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Mickey 17

He's dying to save mankind.
2025 | 137m | English

(192558 votes)

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Popularity: 17 (history)

Details

Unlikely hero Mickey Barnes finds himself in the extraordinary circumstance of working for an employer who demands the ultimate commitment to the job… to die, for a living.
Release Date: Feb 28, 2025
Director: Bong Joon Ho
Writer: Edward Ashton, Bong Joon Ho
Genres: Comedy, Adventure, Science Fiction
Keywords based on novel or book, dark comedy, space travel, space colony, alien planet, creature, space adventure, human clone, spaceship, space sci-fi, black comedy
Production Companies Plan B Entertainment, Warner Bros. Pictures, Kate Street Picture Company, Offscreen, Domain Entertainment
Box Office Revenue: $131,847,147
Budget: $118,000,000
Updates Updated: Aug 27, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Robert Pattinson Mickey Barnes
Naomi Ackie Nasha
Steven Yeun Timo
Mark Ruffalo Kenneth Marshall
Toni Collette Ylfa
Anamaria Vartolomei Kai Katz
Daniel Henshall Preston
Patsy Ferran Dorothy
Steve Park Zeke
Tim Key Pigeon Man
Holliday Grainger Red Hair
Michael Monroe Matthew
Cameron Britton Arkady
Edward Davis Alan Manikova
Ian Hanmore Darius Blank
Lloyd Hutchinson Underboss
Christian Patterson Chainsaw Guy
Samuel Blenkin Delinquent Borrower
Sabet Choudhury News Reporter
Rose Shalloo The Supporter
Bronwyn James Receptionist
Milo James Young Mickey
Jude Mack Kai's New Girlfriend
Thomas Turgoose Bazooka Soldier
Adam Colborne Gate Agent
Tom Cawte Prison Guard
Ellen Robertson Jennifer Chilton
Sam Woodhams Quartermaster
Kayla Meikle Flitter Driver
Haydn Gwynne Congresswoman
Theo Ogundipe Police Detective
Jamila Wingett Stage Manager
Spike White Committee Chairperson
Angus Imrie Agent Charlie
Afolabi Alli First Marshall's Agent
Anna Mouglalis Mama Creeper (voice)
Name Job
Marlow Hope Assistant Set Decoration
Dan Glass Visual Effects Supervisor
Dominique Law Art Direction
Chris McLaughlin Visual Effects Supervisor
David Fox Executive Visual Effects Producer
Saado Abou-Khazaal Visual Effects Producer
Christine Neumann Visual Effects Producer
Robyn Luckham Animation Director
Michael Byrch Stunts
Pete Ford Stunts
P. Whitney Gearin Visual Effects Producer
Francine Maisler Casting
Isabella Abrams-Humphries Visual Effects Coordinator
Yusuf Chaudhri Stunts
John Flemming Key Grip
John Higgins Gaffer
Damien van der Cruyssen Colorist
Jo Beckett Script Supervisor
Paul Lowe Stunt Coordinator
Eilam Hoffman Sound Designer
Choi Tae-young Supervising Sound Editor
Stephen Doyle Props
Chris Bain Steadicam Operator, "A" Camera Operator
Jonathan England First Assistant Camera
Freddie FitzHerbert Second Assistant Camera
Tony Higgins Best Boy Electric
Barney Piercy "B" Camera Operator
Stuart Wilson Production Sound Mixer
Balaji Anbalagan Senior Animator
Uxue Laguardia Makeup & Hair
Niamh O'Loan Key Makeup Artist
Ann Lynch Post Production Supervisor
David Zealey Unit Production Manager
Michael Mann Production Manager
Fiona Crombie Production Design
Jung Jae-il Original Music Composer
Edward Ashton Novel
Darius Khondji Director of Photography
Alice Felton Set Decoration
Catherine George Costume Design
Lucy Cork Stunts
Ben Howard Assistant Director
Sarah Lochlan Stunts
Yang Jin-mo Editor
Jason Knox-Johnston Supervising Art Director
Christine Lois Art Direction
Lisa McDiarmid Standby Art Director, Art Direction
Laura Mickiewicz Art Direction
Paul Savulescu Art Direction
Jan Gronczewski Assistant Art Director
Chelsea Davison Assistant Art Director
Dan Grace Costume Supervisor
Lewis Cook Assistant Accountant
Deanna Marshall Assistant Accountant
Paul Biddiss Military Consultant
Alex Clark Storyboard Artist
Stuart Penn Visual Effects Supervisor
Guido Wolter Visual Effects Supervisor
Ryan Urban Visual Effects Supervisor
Antony Robert Ephgrave Lighting Technician
Jonathan Olley Still Photographer
Kim Jae-won Assistant Editor
Lara Channon Assistant Editor
Kyle Casey Digital Intermediate Producer
Jang Hee-chul Creature Design
Lee Herrick ADR Supervisor
Jeffrey Roy ADR Mixer
Aaron Southerland ADR Mixer
Anita Burger Makeup Artist
Jack Flemming Grip
Amy Wyatt Lighting Technician
Joey Hodges Set Dresser, Props
Samuel Hussey Set Dresser, Props
Vincent Scotet First Assistant "A" Camera
Russell Kennedy First Assistant "B" Camera
Terry Robb Rigging Gaffer
Thomas Royal Rigging Supervisor
Gabriel Kolodny Digital Imaging Technician
Kate Chadderton Costume Coordinator
Sophie Earnshaw Principal Costumer
Amy Djordjevic Post Production Coordinator
David Olson Music Editor
Daniel Glazebrook Second Assistant "A" Camera
Jason Beharie Second Assistant "B" Camera
Matthew Sharp Second Assistant Director
Dominic Tuohy Special Effects Supervisor
Varpu Kronholm Stunts
Ben Jeffes First Assistant Sound Editor
Arie Dekker Stunts
Peter Guiney Stunts
Joe Kennard Stunts
Tom Rodgers Stunts
Paul Bailey Stunts
Emma Britton Stunts
Andrew Burford Stunts
Phil Campbell Stunts
Billy Clements Stunts
Liam Coote Stunts
Pip Cope Stunts
Francesca Cozier Stunts
Jason Curle Stunts
Daniel Dow Stunts
Darin Elie Stunts
Martin Gordon Stunts
Dan Griffiths Stunts
George Harris Stunts
Jessica Hooker Stunts
Octavia Hopwood Stunts
Victor Leon Stunts
Alan Leong Stunts
Lukaz Leong Stunts
Jake Osborn Stunts
Daniel Rawlins Stunts
Matt Sherren Stunts
Jonny Stockwell Stunts
Elmo Walker Stunts
Steven Whitley Stunts
Marco Anton Restivo Art Direction
Shalina Bhamra Set Designer
Hannah Foulkes Set Designer
Giulia Iddas Set Designer
Emily Beswarick Set Designer
Milly White Set Designer
Gang Hye-yeong Sound Effects Editor
Kim Hyun-ju Sound Effects Editor
Kim Jun-yong Sound Effects Editor
Na-Won Jung Sound Effects Editor
Loveday Harding First Assistant Sound Editor
Julia Hardecka Second Assistant Sound
Shin i Na Foley Mixer
Lee Chung-gyu Foley Artist
Nicky Coats Visual Effects Producer
Sharon Martin Makeup & Hair
Klara Levring Makeup & Hair
Ripley Dale-Gulston Makeup & Hair
Hayley Grant Lighting Technician
Steve Ring Lighting Technician
Scott Robinson Lighting Technician
Paul Sheppard Lighting Technician
Dan Crawshaw Set Dresser
Barry Fake Set Dresser
James Hodges Jr. Set Dresser
Louis Manning Set Dresser
Conner Smart Set Dresser
Terry Wood Jr. Set Dresser
Molly Rose Casting Associate
Abby Galvin Casting Associate
Dylan Kendle Main Title Designer
Jason Kedgley Main Title Designer
Haydn Gwynne In Memory Of
Audrey Diwan Thanks
Greig Fraser Thanks
Bong Joon Ho Writer, Director
Jon Hollis Main Title Designer
Chloé Zhao Thanks
Max Solomon Animation Supervisor
Name Title
Pete Chiappetta Executive Producer
Andrew Lary Executive Producer
Anthony Tittanegro Executive Producer
Jesse Ehrman Executive Producer
Dooho Choi Producer
Peter Dodd Executive Producer
Jeremy Kleiner Producer
Dede Gardner Producer
Marianne Jenkins Executive Producer
Yeijin Cho Associate Producer
Bong Joon Ho Producer
Brad Pitt Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 14 26 7
2024 5 12 20 7
2024 6 15 38 7
2024 7 15 28 7
2024 8 13 36 8
2024 9 31 55 7
2024 10 32 69 15
2024 11 22 36 14
2024 12 26 41 16
2025 1 54 115 31
2025 2 83 148 29
2025 3 164 666 17
2025 4 158 246 82
2025 5 50 71 38
2025 6 32 46 25
2025 7 23 26 18
2025 8 16 21 13
2025 9 17 17 17

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 9 89 89
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2025 8 35 135
Year Month High Avg
2025 7 32 75
Year Month High Avg
2025 6 23 46
Year Month High Avg
2025 5 9 21
Year Month High Avg
2025 4 1 8
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2025 3 1 6
Year Month High Avg
2025 2 6 71
Year Month High Avg
2025 1 10 224
Year Month High Avg
2024 12 190 543
Year Month High Avg
2024 11 105 650
Year Month High Avg
2024 10 114 552
Year Month High Avg
2024 9 13 213

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Reviews

msbreviews
7.0

FULL SPOILER-FREE REVIEW @ https://movieswetextedabout.com/mickey-17-review-robert-pattinson-shines-in-bong-joon-hos-latest-genre-bending-adventure/ "Mickey 17 presents an intriguing sci-fi concept and raises interesting questions, even if it doesn't always explore them with the desired depth. ... Bong Joon-ho continues to demonstrate his mastery in blending genres, but here, the satire and lack of subtlety in the narrative end up limiting the emotional and philosophical impact of a story centered on sociopolitical themes like identity, technology, and colonialism. Nevertheless, with a star-studded cast led by an excellent Robert Pattinson and a captivating audiovisual style, the South Korean filmmaker reinforces his status as one of the most creative directors working today, delivering an experience that falls somewhere between fascinatingly hilarious and frustratingly superficial." Rating: B

Mar 07, 2025
Brent_Marchant
9.0

Some movies have a way of hitting things right on the head, either intentionally or by happy accident. And such is the case in both regards in the latest offering from Oscar-winning writer-director Bong Joon Ho, a hilariously insightful sociopolitical sci-fi satire that knocks it out of the park in ... more ways than one can count. In an age of casual throw-away culture, “Mickey 17” takes this idea to an entirely new level by following the dubious exploits of the title character (Robert Pattinson), who works as an “expendable,” a human charged with determining just how lethal various new technologies and environmental conditions are in an off-world colony of the future. The ironic, questionable term for this profession is derived from the fact that its practitioners are considered wholly disposable in every sense of the word but are fully capable of being regenerated in full thanks to a form of digital human printing, allowing subsequent iterations of these beings to be created as often as needed. However, life isn’t quite so “simple and straightforward” for the Mickey expendable when he gets caught up in a series of complicated developments involving an illegal double, the whims of the maniacal cultist colony leader (Mark Ruffalo) and his self-absorbed wife (Toni Collette), the scheming of an unreliable, self-serving childhood friend (Steven Yeun), a relentless loan shark (Ian Hanmore) from his days back on Earth, and an aspiring romantic interest (Anamaria Vartolomei) who tries to get between Mickey and his girlfriend (Naomi Ackie), a passionate but badass security officer. The narrative’s various story threads blend well together (even if a few of them are a little stretched out or aren’t developed as fully as they might have been), but they collectively tell a well-integrated tale that generally keeps viewers riveted throughout. This captivating yarn is superbly supported by the picture’s inventive visuals, expert editing. and stellar performances, most notably Ruffalo, Collette, Ackie and the first-ever portrayal by Pattinson that I’ve actually liked. What makes this offering especially and somewhat inadvertently effective, however, is the timing of its release, which was originally scheduled for a year ago but was delayed due to the SAG-AFTRA strike, a truly fortuitous blessing in disguise. Given current conditions in today’s turbulent sociopolitical climate, particularly the unpredictable leadership of one particular politician, “Mickey 17” couldn’t have debuted at a more pertinently appropriate time. (While I’ll spare the specifics here, let me just say that MAGA fans and evangelical conservatives probably won’t find this picture much to their liking.) In addition, the film deftly addresses a number of pressing social and cultural themes, such as how the average, everyday working class individual is looked upon and treated these days, the expendability question coming front and center. Some might see these attributes as somewhat heavy-handed or preachy, but then such “excesses” are the essence of good satire, and the filmmaker holds nothing back here. I’m also amazed that all of this was foreseen so far in advance of the emergence of current conditions, decidedly prescient and poignantly relevant in its insights. Indeed, this is genuinely a cinematic fable for our times – a rather scathing one, to be sure, but a damning fable nevertheless. Moreover, if this release is any indication of what 2025’s crop of new pictures will be like, I warmly welcome it given the awful movie year that has just passed. And, where “Mickey 17” is concerned, let’s hope that this all comes to pass – both on the big screen and otherwise.

Apr 20, 2025
Geronimo1967
6.0

“Mickey” (Robert Pattinson) is desperate to avoid a grisly fate at the hands of a loan shark, so decides his best bet is to get off-planet. Thing is, there are an whole load of like-minded folk so his only hope is to be an expendable. That means he gets used for all the dangerous and experimental ta ... sks and if he gets killed or seriously maimed, they just lob him in the incinerator and reprint him - complete with all his old and quite a few new memories. Travelling through space, he meets “Nasha” (Naomie Ackie) and they have a good thing going, even if the imperious couple in charge - Mark Ruffalo and Toni Collette - have forbidden the wasting of the 100 calories it takes to have sex! Things start to go a bit wrong, though, when he unexpectedly survives one chilly mission only to find upon his return they have already duplicated his successor. “Nasha” thinks the ménage-à-trois thing could work quite well but “Mickey” less so, and when rumours of their duplicate existence starts to abound, well things get distinctly dodgy. Meantime, the indigenous population of the planet they have landed on are getting a bit cross with the murderous attitudes of their human interlopers, and so perhaps it’s gonna be for “Mickey” x 2 and “Nasha” to sort things out before the pitch changes altogether. It’s quite good fun this, but I kept thinking of “Galaxy Quest” and couldn’t decide if Ruffalo was having a go at Donald Trump or Val Kilmer with his rather hammy performance. Also, despite being easy enough on the eye, Pattinson is a remarkably charm-free actor and here, even when there are some daft scenarios and the CGI works flat out to create a perfect series of images, he just underwhelmed the whole time and when the film is about more than one of him, that mattered. Collette and Steven Yeun are relatively under-used and it’s simply far too long to sustain the thinness of a plot that does raise some interesting issues around human cloning, exploration and that especially American cinematic trait of shooting extra-terrestrials first and then asking question later, but I was disappointed with this, sorry.

Mar 12, 2025
r96sk
10.0

<em>'Mickey 17'</em> is a blast! What a fun time at the cinema this was. It delivers a super engaging plot, an excellent cast and some tremendous special effects. I, like almost everyone, love Bong Joon Ho's <em>'Parasite'</em>, but personally I'd rank this one of his higher. That's likely a pers ... onal thing, this is more entertaining and highly likely more rewatchable; that named 2019 flick is quality, but I can't say I've had any inkling to revisit it since I watched it in 2020. Again, just me; it'll obviously vary person-to-person. Two great films, all the same. Robert Pattinson is brilliant as the titular character, he kills it <i>(ba dum tss)</i> all the way through. Naomi Ackie is as terrific though, she is smashing it in recent years; hard to separate her fantastic performances in <em>'I Wanna Dance with Somebody'</em>, <em>'Blink Twice'</em> and this. Mark Ruffalo, Toni Collette and Steven Yeun are super in their respective roles too. Top notch casting! Anna Mouglalis voices the leader of the Creepers, who I thought looked outstanding. Awesome effects. The whole look (and sound) of this movie is first-rate. Loved it.

Mar 14, 2025
MVReka
N/A

Nothing incredibly groundbreaking, and a little heavy handed with the satire, but a fun ride and well shot, with all of the "I shouldn't laugh at this but I am" that you'd expect I am guilty, as many others will be, of comparing this to Parasite. Doing so is doing the movie a disservice. From Bon ... g Joon Ho I was not expecting a silly black comedy that would have the whole theater laughing. Accept and enjoy it and you'll have a great time. Although I felt like I was getting slapped in the face with the Trump satire, it still hit pretty well and got a good few laughs out of me. After all this, I'm still wondering what the sauce is about...

Mar 28, 2025
MovieGuys
6.0

"Mickey 17" for those of us, old enough to remember has a Jerry Lewis in space, vibe. Mickey's a sad sack, goofy, kind of misfit, who finds himself becoming essentially, a recyclable "crash test dummy", in space, to avoid an arguably worse fate, on earth, at the hands of sadistic, loan sharks. ... Simply put, this irritated me from beginning to end. Its not what it needs to be, that is, genuinely witty and off the wall, likeable. What you get instead, is dark, oftentimes cruel, populated by shabby characters, that are selfish and annoying, in equal measure. If this a species of commentary and, or satire on the human condition, its not a very hopeful one, to say the least. Acting is only passable, too. The main character's don't stand out and there is nothing to off set their marked limitations. At least, Lewis, who I never liked, had the jovial and engaging, Dean Martin. In summary, this is not only not special, its rather bleak, bland and ultimately tedious. It could have been more with upbeat handling and genuine Monty Python-esque humour but that's conspicuous, by its absence. A mediocre watch, at best.

May 02, 2025