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1%% Spoiler warnings: Just to be consistent (if arbitrary):
2%% Not a spoiler: The death of Shariff and the shuttle crew, the death of Stone's daughter.
3%% Is a spoiler: The death of Kowalski, the survival of Stone.
4
5[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/359059_wookmark.jpg]]
6[[caption-width-right:300:It says "[[TemptingFate DON'T let go]]", and what do you do?]]
7
8->''At 600 km above planet Earth the temperature\
9 fluctuates between +258 and -148 degrees Fahrenheit[[note]]or 125.6 and -100 degrees Celsius[[/note]].\
10 There is nothing to carry sound.\
11 No air pressure.\
12 No oxygen.\
13 Life in space is impossible.''
14-->-- '''OpeningMonologue [[TitleCard Card]]'''
15
16''Gravity'' is a 2013 sci-fi thriller film directed and co-written by Creator/AlfonsoCuaron and starring Creator/SandraBullock and Creator/GeorgeClooney.
17
18Two astronauts, Dr. Ryan Stone (Bullock) and Matt Kowalski (Clooney), are with the Space Shuttle ''Explorer'' on a routine mission to upgrade the Hubble Space Telescope when the Russians decommission one of their satellites by shooting it down. As debris from the satellite spreads, the ensuing DisasterDominoes result in Houston losing their own radio satellites, the ''Explorer'' suffering catastrophic damage, and Ryan and Matt being stranded in space and short on oxygen.
19
20And that's just the first ([[TheOner 13-minute-long]]) shot of the movie.
21
22Among many other honors, the film was nominated for ten UsefulNotes/{{Academy Award}}s and won seven, including Best Director for Alfonso CuarĂ³n. While it lost Best Picture, Actress, and Production Design, it still went a long way in beating down the ScifiGhetto.
23
24Also related to the film is the short film "Aningaaq," detailing a scene in the story from a minor, earthbound, character's perspective. The short was directed by CuarĂ³n's son and the film's co-writer, Jonas CuarĂ³n. It was commissioned as a bonus feature on the film's DVD/Blu-Ray release for consideration in the Best Live-Action Short Film Oscar but didn't get nominated. It can be watched [[http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/gravity-spinoff-watch-side-sandra-657919 here]], however it makes more sense after seeing the connected scene in ''Gravity''. Tropes in "Aningaaq" are listed at the bottom of this page.
25
26Previews: [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ufsrgE0BYf0 First Trailer]], [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k0ijEEivCbg "Detached"]], [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8y7Hg5mxMPE "Drifting"]], [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=alq4CHqEL6A "I've Got You"]]
27----
28!!''Gravity'' provides examples of:
29
30* TwoDSpace: Sort of. The space stations, satellites, and action in general take place in a thin shell of an orbit. In reality, satellites, shuttles and the ISS have their own altitudes to themselves, largely to prevent the sort of thing we see in this movie. The destruction of the Russian satellites would not have affected the ISS, for instance.
31* AlmostOutOfOxygen: Stone spends the first 20 minutes dealing with this.
32* AnachronismStew: A fairly interesting example, since shooting of the movie began before the Space Shuttle was retired. But even if that inconsistency was unintentional, we see George Clooney's character flying around using an MMU (Manned Maneuvering Unit) that has so far been used only in the eighties (there is a newer model, which however is much smaller and only to be used in case of emergency), while the Tiangong station won't be up there in the configuration seen in the movie until 2015.
33* AnyoneCanDie: [[spoiler:Of the three characters seen alive onscreen in the first shot, two of them are dead by the time the film reaches the 35-minute mark.]]
34* ArduousDescentToTerraFirma: Exaggerated. The main characters Stone and Kowalski are astronauts out on a ''spacewalk'' in low-Earth orbit when KesslerSyndrome occurs, destroying their Space Shuttle and forcing them to look for alternate means of getting back to the planet's surface. [[spoiler:Only Stone manages to come back down alive, and even then it takes a very difficult ordeal for her to succeed.]]
35* ArmorPiercingQuestion: At one point Stone half-stammers excuses about how she'll never make it back until Kowalski asks her "Do you want to go home or stay up here?" She goes silent.
36* ArtisticLicenseMilitary: Dr. Stone is a medical engineer by profession and she's supposed to be one even as the ''Explorer'''s mission specialist. However, she is put to help Kowalski repair something that is as outside of her area of expertise as the ''Hubble Space Telescope'', only for the HandWaved reason that the piece she's installing is derived from the device she uses in her field. In real life, even small astronaut crews are ''not'' trained to [[OmnidisciplinaryScientist do everything]]; the Space Shuttle crews had seven astronauts, so there would have been more than enough manpower among the crew members to let a proper engineering expert do the job.
37* ArtisticLicensePhysics: While it ''is'' a fairly accurate-to-physics movie, it is by no means completely true to them. Research was done, as the script initially had a lot of {{exposition}} to explain what was happening, but CuarĂ³n felt the resulting {{infodump}}s would [[RuleOfDrama take away from the characters and drama]] (not to mention double the running time), so he opted for some artistic liberties.
38** Kowalski telling Stone to detach from the manipulator arm, which has been hit by debris and is rapidly spinning away from the shuttle. He tells her she needs to detach before the arm carries her too far and he will not be able to reach her, so she detaches. The problem is she would have still had all the angular momentum of the arm itself, so detaching may have flung her away from the arm, but like a baseball pitcher releasing a baseball, she would have still kept moving, and not just stopped dead in space while the arm kept going. It may have been possible for her to release at the exact moment in the arc where she would have been flung back towards the shuttle, but that's an extremely iffy, one-in-a-billion chance that she clearly isn't trying for, as she releases when Kowalski tells her she has to hurry up and do it.
39** [[spoiler:Kowalski's death. In zero-G environments, once the initial momentum had been absorbed, no additional tension would have remained on the tether. He shouldn't have been "pulling Ryan away from the ship", because there was no other force acting on him and he was virtually weightless, so Stone would have been able to retrieve him with only the slightest pull. Even if Kowalski was released, he would remain peacefully floating nearby instead of being violently catapulted to the space's void as in the film.]]
40** Interestingly enough, Stone's tears. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P36xhtpw0Lg Astronaut Chris Hadfield gave a demonstration of how a person cries in space in April 2013]] -- in reality the tears form a ball on your eye until you get a towel and sop them up. Of course, Administrivia/TropesAreTools and the way it is portrayed in this film is much more moving.
41** Even if we assume this film takes place in an alternate universe where the Tiangong and the ISS are in the same orbit 100 miles (or even just 100 kilometers) apart, thrusting directly toward the Tiangong wouldn't actually get her there. At 100 miles distant, she'd need to do an orbital rendezvous. She would have to thrust ''away'' from Tiangong by just the right amount, which would lower her altitude on the opposite side of her orbit, then wait for their orbits to re-intersect and thrust in the opposite direction to re-circularize her orbit. If she'd thrusted toward Tiangong, as shown in the movie, she'd actually end up pulling farther away from it.
42** The Tiangong space station is stably upright as it enters the atmosphere, though it would have begun to tumble due to the increased drag of the atmosphere on such a not-aerodynamic object.
43* ArtisticLicenseSpace: Even the [[ShownTheirWork most technically accurate stories]] have to bend the rules somewhere.
44** There is a fire aboard the ISS, even though without gravity, there would no convection to sustain the flame, at least not the type of convective fire seen in the movie.
45** Space debris moving slow enough to be seen would have too little energy to be dangerous.
46** The Chinese space station leaves orbit and crashes to the Earth for no obvious reason. It seems to be caught in a rain of debris, but that could not possibly impart enough energy to cause reentry. However, it is possible that the station was intentionally deorbited by the Chinese to avoid adding to the Kessler Syndrome.
47** It is unclear what continues to pull Kowalski away after his momentum has been halted by Dr. Stone grabbing the tether. Dr. Stone is only slowing him down. Her leg is trapped in the deployed parachute cord of the escape pod, but if you look closely you will see that the actual parachute being slowly pulled through whatever it is entangled in. Kowalski is in a position to see that not only is the cord around Dr. Stone's foot unwrapping, but the parachute is also unraveling because of his momentum.
48** A communications blackout would be unlikely as the ISS orbits at only about 260 miles and is reachable by just about every radio transmitter on Earth due to its unrestricted line of sight. Routing communications through satellites which operate at higher orbits would only introduce unnecessary delay.
49* AsteroidThicket: The debris.
50* BilingualBonus:
51** The Greenlandic spoken by Aningaaq over the radio is not subtitled. The short film "Aningaaq", which shows his side of the story, has subtitles.
52** When trying to figure out how [[spoiler:to get the Chinese Shenzou spacecraft on the Tiangong to start up so she can return to Earth]], she mutters a sarcastic "No hablo chino.", Spanish for "I don't speak Chinese", after the computer gives her a warning.
53* BittersweetEnding: Kowalski sacrifices himself to save Ryan who manages to get back to Earth safely.
54* BlackDudeDiesFirst: OutOfFocus FunnyForeigner Shariff is the first character to die in the film.
55* BrokenFaceplate: Shariff's death is confirmed not only from the large hole in the visor of his helmet, but from the hole in the back of the helmet and straight through the head in between.
56* CallBack: "My eyes are brown."
57* CameraAbuse: Droplets of water impact the camera. CuarĂ³n loves this trope.
58* TheCaptain: Mission Commander Matt Kowalski. A bit of a OneSceneWonder, his cool head and utter calm in ''extreme'' circumstances helps Ryan survive.
59* CaptainsLog: Despite being [[MissingMissionControl cut off from Mission Control]], the protagonists continue to transmit to them (even asking permission for various actions) in case they or someone else can hear their transmissions and help in some way. This serves as a handy means of exposition for the audience as well as compensating for the minimal cast.
60* CastingGag: The voice of Mission Control is provided by...Creator/EdHarris, who played Mission Control (or rather, Gene Kranz) in another movie about a space disaster, ''Film/Apollo13''.
61* CasualDangerDialogue: Kowalski, intentionally doing it as a means to calm down the panicked Stone at times.
62* TheCharmer: Kowalski. He's professional to a fault and a consummate commander, but he enjoys keeping morale up with light banter and good-natured flirtation.
63* ChekhovsBoomerang: [[spoiler:The fire extinguisher that Stone hangs on to while fleeing the fire aboard the ISS, and which accidentally wedges itself inside the ''Soyuz''. She later uses it to maneuver herself from the ''Soyuz'' to the Tiangong, Ă  la ''WesternAnimation/WallE''.]]
64* ChekhovsGun: Kowalski appears to be frivolously using a lot of fuel with his JetPack in the beginning of the story. [[spoiler:That proves his undoing.]]
65* ColdEquation: [[spoiler:Kowalski [[CutTheSafetyRope detaches his tether]] because his momentum is pulling Stone loose from the ropes attaching her to the ISS. It's also possible he maintains radio silence when she tries to contact him later, so she won't try a rescue.]]
66* ColorCodedForYourConvenience: In-universe example: The Soyuz flight manuals.
67* ComingInHot: [[spoiler:Stone gets to the Chinese station, but its orbit is already decaying. She has to pilot its reentry capsule down to the surface, even though the buttons are all labeled in Chinese.]]
68* ContrivedCoincidence: [[spoiler:Stone gets to Tiangong mere minutes before it reenters. She then has an unplanned, unmanned splashdown in a freshwater lake in the Midwestern US, where NASA can easily track her reentry and send a rescue team.]]
69* ConvenientlyClosePlanet: The space shuttle, the International Space Station, and the Chinese Tiangong are all within spitting distance of each other, despite really being in vastly differing orbits. The Tiangong is "100 miles" (in one line; "100 kilometers" in another) from the ISS, a figure which evidently stays stable in this film. Of course, if the movie was following the real-life distances and orbits, however, Stone would have never survived. CuarĂ³n stated in an interview that an early draft of the script did try to work with the fact the HST, ISS, and Tiangong were in different orbits in reality, but it ended up with half the movie being the characters explaining orbital mechanics, [[AcceptableBreaksFromReality so the decision was made to put them all in the same orbit for plot convenience]].
70* CoolStarship: The gutsy little Soyuz escape boat fits nicely into the "old, junky rustbucket" category[[note]]By reputation anyway. While in real life the history of the Soyuz craft has been tainted by safety failures and shortcuts -- as well as the general Western conception of "Russian, therefore crap" regarding most Russian technology -- for the last few decades it has had the best safety record (given well over 2,000 launches by now) of any spacecraft family in the world. Even NASA acknowledges this. A Soyuz serving as a lifeboat would not be an "old, junky rustbucket" since each launch is a new spacecraft, and the Soyuz family itself has been continually upgraded over the decades.[[/note]], complete with a visually stunning separation sequence. The Shenzhou, a Chinese Soyuz knockoff [[spoiler:that Stone uses to finally reach Earth]] may also qualify, but gets rather less screentime.
71* {{Conflict}}: One of the Man vs. Nature types. Or, more accurately, "Woman vs. the Laws of Nature, including the ever-present FinaglesLaw."
72* CoversAlwaysLie:
73** The advertising tag line is "Don't let go", but [[spoiler:the theme of the movie is "You have to let go"]].
74** {{Inverted|Trope}} in Italy; [[spoiler:there the tagline is "Non Mollare Ora" ("Don't give up now")]].
75* CutTheSafetyRope: [[spoiler:Kowalski cuts himself loose when he realizes that the ropes tethering them to the ISS aren't strong enough to hold them both. Note in Artistic License - Physics above that [[RuleOfDrama nothing of this was necessary]].]]
76* CynicismCatalyst: Dr. Stone took the death of her four-year-old daughter quite hard.
77* DamnYouMuscleMemory:
78** [[InvertedTrope Inverted]] to "Bless you, muscle memory". The Chinese reentry craft is based off of the Soyuz, which Stone ''has'' been trained on. While she can't read the buttons, she does know enough of the layout that she knows generally where each button should be, narrowing down the guessing to a few buttons.
79** Stone almost loses her screwdriver when trying to detach the tethers by absentmindedly setting it down on the ship. In zero gravity, it starts to drift away. Foreshadowed when Stone almost loses a screw in the opening scene. She apologizes to Kowalski after he retrieves it, noting that she's used to a basement laboratory where things fall to the floor.
80* DangerDeadpan: Kowalski remains unflappably calm and collected throughout the entire disaster.
81* DarkestHour: In the ''Soyuz'' capsule, [[spoiler:Stone learns the fuel is out, resigns herself to death, and turns off the oxygen. Then a HelpfulHallucination gives her a HeroicSecondWind]].
82* DaydreamSurprise: [[spoiler:Kowalski's return, where he raises the oxygen levels in the ''Soyuz'' and tells Stone how to make it back to Earth, as well as motivates her to keep going.]]
83* DeathByFallingOver: Stone's daughter tripped during a game of tag, hit her head and died.
84* DeathByIrony: [[spoiler:Kowalski ''definitely'' holds the space walk record now.]]
85* DecoyProtagonist: Creator/GeorgeClooney appears to be having a larger role as Kowalski. Turns out, [[spoiler:he is only a SacrificialLion]] whilst Creator/SandraBullock as Stone is having most of the screentime for herself.
86* {{Determinator}}: Stone, from the conversation aboard Soyuz to the end credits.
87* DisasterDominoes: Each piece of debris impacting a satellite or space station throws off multiple pieces that endanger anything else in the same orbit.
88* DisasterMovie: One with a [[MinimalistCast very small cast]].
89* DisneyDeath: [[spoiler:Subverted with Kowalski coming back to life... [[DaydreamSurprise Not!]] ]]
90* DissonantSerenity: Kowalski. Justified as he's trying to keep Stone calm by acting calm himself. Also [[ShownTheirWork an accurate representation]] of how trained pilots and astronauts are supposed to deal with flight emergencies -- coolly and methodically. You don't earn your wings if you tend to panic.
91* DoubleMeaningTitle: "Gravity" means both "the physical force of gravitation" and "the seriousness of the situation".
92* DramaticSpaceDrifting:
93** The protagonists enter the shuttle to confirm there are no survivors, suddenly running into the bodies of the floating crew, who weren't wearing their spacesuits.
94** Later, [[spoiler:Kowalski sets himself adrift in space]].
95* DrivenToSuicide: [[spoiler:Stone turns down the oxygen when she gives up hope of reaching the Chinese station.]]
96* DrowningPit: [[spoiler:Stone, upon landing, finds herself caught in the Shenzhou capsule rapidly filling with water.]]
97* DyingAlone: [[spoiler:Kowalski essentially floats off into space by himself. Stone laments how she will die without anyone to mourn or pray for her.]]
98* EarnYourHappyEnding: [[spoiler:Several deaths and a whole bunch of hard work to get Stone back to Earth. And even after she makes a safe splashdown, she nearly [[DrowningPit drowns trying to leave the capsule]]. As ''Cinema Sins'' put it, "We've already had her escape death about eleven times in this movie..."]]
99* EscapePod: The main plot of the movie involves trying to get to one of these to make a safe return to Earth.
100* EstablishingCharacterMoment: In the 8 minutes before the plot kicks in, we get many hints as to the type of people Stone and Kowalski are.
101** The first lines of dialogue involve MissionControl telling Stone that her medical readings indicate she's more than a little stressed. Control asks she'd like to stop what she's doing and return to the Shuttle, to which she replies she just wants to get the job done. That kind of {{Determinator}} willingness to push through difficulty is what winds up saving her life.
102** Kowalski comes off as a jokester and goof-off, constantly telling weird stories, ribbing his fellow astronauts, and playing country music. But the dialogue establishes that Kowalski is a respected astronaut who's thought of highly by all who've worked with him, which hints there's [[HiddenDepths more to this guy]] than playing around. When Mission Control informs Kowalski that he won't break the cosmonaut's spacewalk record, before they can tell him how much he's short by, Kowalski already knows he's 75 minutes shy. One could say that points to his vanity, but it's also a subtle hint that no matter how much he seems he's playing around, he seems to have a grasp of everything happening at any given moment. Also notice, immediately after accepting he won't break the record, he shrugs it off. Man's a team player. Stone, distracted by Kowalski's music, asks him to turn it off and he does so without complaint. He also cheers her up over her lack of comfort in space telling her he nearly coughed up his kidneys his first time up, and also volunteers to assist her with fixing the module on HST. All this foreshadows just how much of a difference he'll make to her survival.
103** A bit of a reach, but the dialogue indicates MissionControl did not heed Dr. Stone's warnings that parts of the equipment she was installing might not work. One could say it foreshadowed how badly they underestimated effect of the Russian missile strike.
104* EverybodysDeadDave: Kowalski makes sure to retrieve Shariff's body and check the interior of the space shuttle, just in case there are any survivors. There aren't.
105* EverythingTryingToKillYou: The film could be described as "90 minutes of the universe trying to kill Sandra Bullock." The opening text shows just how hostile to life space is.
106* ExplosiveDecompression:
107** Stone is startled to see Kowalski outside the Soyuz hatch, which he opens even though she's not wearing her helmet, sucking out all the air but leaving her unharmed once he closes the hatch and raises the oxygen levels. [[spoiler:Turns out it's a DaydreamSurprise anyway.]]
108** Stone has to open an airlock quickly to take shelter from an oncoming cloud of space debris; the hatch slams open from the sudden outrush of air, nearly breaking her grip on the handle. [[spoiler:Then, at Tiangong, she can be seen attempting to get a good grip on the surrounding rail while opening the door, but it smacks into her as it blows open and knocks her grip on the rail loose, leaving her swinging from the handle ''again''.]]
109** Averted with the dead bodies the protagonists find along their way.
110* ExplosiveInstrumentation: Downplayed. During reentry, the panels of the Chinese capsule start to spray sparks.
111* ExplosionsInSpace: Portrayed pretty well, it looks like. The one burst of flame we see expands in a ball then is gone a second later, leaving debris flying out in all directions. Stone survives because she's behind the Soyuz capsule. The one actual fiery explosion occurs within a pressurized compartment, albeit in microgravity.
112* ExtremelyShortTimespan: The ''entire movie'' takes place in about 4 hours. The debris field attacks are 90 minutes apart, and Stone [[spoiler:re-enters]] just after the third.
113* FaceDeathWithDignity: [[spoiler:Kowalski]], adrift and beyond rescue, sends a final transmission expressing awe at the incredible beauty of Earth from space:
114-->'''[[spoiler:Kowalski:]]''' Oh my god... Wow. You should see the sun on the Ganges. It's amazing.
115* TheFaceless: Shariff. The only time we see what's under his helmet is when [[spoiler: there's ''[[FacialHorror not much left]]'' underneath.]]
116* FailedASpotCheck: Stone floats through the International Space Station and does not notice the small fire. This has [[{{Understatement}} consequences]].
117* FanService: Two scenes with Stone in an [[LingerieScene undershirt, shorts, and bare feet]]. These scenes are, by the way, ''not'' accurate: in real life, astronauts wear special liquid-cooled undergarments like long underwear under their spacesuits.
118* FamilyUnfriendlyDeath: We don't get to see the actual impact in detail, but the remains of Shariff's face are ''[[FacialHorror extremely]]'' gruesome for a PG-13 movie.
119* FatalFamilyPhoto: After Shariff dies, we see a photo of his wife and son floating alongside his body.
120* FetalPositionRebirth: Stone assumes this position after escaping to the ISS and getting out of her suit. One of the cords attaching her is even positioned to resemble an umbilical cord.
121* FightToSurvive: "Life in space is impossible", as the opening title cards point out, and the bulk of the story is Stone fighting to overcome the many problems of being in space and make it back home alive.
122* FinalGirl: [[spoiler:Stone, outliving her companions.]]
123* FirstNameBasis: Kowalski switches to calling Stone by her first name ("Ryan") in order to get her attention.
124* FlechetteStorm: The cloud of space debris orbits the Earth every 90 minutes.
125* FloatingWater: We realize Stone is crying when her tears start floating in bubbles through the microgravity of the Soyuz capsule. [[RuleOfDrama Note that Stone's tears would not have formed free-floating tear spheres.]] The liquid's surface tension would make them cling to her skin or eyelashes.
126* GenderBlenderName: Dr. Ryan Stone. When [[WhoNamesTheirKidDude Matt complains that it's no name for a girl]], she explains to him that her father wanted a son.
127* GoneHorriblyWrong: A routine satellite disposal causes a chain reaction that destroys a space shuttle orbiter, the Hubble Telescope, two space stations, and kills at least four astronauts.
128* HeadsUpDisplay: Projected on the space helmets, but not greatly emphasized.
129* HelpfulHallucination: [[spoiler:Stone hallucinates Kowalski's return and his explanation that the soft-landing rockets can be used to get to the Chinese space station.]]
130* HerHeartWillGoOn: Not the entire function of [[spoiler:Kowalski's death]] but part of it.
131* HeroOfAnotherStory: As noted elsewhere, the other half of Stone's conversation with a ham radio operator who doesn't speak English was dramatized in the short film "Aningaaq". The astronauts on the ISS presumably had their own adventures after abandoning the station; it's never revealed if they made it back.
132* HeroicSacrifice: See ColdEquation.
133* HistoricalFiction: An accidental example; the Space Shuttles are no longer flying.
134* HitlerCam: [[spoiler:The final shot of Stone standing on the ground -- showing that she has conquered the adversity.]]
135* HollywoodPsych: Dr. Stone's daughter died not that long ago, yet NASA apparently felt it was all right sending her as a mission specialist to Low Earth Orbit, despite her lingering depression over the loss of her child(!). Even the excuse of "they couldn't get anyone else" makes no sense in this case, given that every astronaut/cosmonaut crew in history has always had backup crew members (in case the primary ones would become sick or be otherwise indisposed).
136* HopeSpot:
137** "How did you make it back here?" [[spoiler:When Kowalski "makes it back" to Stone]].
138** Stone makes contact with someone via the Soyuz radio, [[spoiler:only they're a ham radio operator who can't speak English.]]
139* INeedAFreakingDrink: The vodka bottle [[VodkaDrunkenski hidden under the seat of the Soyuz]]. Then again, [[spoiler: she was hallucinating]].
140* ImprovisedMicrogravityManeuvering: [[spoiler:A fire breaks out on the International Space Station, and when Stone tries to extinguish it the thrust of the extinguisher slams her against the bulkhead, knocking her unconscious for a moment. This becomes a ChekhovsBoomerang when she later uses the extinguisher to maneuver herself to another space station.]]
141* InSpaceEveryoneCanSeeYourFace: Probably the least realistic aspect of an otherwise [[ShownTheirWork thoroughly researched]] movie, so we can get a good look at stars Sandra Bullock and George Clooney.
142* IndyPloy: When you are stranded in space with nothing between you and the vacuum except your suit, which is rapidly losing air, it's time to call in this trope.
143* IronicEcho: After his job is done and he's told to take the day off, Shariff starts goofing off by launching himself off the shuttle and letting his tether snap him back, laughing all the way. Then he's hit by debris, and the same thing happens. Not funny anymore.
144* ItsASmallWorldAfterAll: [[spoiler:An unplanned descent down to earth, which is 70% covered with water, nets Stone a water landing in a relatively shallow lake in the United States' Midwest. She's even picked up again by NASA's radars. Forgivable as it's a way to allow the movie to end where it does, with the audience knowing she will be fine, picked up in less than an hour, and not stranded in a remote area without anyone knowing she's there.]]
145* ItsProbablyNothing: NASA mission control informs the astronaut team that the Russians have just created a big debris field by shooting down a satellite, yet both control and Kowalski initially dismiss it. Given that this is ''NASA'' here, they should probably [[GenreBlindness know enough about space]] to guess how that could lead to [[DangerousOrbitalDebris a worst case scenario]] and taken steps to prepare for it. It actually takes Mission Control about 2 minutes to abort the mission, which could have given the astronauts twice the time to escape as they actually got.
146* JammedSeatbelts: Stone has trouble unstrapping herself from the claw arm, and is still there when the debris cloud hits.
147* JetPack: Kowalski has one; a fictitious prototype upgrade to NASA's (retired) Manned Maneuvering Unit.
148* {{Leitmotif}}: The debris gets a distorted, synthesized, two-note theme whenever it appears.
149* MadeOfExplodium: Averted. Unlike, for instance, the comparable situation in ''Film/Armageddon1998'' -- where a small fire aboard the Mir space station eventually caused the whole thing to blow up spectacularly in mere minutes -- the fire on the International Space Station causes no structural damage at all, and is only a problem in that it eats up oxygen like nobody's business, and could have damaged the Soyuz capsule.
150* MagicCountdown: The time it takes for Stone's oxygen supply to drop from 5% to 1% is roughly the same time it takes to drop from 1% to 0%.
151* MarriedToTheJob: Stone after the death of her daughter; being a doctor is literally all she has left in life.
152* MaybeMagicMaybeMundane: [[spoiler:Did Kowalski's spirit stop by to give Stone one last pep talk before crossing over to the other side? Or was it the part of her that still wanted to live making her see somebody it knew she would listen to?]]
153* MeaningfulBackgroundEvent:
154** As Kowalski struggles to free Stone from the claw arm, Shariff suddenly snaps to one side on his tether as he's struck by the chunk of space debris that kills him.
155** Later, as Stone is trying to free the Soyuz module, the audience sees the debris hitting the ISS before she notices.
156* MeaningfulEcho: In the early scene where the pair work to activate Stone's equipment, Kowalski refers to Stone's "beautiful blue eyes" though she points out that hers are brown. Later, he gives tit for tat during their final conversation:
157-->'''Kowalski:''' Well, people say I have beautiful blue eyes.\
158'''Stone:''' You have beautiful... you have beautiful blue eyes.\
159'''Kowalski:''' I have brown eyes.
160* MeaningfulName: "Stone" is a two for one. It both indicates how she's not really living at the beginning of the movie (aside from the part about visiting space) and how tough she proves to be as the story progresses.
161* {{Minimalism}}: The story is quite stripped down, as opposed to other movies of similar funding. As stated elsewhere here there's NoAntagonist. There's a MinimalistCast. CuarĂ³n didn't have to ''fight'' with ExecutiveMeddling (he has the cred to be trusted), but he did listen to people pitching ideas like the rescue mission being covered and Stone being in love with one of the mission controllers. This film is really simple -- Stone is trying to get back to Earth ''somehow''.
162* MinimalistCast:
163** The film has only three visible characters [[spoiler:(with two dying by the 35-minute mark)]], with five other roles credited on Website/IMDb as voice-only. The vast majority of this film focuses on Bullock's character, almost constantly.
164** The "Aningaaq" short likewise has just two visible actors (with one character not even named).
165* MissingMissionControl: Things only get worse when the connection to MissionControl is severed.
166* MonumentalDamage: The satellite debris deals spectacularly catastrophic damage to the most iconic achievements of the modern space program, including the space shuttle, the Hubble Space Telescope, and the International Space Station. This would cause what's known as [[DangerousOrbitalDebris Kessler Syndrome]] and has a high likelihood of rendering space inaccessible from Earth for a very long time (until the debris deorbited by friction with the extremely thin atmosphere at that altitude). No more satellite communications, TV, weather, etc.
167* MoodWhiplash:
168** A [[WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes Marvin the Martian]] toy floats through the space shuttle wreckage. Then a body.
169** The movie actually utilizes this trope to great effect throughout. With TheOner, we get several minutes of Shariff finishing work and goofing off, Kowalski amiably chatting, and Dr. Stone simply trying to get her tech to work. Just as Kowalski is starting to tell [[NoodleIncident the Mardi Gras story]] NASA interrupts and tells everybody to pack up and get the hell out of dodge; now.
170** Kowalski comes off as a highly-experienced, but goofy, astronaut. However, the minute the situation calls for it, he drops the stories and jokes, and gets deadly serious, sometimes in the space of a sentence. Throughout his screentime, Kowalski will alternate between sternly telling Stone to get her head straight and focus, and then switching to jovial banter and light flirting.
171* MortalWoundReveal: Any lingering hope that Shariff is still alive is averted when we see the massive hole punched through not only [[BrokenFaceplate his helmet]], but his head.
172* NeverTrustATrailer:
173** There's a lot more to this movie than simply the female astronaut being flung off into space. [[spoiler:Saving her happens pretty quickly, actually.]]
174** Though the film itself depicts vacuum as a silent void, [[SpaceIsNoisy sound effects were added]] to the trailers.
175* NoAntagonist: It's all just Stone versus the space debris, which isn't a character.
176* NobodyPoops: Astronauts wear a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maximum_Absorbency_Garment Maximum Absorbency Garment (MAG)]], which is kind of like a diaper, because they cannot go back into the spacecraft to pee during a space walk. Ryan is definitely ''not'' wearing one -- see {{Fanservice}}, above.
177* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed: The ''Explorer'' is the ''Atlantis'' in all but name. Even the soundtrack names it thus. It's further linked by the fact that the last service mission to the Hubble Space Telescope was performed by ''Atlantis'' in 2009, bearing a [[http://www.space.com/14417-hubble-space-telescope-shuttle-mission-photos.html patch]] that served as basis for the ''Explorer'''s [[http://www.collectspace.com/news/news-093013a.html STS-157 mission]].
178* NoodleIncident: We never hear the full Mardi Gras story.
179* NoPeripheralVision:
180** Played straight. [[spoiler:Stone has to use the fire extinguisher when her back is to the Chinese space station, but she can't see behind herself due to her helmet; she has to estimate when she has rotated halfway around.]]
181** Kowalski looks at Stone's reflection in his wrist mirror when she's talking about her daughter, as she is behind him. We also see a wrist mirror on the Russian suit that Ryan gets into after she makes it to the ISS, as they are a standard piece of equipment due to the TruthInTelevision nature of this trope while wearing a space helmet.
182* NoTimeToThink: [[spoiler:Stone has to reenter the Earth's atmosphere using the capsule on the Chinese space station whose orbit is already decaying, but the instructions in the capsule are all in Chinese. In the end she just has to push buttons and hope she's hitting the right ones. They're not complete guesses though. The Chinese capsule (Shenzhou) is a Russian Soyuz copycat, which she received training for.]] Except for: being larger externally; being more spacious internally (ultimately able to hold four to Soyuz' three astronauts); having different (and more modern) engine design, avionics, and so on.
183* TheOner: A CreatorThumbprint for Creator/AlfonsoCuaron. The film uses a lot of long shots, and the camera is almost always moving -- a visual shorthand for the disorientation of the zero-G environment. Special mention: The opening scene, from the establishing view of Earth to Dr. Stone detaching from the structure, is a single, continuous shot lasting about twelve and a half minutes. Another notable instance occurs when she exits the Soyuz capsule to free it from the entangled parachute cords: her entire efforts, the approach of the debris cloud, the disaster that destroys ISS, and Dr. Stone's close-calls as the Soyuz is swung all over the place by the cables, is one single take until she finally goes back inside the capsule.
184* OneSizeFitsAll: Stone finds a cosmonaut pressure suit that fits her. While astronauts do have height and weight restrictions so they aren't too far off each other's sizes, the differences are still enough and the suits ''are'' custom tailored. At the very least that suit is probably very uncomfortable, though given the situation, comfort is unlikely to be a priority.
185* OneWomanWail: Shows up towards the end of the title track in the film's score. [[spoiler:It works quite well to show the triumph of Stone's survival]].
186* OneWordTitle: "Gravity".
187* OtherStockPhrases: "I've got a bad feeling about this," used by Kowalski before launching into LetMeTellYouAStory.
188* OutrunTheFireball: When a fire takes hold on the abandoned ISS.
189* OutlivingOnesOffspring: Stone mentions that she had a daughter who died in a preschool accident.
190--->'''Stone''': I had a daughter. She was four. She was at school, playing tag. Slipped, hit her head, and that was it. Stupidest thing.
191* PercussiveMaintenance: Stone tapping one of the instruments of the Soyuz to make it show the correct oxygen level.
192* POVCam: Several times things are seen through Stone's eyes.
193* PrecisionFStrike
194-->'''Kowalski:''' Do you copy?\
195'''Stone:''' Fuck!\
196'''Kowalski:''' Copy that.
197* ProductPlacement: We see a [[https://www.sitebox.ltd.uk/prodimages/Tools/Plumbing/Wrench/ws2m10.jpg Mole Wrench]] in the cockpit of the Shuttle and in the International Space Station. We get a particularly good look at the one in the ISS because it's near [[spoiler:the small fire that Stone misses]]. An alternative explanation is that the effects crew are Mole Wrench fanboys, and stick them in whenever they can.
198* RaceAgainstTheClock: After the first debris strike, Kowalski and Stone are racing to get out of the way before the debris field completes an orbit and strikes again; Kowalski estimates the orbit will take 90 minutes and instructs Stone to set up a countdown on her wrist chronometer so she knows how long they have.
199* ReadTheFreakingManual: Although Stone [[spoiler:flew the ''Soyuz'' simulator dozens of times (and [[CaptainCrash crashed it every time]]), she still takes the time to pick each specific color-coded manual to verify procedure depending on her needs at the time]].
200* RealTime:
201** Large parts of the film are in real time, though there are either cuts into the near future or compression, since the orbiting debris, which should take about an hour and a half to come around again, appears the second time about an hour into the film.
202** There seems to be a time skip when Stone and Kowalski are getting back to the space shuttle, and another when Stone is exiting the Soyuz capsule to untether it (in that scene the camera cuts from her in the capsule without a suit, to her exiting the capsule with full suit on). These two time skips separate what are essentially three long RealTime action sequences.
203* RecycledInSpace: Following the first trailers, people compared the film to shipwreck films like ''Film/CastAway'' and ''Film/OpenWater''. [[spoiler:This [[AvertedTrope is not]] [[BaitAndSwitch the case.]] The time Stone spends "adrift" is relatively little. Afterwards she always knows where she is going.]]
204* RememberedICouldFly: Even though she always crashed it in simulators, Stone learned enough about ''landing'' the ''Soyuz'' to know it has [[spoiler:soft-landing rockets that activate at 3 meters above ground. Rockets that, in orbit, are useful for one good boost...]]
205* {{Retirony}}: This is supposed to be Commander Matt Kowalski's last mission before retiring.
206* RousingSpeech: Kowalski talks constantly in order to keep Stone's spirit up. [[spoiler:Subverted with his final speech; it's a DaydreamSurprise so Stone is in fact giving the speech to herself.]]
207* RuleOfDrama: Despite the emphasis on scientific accuracy, [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravity_%28film%29#Scientific_accuracy there are several examples of this]]. Also [[http://www.thespacereview.com/article/2376/1 here]]. That being said, it's still one of the [[ShownTheirWork more accurate films]] ever made about space.
208* RuleOfSymbolism: "Rebirth" is the theme.
209** Stone [[FetalPositionRebirth floating in the capsule with her umbilical cord-like oxygen tube]].
210** Stone never once stands on her own two feet until the very end, when she has overcome her trauma and resolved to live again.
211** The entire end sequence once [[spoiler:Stone splashes down in the lake is one gigantic "being born" symbol. She is "birthed" from the capsule, and needs to shed her protective suit to swim to the surface of the lake. She takes her first natural breath in the entire movie, and then crawls onto the shore, where, the "fluids" of her "afterbirth" running off her, shakily climbs to her feet and takes her first tentative steps. FadeToBlack.]]
212** This same scene also includes a frog in the foreground, an animal known for its transformative life cycle [[spoiler:from a weightless environment to land.]] Having a butterfly in its place would have likely been taken as too cliched.
213* RuleOfThree: The space debris comes around three times with catastrophic results each time.
214* SacrificialLamb: Shariff. We don't even see his face until after he's killed (and we need to look at the FatalFamilyPhoto to see what that looked like).
215* SacrificialLion: [[spoiler:Kowalski.]]
216* SanitySlippage: When she can't communicate with the ham radio operator she contacts on her radio, Stone begins ''howling'' like a dog after hearing his dogs barking.
217* ScareChord: After their space shuttle is badly damaged, Stone and Kowalski inspect inside for survivors. They shine a flashlight inside to see that the hull has been breached. There is silence for several seconds, until [[spoiler:the lifeless, frozen face of the pilot, not in a space suit and exposed to the vacuum, appears right in front of Stone.]] Stone screams, accompanied by a loud, prolonged glissando and tremolo of violins.
218* SceneryGorn: The destruction of ''Explorer'' and the ISS, and the reentry of Tiangong.
219* SceneryPorn: Some of the shots of Earth from outer space and some of the space shot itself is amazingly beautiful.
220* ScienceHero: An updated version.
221* SecurityCling: As the tagline says, "Don't let go!"
222-->'''Kowalski:''' I know I'm devastatingly good looking, but you gotta stop staring at me.
223* ShooOutTheClowns: Shariff sure has a funny accent and loves space bungee jumping. He's the first to be [[BoomHeadshot removed]] from the main plotline.
224* ShoutOut:
225** Kowalski's insistence on playing country music while getting the team to reminisce about those they're missing back on Earth is a shout out to ''Film/DarkStar'' and its opening theme, ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eTa2vXL7FI8 Benson Arizona]]''.
226** Ryan grasping for a bolt floating in space resembles the poster/DVD cover for ''Anime/{{Planetes}}'', as well as one of the establishing shots.
227** Stone stripping down to a singlet and panties resembles the shuttle scene at the end of ''Film/{{Alien}}''.
228** A toy of [[WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes Marvin the Martian]] is shown drifting out of the destroyed shuttle.
229** Near the end, [[spoiler:Stone has to fly her way to the Chinese Space Station with a fire extinguisher]], just like ''WesternAnimation/WallE''.
230** The {{Leitmotif}} for the debris sounds similar to the one used in ''Film/{{Jaws}}'' for the shark.
231** ''Film/TwoThousandOneASpaceOdyssey'':
232*** The floating pen seen in several shots is reminiscent of a shot from Creator/StanleyKubrick's movie.
233*** Another ''2001'' shout-out is the scene in which Stone blows herself out of the capsule, similar to Dave Bowman doing the same.
234*** And when she gets into the ISS and disrobes, she curls into a fetal position, with her umbilical floating behind her, reminiscent of the Star Child.
235** Kowalski has "[[Franchise/StarWars a bad feeling about this]] mission."
236** The lake Stone crashes into was filmed at Lake Powell in Arizona, the same lake used for astronaut Taylor's crash in the original ''Film/{{Planet of the Apes|1968}}''.
237** After boarding the ISS, Stone starts undressing in zero gravity in a way very similar to ''Film/{{Barbarella}}'s'' opening scene.
238** The final [[CaptainsLog radio message]] from Ripley in ''Film/{{Alien}}'' is paraphrased.
239** Some viewers have humorously noted that Kowalski looks like [[Franchise/ToyStory Buzz Lightyear]].
240* ShownTheirWork: One of the most accurate films ever made about space. The film addresses many actual physical effects of zero-G that were largely ignored in other science fiction films, such as how when you start moving, you won't stop until you've hit something, which is ''really'' bad when a disaster happens and you're now spinning out of control. The movie's story is very much based on a real proposed space disaster, the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kessler_syndrome Kessler syndrome]].
241* SinkingShipScenario: By the time Stone reaches the ISS, the station is deteriorating fast due to debris strikes, and she narrowly survives a fire by ducking into the remaining Soyuz. [[spoiler:Even more so with Tiangong, which is literally ''falling into the atmosphere'' as she scrambles to a Shenzhou, complete with blaring alarms, exploding circuitry, and ominous rumbling as the station is battered by the thickening air outside]].
242* SoleSurvivor: What Stone realizes that she is about a third into the film.
243* SpaceIsCold: The shuttle crew freezes solid, instantly, when exposed to the vacuum of space. In reality, it would take hours for them to freeze under most circumstances.
244* SpaceIsNoisy: Averted. The film relies on its soundtrack (or lack thereof) to evoke action and emotion. The only sounds heard during the scenes where the astronauts are out in space (apart from the soundtrack) are sounds that would vibrate through their suits. Played straight [[NeverTrustATrailer in the trailers]], which added sound effects to seem more exciting. Ironically, the film won Oscars for Sound Editing and Sound Mixing.
245* SpaceIsolationHorror: Currently provides the page image.
246* SpaceFriction: Averted; much of the drama comes from the fact that an object (whether debris or protagonist) doesn't slow down once it's set in motion. It also helps when they only need short maneuvering bursts to launch themselves across vast distances.
247* SpaceStation: The International Space Station and the Chinese Tiangong (albeit an expanded version) make appearances. The former is damaged by the debris cloud, then completely annihilated by the second pass; the latter is only damaged, but it's thrown into the atmosphere and it breaks up into chunks during entry.
248* SuddenSoundtrackStop: The film often cuts off the music to mark Ryan transitioning from spacewalking to inside a spacecraft and vice versa.
249* SurvivorshipBias: Ryan Stone is one out of two astronauts to survive the opening scenes, but she remains the central focus of the film even before George Clooney's character dies.
250* SymbolicBaptism: ''Film/{{Gravity}}'' ends with Dr. Stone unsteadily walking out of a lake: a literal return to life on Earth after a grueling trial to escape death on a space mission gone wrong.
251* TakeMyHand: Happens quite often between Kowalski and Stone, as the two of them tumble through space.
252* ThatsAnOrder: MissionControl warns them about the approaching debris, so Kowalski tells Stone to get inside the shuttle immediately. She says, "Just a second" as she's securing the Hubble equipment, but Kowalski snaps "Not in a second -- NOW!"
253* TomboyishName: Ryan Stone. When Kowalski asks about it, she answers that "Dad wanted a boy".
254* TraumaCongaLine: Stone experiences this.
255* {{Understatement}}: Stone, after the second debris field encounter: "I hate space."
256* TheWorldIsJustAwesome: While towing her to the ISS, Kowalski draws Stone's attention to the beautiful sunrise.
257* YouHaveGotToBeKiddingMe: Ryan Stone [[TantrumThrowing repeatedly exclaims]] "You've got to be kidding me!" when the ''Soyuz'' capsule's [[spoiler:main rocket is out of fuel.]]
258* YouTalkTooMuch: Kowalski -- Stone and Mission Control both gripe about his constant stories.
259
260!!The companion short film "Aningaaq" provides examples of:
261
262* DownerEnding: The short ends with Aningaaq [[spoiler:killing his dog Nanaan.]]
263* MercyKill: When he is talking with Stone, Aningaaq mentions that his beloved dog, Nanaan, is elderly and sick, but he can't bear the thought of having to sacrifice her and put her out of her misery because he loves her so much. Evidently, his conversation with Stone (despite the fact that they actually couldn't understand each other due to the language barrier) is what gives him the resolve to [[spoiler:go through with euthanizing Nanaan, as the short ends with a single gunshot.]]
264* OneSceneTwoMonologues: The fact that Stone and Aningaaq can't understand each other doesn't stop them from describing their troubles to each other in detail.
265* POVSequel: Of a sort.
266* SilentCredits: Which are punctuated with [[spoiler:a gunshot]].

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