Lucy in the Sky Comments

  • Francesca 2023-02-21 00:21:46

    If you watch short reviews of a bunch of straight guys, you'll miss this good...

  • Kacie 2023-02-12 15:04:56

    There are too many good movies about space, and in this dimension, this one really doesn't work. The frequent frame changes have come to the point of preventing the audience from getting into the...

  • Charlie 2023-02-12 05:54:35

    schizophrenia in...

  • Constantin 2023-01-15 19:47:37

    Two and a half stars, with this cast, it's boring, boring, and...

  • Cullen 2023-01-07 21:55:09

    The film perfectly captures the feeling of loneliness and alienation that the female astronaut Lucy felt after returning to Earth. Infidelity is the kind of state that is both detached and realistic, allowing her to find herself on earth. In the end, although she took off the beekeeping suit mask similar to the space suit and bravely accepted the reality of bee stings, I still felt her helpless...

  • Helen 2022-12-29 22:52:59

    The lens is so unique, the blurry tone rendering is very...

  • Tressie 2022-12-19 01:01:12

    The subject is unknown, the photography is good, the frame changes too...

  • Sigmund 2022-12-06 00:11:03

    Ugly to death, even Natalie couldn't hide how boring it...

  • Alysa 2022-11-26 23:29:51

    75/100, discussing that loneliness is nothing more than the emptiness of the heart and the distortion of the soul. The contrast between reality and the past makes you look forward to the future. There is no way to let all the urges come to nothing, and life inevitably begins to spin out of control. Bobo is more relaxed and natural than ever before. She makes this immoral personality full of persuasion. Without the cassock, there is only a natural reaction. Her every move, every frown and smile...

  • Madeline 2022-11-21 18:11:06

    Not even Jon Hamm could save the...

Extended Reading

Lucy in the Sky quotes

  • Lucy Cola: You go up there, you see the whole universe, and everything here looks so small.

  • Will Plimpton: You know Michael Collins?

    Lucy Cola: Yeah, yeah. Of course. Apollo 11. He flew the command module for Neil and Buzz.

    Will Plimpton: Yeah. So you know after he dropped them he circled the moon for hours. It's farther from Earth than any man has ever been. No light, no radio. And he wept, consumed by darkness and then, when he saw the sun again he wept some more. Inside the module he wrote, "I am now truly alone and absolutely alone from any known life. I am it."