$166 million (shared with Part Two: The Scargiver)[1][2]
Rebel Moon – Part One: A Child of Fire, or simply Rebel Moon, is a 2023 American
epicspace opera film directed by
Zack Snyder from a screenplay he co-wrote with
Kurt Johnstad and
Shay Hatten. Its
ensemble cast features
Sofia Boutella,
Djimon Hounsou,
Ed Skrein,
Michiel Huisman,
Doona Bae,
Ray Fisher,
Charlie Hunnam, and
Anthony Hopkins. The film is set in a fictional galaxy (a build up mix of cowboy-style pre-Space colony together with epic space fantasy), ruled by the imperialistic Motherworld, whose military, the Imperium, threatens a farming colony on the moon of Veldt. Kora, a former Imperium soldier, ventures on a quest to recruit warriors from across the galaxy to make a stand against the Imperium before they return to Veldt.
Atticus Noble, the sadistic admiral of the
militaristic Imperium, arrives on the backwater moon of Veldt on behalf of the Motherworld, an interstellar empire fueled by centuries of conquest and war. He explains that his troops are hunting for a band of rebels led by siblings Devra and Darrian Bloodaxe, and offers to buy the village's surplus grain. The village's leader, Sindri, refuses the offer, claiming they barely have enough to survive. A farmer, Gunnar, ignores earlier warnings from Sindri and farmer Kora and indicates that the village might have some surplus. Noble kills Sindri and orders Gunnar to prepare grain for them in ten weeks, which would not leave the village with enough to survive. Noble departs, leaving a handful of soldiers and a "Jimmy" robot to oversee the harvest. After being harassed by a peer, Jimmy starts to become independent. One villager, Kora, finds the other soldiers holding another villager hostage, preparing to rape her, and kills them with help from Jimmy, who has defected from the soldiers. Kora warns the villagers that Noble will massacre the village once he returns, unless they mount a defense.
Kora and Gunnar depart for the port town of Providence to recruit warriors for the village's defense, including Titus, a disgraced Imperium general. During their journey, she reveals to Gunnar that she once served the Imperium as a soldier, having been adopted and renamed to Arthelais by Balisarius, an Imperium commander, after he killed her family and eradicated her home planet's population. She became bodyguard to Motherworld princess Issa, who was expected to usher in an end to the Imperium's conquests. She was unable to protect Issa during her coronation, when the royal family was assassinated, and Balisarius subsequently declared himself
regent before renewing its conquests.
Arriving at Providence, the pair meets smuggler and criminal Kai, who agrees to take them to recruit Titus. On the way, Kai takes them to two additional warriors: Tarak, a beast tamer, and Nemesis, a talented swordswoman enhanced by cybernetics. The group arrives at a gladiator arena on a remote moon, finding Titus in a drunken stupor. Titus initially refuses but agrees to join them after Kora suggests that he avenge his fallen soldiers. Using Gunnar's previous dealings with the Bloodaxes, they then arrive at planet Sharaan to meet them and their rebellion, intending to recruit them. Darrian agrees to defend the village and brings with him a handful of rebels, including Milius, while Devra and the rest of the rebellion leave Sharaan. After they depart Sharaan, Noble arrives and eradicates its population as punishment for assisting the rebels.
Kai tells Kora that he has been moved by her quest to abandon his illicit life as a smuggler and that he has one last shipment to drop off to leave that life behind him. He takes the group to a trading post at which Noble's ship has arrived and restrains them save for Gunnar, betraying them to Noble and revealing he had always intended to do so for the bounties on their heads. Noble identifies Kora, Tarak, Nemesis and Titus for their history: Kora and Titus as deserters, Tarak as a criminal and former prince, and Nemesis as the killer of several Imperial officers in revenge for her murdered children. Kai demands that Gunnar paralyze Kora; Gunnar instead frees her and kills Kai. The other warriors are unshackled as well. Darrian is killed in the ensuing battle and Kora kills Noble. Afterwards, the surviving warriors return to Veldt together, with Jimmy watching them from afar on their way to the village.
Noble's corpse is recovered by Motherworld forces, and he is resurrected after having spoken on an
astral plane with Balisarius,[4] who demands that Noble end the insurgency against him and bring Kora to him alive so he can execute her himself.
Cast
Sofia Boutella as Kora/Arthelais, a former Imperium soldier who rallies warriors from across the galaxy to fight against Motherworld
Elizabeth Martinez portrays Kora as a child
Djimon Hounsou as Titus, a former general of the Imperium recruited to lead the fight against Motherworld
Ed Skrein as Atticus Noble, an admiral and Balisarius' right-hand man
Michiel Huisman as Gunnar, a farmer secretly in love with Kora who joins her in her attempts to defend his homeworld, Veldt
Greg Kriek as Marcus, a Motherworld soldier who arrived on Veldt to demand their harvest
Brandon Auret as Faunus, a Motherworld commander, left in charge of the farming village on Veldt
Ray Porter as Hickman, a farmer whom Tarak is indebted to
Dominic Burgess as Dash Thif, a connected man who came into conflict with Kora and Gunnar in Providence
Tony Amendola as King Levitica, an alien king who shelters the Bloodaxes and their rebellion
Derek Mears as Simeon, a Hawkshaw working for the Imperium, hunting their enemies for profit.
Production
Development
Rebel Moon is inspired by the
works of
Akira Kurosawa, the
Star Wars films and Heavy Metal magazines; its logo is an homage to the latter.[10] Snyder initially conceived the idea for the film in college,[11] before discussing it with Johnstad in 1997.[7]
Following concerns from
Netflix Films chairman
Scott Stuber that the project would underperform due to its length, Snyder, unwilling to "lose all the character", decided to split the film into
two parts.[15]
Casting
Sofia Boutella's casting in the lead role was announced in November 2021.[16]Charlie Hunnam,
Djimon Hounsou,
Ray Fisher,
Jena Malone,
Staz Nair,
Doona Bae,
Stuart Martin, and
Rupert Friend joined the project in February 2022.[17][18] Fisher first became aware of the project around 2019 or 2020 back when Snyder planned it to be a TV show, being shown whiteboards and showing his interest when Snyder explained that those were for a "little space thing" he was working on.[19]Cary Elwes,
Corey Stoll,
Michiel Huisman and
Alfonso Herrera joined the cast in April 2022.[20] On May 16, 2022, it was announced that
Ed Skrein had replaced Friend as the film's main antagonist due to scheduling conflicts, with
Cleopatra Coleman,
Fra Fee and Rhian Rees joining the project.[21] On June 8, 2022, it was announced that
Anthony Hopkins had joined the cast as the voice of Jimmy, an impossibly sentient JC1435 mechanized battle robot and one-time defender of the slain king.[22]
Filming
Filming commenced on April 19, 2022,[23] with Snyder sharing the first images from the set on
Twitter that day.[24] Snyder also served as cinematographer.[25] It ran until December 2,[26] with 152 days of filming taking place in
California, to tap into $83 million in qualified spending and
tax incentives.[27]Stuart Martin,
Cary Elwes, Rhian Rees and
Ray Porter acted out and recorded the film's script for Snyder to listen to while preparing the day's shoot;[28] they appear in the film as Den, The King, The Queen, and Hickman, respectively.[29]
For the two-part Rebel Moon, the
below-the-line wages to California workers and payments to in-state vendors was $166 million.[30][31]
Post-production and visual effects
On August 20, 2023, the titles for the two parts were reported to be A Child of Fire and The Scargiver, respectively.[32][unreliable source?] Two days later, Zack Snyder appeared at
gamescom opening night to present the teaser trailer for the two parts, which confirmed the titles.[33][34]
Production VFX supervisor
Marcus Taormina[35] worked with
Framestore, Luma Pictures, Mammal Studios, Rodeo FX, Scanline VFX and Weta FX. Framestore delivered key creatures the Bennu and Harmada.[36][37]
After premiering December 22 on Netflix, the film garnered 23.9M views in three days, making it the #1 most viewed English-language film on the service from December 18 to 24,[44] the second consecutive Netflix #1 for Snyder, starting with Army of the Dead;[45] it was the ninth best 2023 debut for a Netflix original film.[46] The film stayed in first place with 34M views in its first full week of availability, following its debut weekend.[47] The week after that, the film slipped to second place with 11.1M views.[48] In its fourth week, it had dropped to eighth place while earning 3.9M views, as the film also earned an overall worldwide total of 72.9M views.[49] In 2024, for the week of April 15 to April 21, the film re-entered charts at number five, bringing in 5.5M views over the week.[50][51]
Critical response
On the
review aggregator website
Rotten Tomatoes, 21% of 174 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 4.2/10. The website's consensus reads: "Rebel Moon: Part One – A Child of Fire proves Zack Snyder hasn't lost his visual flair, but eye candy isn't enough to offset a storyline made up of various sci-fi/fantasy tropes."[52]Metacritic, which uses a
weighted average, assigned the film a score of 31 out of 100, based on 40 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable" reviews.[53]
Variety writer
Owen Gleiberman commented, "while eminently watchable, [Rebel Moon] is a movie built so entirely out of spare parts that it may, in the end, be for Snyder cultists only."[54] Clarisse Loughrey of The Independent gave the film 1/5 stars, calling it "a film populated by some of the Zack Snyder's Justice League filmmaker's worst impulses: a mess of imagery, some of it attempting to shock, congregated largely around the idea of what might look good in a trailer."[55]The Guardian's Charles Bramesco also gave the film 1/5 stars, writing, "the finished product has only the vaguest contours of ambition, diminished by a half-assedness dinkifying the latest CGI-jammed saga to decide the fate of the universe."[56]RogerEbert.com's Simon Abrams gave the film 1 star out of 4 and characterized it as too similar to Star Wars and Seven Samurai, containing an over-reliance of visual spectacle with clichéd characters and themes.[57]
Robbie Collin of The Daily Telegraph gave the film 2/5 stars, noting its similarities to Star Wars and saying that "this first half of Snyder's
diptych... is more of a loosely doodled mood board than a functioning film – a series of pulpy tableaux that mostly sound fun in isolation, but become numbingly dull when run side by side."[58]The Messenger's Jordan Hoffman gave it a score of 4/10, writing, "As a space opera, it has none of the weight of Dune, none of the characterizations of Guardians of the Galaxy, none of the madness of Jupiter Ascending or The Fifth Element and none of the pep of Star Wars."[59] Writing for The A.V. Club, Lauren Coates said, "while Snyder may do his best to invent a dark, gripping universe to engross viewers, Rebel Moon is a limp, soulless regurgitation of tropes stolen from much more formidable films" and gave the film a D– grade.[60]
Fred Topel of
United Press International was more positive, calling the film "an entertaining filtering of science fiction and general storytelling tropes through the lens of creator/director Zack Snyder."[61] The South China Morning Post's Daniel Eagan gave it 3.5/5 stars, writing, "What Snyder brings to the project is a sensational world-building vision and a muscular filmmaking style that can pummel viewers into submission."[62] Adam Graham of The Detroit News gave it a B- grade, saying, "To its credit, it borrows from a solid slate of sources, and while it's highly derivative, it's also highly watchable. Its referential nature helps it clip along at an expedient pace, and while it never feels like you're watching something new, it at least feels like you're watching something familiar."[63]
Rebel Moon is planned to be a
franchise that begins with a
two-part film; each part to be shot back-to-back.[29] By August of the same year, the follow-up was officially confirmed with the title Rebel Moon – Part Two: The Scargiver, and scheduled for release on April 19, 2024.[64][34] Development of additional installments in the story are ongoing, with the script for the third film already being worked on as of December 2023.[65][66][67] Snyder's exact series-length plans are unclear, having stated that the film is intended to be the first in a trilogy,[68] but also that it would be followed by a "trilogy of sequels", implying four or five total.[69] In April 2024, co-writer Kurt Johnstad clarified that though the original plan was for a trilogy of movies, the franchise will eventually consist of a total of six films; explaining that the stories for each original installment have been expanded into two parts. The writer stated that the treatments are completed for the third and fourth movie and Snyder is currently writing the third film.[70] On the same day, Snyder stated that the total number of films in the series will be either four or six, depending on whether or not the second and third entries of the trilogy each get split into a two-part movie as well. [71]
Other media
Snyder has stated that his intent is for Rebel Moon to become "a massive
IP and a
universe that can be built out."[14] A
role-playing video game based on Rebel Moon was in development as of March 2023, alongside an animated short and a
graphic novel.[72][73] A
novelization of the film written by V. Castro was published by
Titan Books on December 26, 2023.[74] Snyder announced in July 2023 plans for a TV series focusing on Balisarius.[75] At
Gamescom in August 2023, Snyder announced that Super Evil Megacorp was developing a four-player co-op action game that would be exclusively available on the Netflix Games platform.[76] In September 2023, Evil Genius Games sued Netflix for terminating a deal that allowed them to produce a tabletop role-playing game set in the Rebel Moon universe.[77]
A four-issue prequel comic entitled Rebel Moon: House of the Bloodaxe by writer
Magdalene Visaggio and artist Clark Bint was published by
Titan Comics in January 2024.[78] Set five years before the events of the film, the comic depicts the backstory for the characters of Devra and Darrian Bloodaxe. In November 2023, a narrative-
podcast, an animated comic book, and an animated series were announced to be in development with each project taking place chronologically before the feature films.[79] The animated short is set to tell the story of the Kali, the "shadowy figures" who power the Motherworld's "most dangerous technology".[5]
Notes
1.^Variety reported that $166 million is only the
below-the-line cost to California workers and that the total cost will be much higher.