Parents' Guide to Fly Me to the Moon

Movie PG-13 2024 132 minutes
Fly Me to the Moon movie poster: Scarlett Johansson adjusts Channing Tatum's tie; a full moon is behind them

Common Sense Media Review

Sandie Angulo Chen By Sandie Angulo Chen , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 12+

Charming revisionist-history dramedy has language, brands.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 12+?

Any Positive Content?

Parent and Kid Reviews

age 13+

Based on 1 parent review

age 12+

Based on 8 kid reviews

What's the Story?

In FLY ME TO THE MOON, it's the 1960s, and Kelly Jones (Scarlett Johansson) is a smooth-talking New York City advertising and marketing specialist who can land big deals mostly by pretending to be whomever her (male) clients will listen to most—like pregnant and married, for example, when she's neither, or flirtatious and confident, when she's both. One day, a mysterious man named Moe Berkus (Woody Harrelson) approaches Kelly at a bar with an offer she can't refuse: President Nixon (whom Berkus represents) needs her to help turn NASA's public image around because the United States can't afford to lose the space race to the Soviet Union, particularly in the face of the Vietnam War and the aftermath of the Apollo I catastrophe. Once in Cape Canaveral, Kelly has a meet-cute with Cole Davis (Channing Tatum) in a diner, a brief but memorable exchange that shakes Cole up when he realizes the next day that she's the new, disruptive presence in the office—and she discovers that he's the Apollo 11 launch director. As Kelly uses her marketing skills to get the Apollo 11 astronauts into countless articles and national ad campaigns, Moe comes to her with a classified subtask: She must hire a director and use Secret Service agents as actors to stage the moon landing, just in case the real astronauts are unsuccessful.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say ( 1 ):
Kids say ( 8 ):

This crowd-pleasing historical dramedy has heart, humor, and two charming leads. In his sophomore directorial feature, Greg Berlanti, working from a script by Rose Gilroy, blends an opposites-attract period workplace romcom with a historical space-race drama and a movie-within-a-movie comedy. While not all aspects of Fly Me to the Moon work equally well—the romance spends a lot of time on the back burner while Kelly and Cole run around putting out figurative (and occasionally literal) fires—overall this is a fun and surprisingly funny movie (the latter mostly thanks to Jim Rash, who plays Lance, the hilariously exacting director Kelly hires to prep the fake landing). Tatum is believable as a military pilot turned NASA launch director whose sense of honor is at direct odds with Kelly's capacity to lie (whether about her name, her alma mater, her accent, or pretty much anything) to get what she wants. In addition to Rash, who's a gifted comedic actor, notable supporting characters include Harrelson as the know-it-all, "this never happened" Nixon operative; Ray Romano as Cole's second in command; and Anna Garcia as Kelly's younger, progressive assistant, Ruby.

Fly Me to the Moon isn't a film to see for historical accuracy when it comes to the Cold War, what did and didn't happen leading up to the Apollo 11 launch, or the history of NASA. There are plenty of other biographical and historical dramas for that. And, yes, it's a bit odd to play into a real conspiracy theory about the moon landing, but that's part of the humor. This isn't Apollo 13 or The Right Stuff, nor does it strive to be that kind of fact-based drama. Frankly, the only women in those movies were supportive wives, so there's a certain joy in one that centers around a pioneering (if fictional) woman whose appeal is so broad and intelligence so keen that she can (nearly) always get her way. For some history swirled into a romcom, this is a winner.

Talk to Your Kids About ...

  • Families can talk about the way that Fly Me to the Moon blends historical fact with fiction. Does the movie make you want to learn more about the history of NASA, the Apollo program, and the space race?

  • The film takes liberties with historical events. Do you think movies based on real events need to be historically accurate?

  • Which of the movie's characters demonstrate teamwork, integrity, perseverance, and communication? Which ones don't? Do they come into conflict with each other?

  • What do you think about the idea that the United States had to win the space race at all costs? What do you think would have happened if Apollo 11 hadn't successfully landed on the moon?

Movie Details

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Fly Me to the Moon movie poster: Scarlett Johansson adjusts Channing Tatum's tie; a full moon is behind them

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