This is one of the strangest indie movies ever made - and one of
my favorites. I was sent a copy to watch before calling and speaking
to the filmmaker. It was one of my favorite pieces. He was astonished
at how warmly Jackson reacted to his very bizarre movie.
“I wanted to create a movie that people would like more and more every time they watched it,” says Cory McAbee, about The American Astronaut, the full-length movie he wrote and directed.
Six
years from script to screen, released and distributed by McAbee and the
film’s producers, Bobby Lurie and Joshua Taylor, The American Astronaut
is a combination low budget science fiction movie, punk musical, snarky
comedy, and a literate commentary on mankind’s base desires. Filmed on
lush 35 mm black-and-white film, it looks like a blend of old “Flash
Gordon” serials, Joss Whedon’s Firefly, Terry Gilliam’s Brazil,
and an indie graphic novel. In The American Astronaut, the look and
feel of the film itself is more important than the look of the effects,
an almost incomprehensible notion for a film that is, basically, science
fiction.