You can't say that Mike Cahill's Another Earth doesn't go for broke: The visual of a mirror globe hanging in the sky, twice the size of the moon, is unsettling and oddly powerful, but the film hangs uneasily between two worlds too: Though Marling,
You can't say that Mike Cahill's Another Earth doesn't go for broke: The visual of a mirror globe hanging in the sky, twice the size of the moon, is unsettling and oddly powerful, but the film hangs uneasily between two worlds too: Though Marling,
The writer-director of Another Earth sits down with the Yap to discuss his film debut and the sci-fi genre's ability to externalize internal monologues.
By Mary Pols Wednesday, July 20, 2011 The plot of the dreamy indie Another Earth sounds like something a grief chaser like Jodi Picoult might cook up: young woman with a bright future kills a man's wife and child while driving drunk and struggles to
I don't love "Another Earth" but I appreciate the fact that it asks questions. It presents a premise — that there is another Earth, identical to our own in every way, floating out there in space — and interrogates it. How would someone react to that
