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Biosphere
Directed by
Mel Eslyn
Not Rated
2023
1h 46m
Science Fiction
,
Comedy
,
and more
5.5
80%
60%
4.8
Add to Watchlist
In the not-too-distant future, the last two men on earth must adapt and evolve to save humanity.
More
Where to Watch Biosphere
AMC+ Amazon Channel
Subscription
Disney Plus
Subscription
Hulu
Subscription
+12 more
Cast of Biosphere
Sterling K. Brown
Ray
Mark Duplass
Billy / Writer / Executive Producer
Mel Eslyn
Director / Writer / Producer
Zackary Drucker
Producer
Maddie Buis
Producer
Jay Duplass
Executive Producer
Shuli Harel
Producer
Drew Langer
Co-Producer / First Assistant Director
Megan Fenton
Production Design
Christine Brandt
Art Direction
Samantha Bowling
Set Decoration
Nathan M. Miller
Director Of Photography
Ronald Leamon
Costume Design
Bree Bañuelos
Set Costumer
Josh Spiegel
Second Assistant Director
Chris Donlon
Editor
Nicholas Hasson
Colorist
Matthew Hawkins
Dailies Technician
Ken Lebre
Dailies Manager
Danny Bensi
Original Music Composer
Biosphere Ratings & Reviews
Los Angeles Times
Sergio Burstein
Mark is a particularly competent actor who succeeds in granting credibility to the distinct characters he interprets, as in Biosphere... despite its apparent simplicity, he confronts one of the most difficult roles of his career. [Full review in Spanish]
Culture Mix
Carla Hay
The sci-fi dramedy Biosphere would've been better as a short film, because some of the story drags with repetition. However, this post-apocalyptic movie with a two-person cast has good acting and provocative issues about human reproduction and gender.
Nuha Hassan (Medium)
Nuha Hassan
Even if the viewer might not want to spend days stuck in a dome-like structure with Billy or Ray, the film is worth the watch - just for one day.
Crooked Marquee
Kimber Myers
Eslyn and Duplass have made a movie that uses its limited setting and minimal number of characters well, surprising the audience with what they do with so little.
Mashable
Kristy Puchko
The best 2023 movie you just might overlook.
RogerEbert.com
Simon Abrams
There's more schtick than speculation baked into the dialogue, which makes it too easy to dismiss this unfortunately stagey misfire.
Variety
Dennis Harvey
Ultimately the performers are winning enough, and the ideas in the ambiguous story intriguing enough, to achieve an end result of successful middleweight charm and substance.
San Jose Mercury News
Randy Myers
Director and co-writer Mel Eslyn tackles big issues along the way, from gender roles, accountability, feminism and masculinity.
Austin Chronicle
Richard Whittaker
There's a sense that Duplass and Eslyn deliberately avoided any narrative or dramatic weight to the story, to keep it low-key and personal: a wise move because that's where Biosphere is the most fun to visit.
New York Times
Amy Nicholson
I can say without hyperbole that there are conversations in this movie that I have never heard before (and refuse to spoil).
Chicago Sun-Times
Richard Roeper
Alas, there's not enough story here to warrant a feature-length film, and the ending feels like a copout.
Tribune News Service
Katie Walsh
A fascinating curio that speaks to many contemporary issues, "Biosphere" feels like a rough draft, as it hasn't been honed to a degree that allows it to fully penetrate.
San Francisco Chronicle
Mick LaSalle
It's hard to explain how the screenwriters thought they could just show two guys on a couch, calling each other "dude," and assume audiences would be interested.
The New Yorker
Anthony Lane
Biosphere, though sometimes larky in tone, is also a frowningly intense venture that never stops being about itself.
Slant Magazine
Ross McIndoe
Mel Eslyn's film is a thoughtful drama about life, gender, and male friendship.
The Playlist
Jason Bailey
Like "Humpday," it's an act of daring - we're waiting for the movie to cop out because most movies do. This one doesn't, and bravo for that.
Autostraddle
Drew Gregory
Mel Eslyn has created a funny and complicated film sure to provoke thought and discussion.
RogerEbert.com
Brian Tallerico
An ambitious project that doesn't develop enough to fill out the length of a feature before it basically gives up on getting out of the corner it's written itself into.
IndieWire
Emma Stefansky
"Biosphere" is tons of fun as a character study, but its ideas will leave you gazing out of its geodesic windows, wishing there was something more out there.
The Hollywood Reporter
John DeFore
Post-apocalyptic survival meets the anxious buddy humor of Humpday in Biosphere, a mysterious and hilarious pic that really can't be discussed much without saying things a prospective viewer would be better off not hearing.
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