
Phil Lord and Chris Miller rejected the use of green screens during the making of 'Project Hail Mary' with Ryan Gosling.
Amazon-MGM's entire 156-minute, big-budget sci-fi gamble was shot without any green (or blue) screen, Christopher Miller says.
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