Wendy Ide 

Rebel Moon – Part One: A Child of Fire review – derivative space opera saga

The action sequences are decent – but Zack Snyder’s plot comes from other, better films
  
  

Sofia Boutella as Kora in Rebel Moon raising an axe to a man on the ground pointing a machine gun at her
‘Action-star potential’: Sofia Boutella as Kora in Rebel Moon. Netflix Photograph: Chris Strother/Netflix

The first part of Zack Snyder’s ambitious, long-cherished space opera, Rebel Moon – Part One: A Child of Fire looks suitably impressive: the story unfolds against vividly realised worlds, starting in an idealistic agrarian commune on an out-of-the-way moon, and travelling through cobalt mining planets, gritty desert outposts and lunar dive bars. The fight sequences are decent, if a little over-reliant on self-important slow-motion shots of people clobbering one another with space axes. But the story is a derivative mess that feels as though it was assembled from bits of plot picked off the carcasses of other, better films, and glued together with brain-numbing, pace-killing chunks of exposition. Sofia Boutella shows action-star potential as Kora, a mysterious outsider who has found peace living with the farming commune, but she deserves a better vehicle than this chop-shopped jalopy.

Watch a trailer for Rebel Moon – Part One: A Child of Fire.
 

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