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‘Project Hail Mary’ Contains Not a Single Green Screen Shot in Entire Movie, Director Says

Amazon-MGM's entire 156-minute, big-budget sci-fi gamble was shot without any green (or blue) screen, Christopher Miller says.

EntertainmentBy Amanda SterlingMarch 4, 20263 min read

Last updated: March 19, 2026, 12:35 AM

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‘Project Hail Mary’ Contains Not a Single Green Screen Shot in Entire Movie, Director Says

Want another reason to see Project Hail Mary?

The highly anticipated, big-budget Ryan Gosling title somehow contains not a single shot of green/blue screen in the entire film.

Which is really saying something considering Project Hail Mary is a sci-fi epic that’s 156 minutes long.

The Amazon MGM Studios project is based on The Martian author Andy Weir’s bestselling hard-science novel Project Hail Mary and tells the story of an astronaut (Gosling) on a high-stakes mission to save Earth from an interstellar disaster who encounters an alien trying to save his world from the same fate.

Christopher Miller, who directed the film along with Phil Lord, told Comicbook.com (below, with some unmistakable pride in his voice), “What’s fun about the movie is that there is no green screen in the movie whatsoever. Not a single green or blue screen was used. The whole ship was built as a set from the inside. We had a huge section of the exterior of the ship on the outside that we built. [The alien character Rocky] was really with us at all times.”

“And so, that’s what makes it feel real and makes it feel natural,” Miller continued. “And the way that [cinematographer Greg Fraser’s] team lit [the set] with a lot of practical effects, allowed him to move the camera wherever and find these moments. Because you weren’t just guessing and pointing it at where Rocky might be someday [if the character was added in post-production]. That’s what makes [the action] feel like it was captured in the moment.”

Project Hail Mary has a reported gross budget of $248 million ($200 million after tax credits, says Puck) and represents a bit of a Hail Mary by the studio. But at a time when many sci-fi, superhero and fantasy projects are stuffed with green screen artificiality (not to mention, our collective increasing weariness of so-called “AI slop” videos online), the practical nature of the film will could prove to be a selling point.

The film has been receiving rather stellar early buzz. One reporter called it “profound and profoundly moving, an absolute masterpiece of hope and humanity. It’s also insanely entertaining,” while another wrote the film “feels, in many ways, like a miracle of a movie. It combines the technical awe of Gravity, the problem-solving exhilaration and humor of The Martian, and the sweeping emotion of Interstellar into one film with its own unique style and charm.”

The cast also includes Sandra Hüller, Lionel Boyce, Ken Leung and Milana Vayntrub. Project Hail Mary is released in theaters on March 20.

Christopher Miller said there's no green screen used in Project Hail Mary"What's fun about the movie is that there's no green screen in the movie whatsoever. There's not a single green or blue screen was used. The whole ship was built as a set from the inside… Rocky was… pic.twitter.com/5mZ0zksxAp— ada (@leadaal) March 3, 2026

Christopher Miller said there's no green screen used in Project Hail Mary

"What's fun about the movie is that there's no green screen in the movie whatsoever. There's not a single green or blue screen was used. The whole ship was built as a set from the inside… Rocky was… pic.twitter.com/5mZ0zksxAp

AS
Amanda Sterling

Culture Reporter

Amanda Sterling reports on music, pop culture, celebrity news, and the arts. A graduate of NYU's arts journalism program, she covers the cultural moments that define the zeitgeist. Her reviews and profiles appear regularly in the Journal American's arts and culture section.

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