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An ambitious sci-fi that started strong before falling to pieces discovers new signs of streaming life

Started strong, but eventually came right off the rails.

oblivion
via Universal

Tom Cruise and Joseph Kosinski recently conspired to deliver the near-perfect Top Gun: Maverick, one of the finest blockbusters of the modern era that rode a wave of critical acclaim all the way to almost $1.5 billion at the box office, ensuring their second collaboration turned out a great deal better than the first time they teamed up on Oblivion.

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Not that the ambitious sci-fi epic was a disaster, but a great deal more was expected from the world’s biggest movie star making a rare detour into the genre, especially when the visual mastermind behind Tron: Legacy was at the helm. Once again, though, Kosinski’s stunning visuals failed to paper over a narrative that was severely lacking.

oblivion

A 54 percent Rotten Tomatoes score and a $287 million take at the box office on production costs of $130 million is almost the very definition of solid-if-unspectacular for a project with Cruise front and center. Starting off strong with the leading man embracing his lonely existence, the introduction of more familiar sci-fi trappings and action sequences ultimately conspires to send Oblivion down a route marked “seen it all before,” something we weren’t expecting given the stellar opening act.

Nonetheless, shiny big budget spectacle and A-list superstars remain bulletproof on streaming, which is no doubt one of the reasons why Oblivion has conspired to fly onto the Prime Video Top 10 in a dozen countries spanning three continents this weekend, per FlixPatrol.

It’s decent, but nowhere near as good as it could have been, which is a major missed opportunity when you consider what Cruise and Kosinski went on to cook up almost a decade later.