Mars

2016 • National Geographic Channel
4.4
1.33K reviews
TV-14
Rating
Eligible
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Season 2 episodes (11)

1 We Are Not Alone
11/12/18
Season-only
With a common water source, IMSF and Lukrum establish a tenuous coexistence that threatens to dissolve when Kurt and his crew make unexpected headway in their mining mission. Commander Hana Seung maintains diplomacy between the two camps until tragedy strikes. In present day on Earth, Greenpeace activists protest Arctic oil drilling, examining the effectiveness of such tactics.
2 Worlds Apart
11/19/18
Season-only
With a common water source, IMSF and Lukrum establish a tenuous coexistence that threatens to dissolve when Kurt and his crew make unexpected headway in their mining mission. Commander Hana Seung maintains diplomacy between the two camps until tragedy strikes. In present day on Earth, Greenpeace activists protest Arctic oil drilling, examining the effectiveness of such tactics.
3 Darkness Falls
11/26/18
Season-only
When a solar flare strikes Mars, knocking out communications in the colonies, Olympus Town races to locate exobiologist Marta Kamen. The colony braces for the red planet’s first-ever pregnancy. Amelie’s plans to return to Earth are thwarted. In the present day on Earth, scientists brave harsh conditions in pursuit of data that will help predict the effect of glacial melt on global sea levels.
4 Contagion
12/3/18
Season-only
A mysterious illness sweeps through the colonies. IMSF realizes one of its own has died as a result and races to determine the cause, origin and mode of transmission before time runs out and more lives are claimed. In present day on Earth, Vladimir Chuprov, a Greenpeace activist, sheds light on an indigenous health crisis being kept quiet by the Russian state to benefit its oil endeavors.
5 Power Play
12/10/18
Season-only
Lukrum strikes a deal with Russia for exclusive mining rights. Lt. Cmdr. Mike Glenn undermines Hana and endangers colony members. The first-generation Martian baby arrives two months early! In the present day on Earth, nations attempt to work together to rein in corporate interests, protect fragile ecosystems and preserve indigenous lifestyles.
6 The Shake Up
12/17/18
Season-only
Lukrum pushes its corporate interest too far and jeopardizes the safety of both colonies. IMSF stabilizes the situation, but for some it will be too late. In the present day on Earth, human activity has destabilized the natural world. NASA’s Operation Icebridge studies Arctic sea ice in an attempt to bring awareness to global warming and the dramatically changing state of our planet.
101 Trailer
10/15/18
Season-only
The groundbreaking series returns, exploring the next phase of human colonization on Mars. Blending powerful drama, action, and visual effects, with insightful interviews featuring leading space-science innovators and thinkers – such as Elon Musk and Andy Weir – MARS explores the perils and promise of the next great frontier.
102 Season 2 - Behind the Scenes
10/19/18
Season-only
Peek behind the scenes at the filming of MARS Season 2 – with cast and crew interviews, storyline insights, and a glimpse of the giant green screen that puts our actors on Mars.
103 101
10/19/18
Season-only
From its blood-like hue to its potential to sustain life, Mars has intrigued humankind for thousands of years. Learn how the red planet formed from gas and dust and what its polar ice caps mean for life as we know it.
104 Exploring Mars in Utah
10/19/18
Season-only
Join five scientists on a "mission to Mars" in Utah. Photojournalist Jim Urquhart embedded with Crew 138 of the Mars Society's Mars Desert Research Station for two weeks in March. The crew describes what it's like, in their own words.
105 Season 1 Recap
11/13/18
Season-only
Check out this quick recap of the first season of MARS, as you prepare to launch yourself into season 2. From executive producers Brian Grazer & Ron Howard, MARS offers a unique blend of scripted drama with feature-film caliber visual effects, intercut with documentary interviews with some of the greatest minds in space exploration.

About this show

From executive producers Brian Grazer & Ron Howard, MARS is an epic series following a thrilling quest - in 2033 - to colonize Mars. In a unique blend of scripted drama and feature-film caliber visual effects, intercut with documentary sequences, the series presents what the greatest minds in space exploration are doing to make traveling to Mars a reality, and shows us the world they seek.

Ratings and reviews

4.4
1.33K reviews
Joe Murphy
November 30, 2016
TTL;DR Ambitious space missions are very dramatic on their own and don't need Nat. Geo. injecting more. TL;DR: If you want to watch a semi-factual account of a Mars mission, go watch "The Martian". However, if you aren't very attached to the physics and engineering of it, this is pretty decent as they come. Long version: From someone who actually studies aerospace engineering, it's very unrealistic (at least if the way missions are carried out today is to be any judge). From the outset, the show makes use of horrible representations of orbital mechanics and operating procedures to fulfill a contrived need for drama. Then the astronauts start taking risks that would never be allowed in the present to up the ante some more. This show also throws in virtually meaningless accounts from present day notables (Elon Musk!) that keep saying essentially "Mars is hard. We're working on it." (thanks Captain Obvious, if Mars was easy we'd already be there). This combined with the previous problems makes for a show that dresses itself like a documentary but has as less basis in reality than some soap operas.
717 people found this review helpful
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Milton Lau
December 15, 2020
It is okay, given much of the content is from a one sided perspective. For example, if we sent semiautonomous robots to begin building an artificial mountain, they could "work" on their own for as long as it takes to build it. The objective is to build a plateau just short of Low Mars Orbit, so visitors can land safely, and leave safely. Eventually a proper mechanized Space Elevator would be installed to enable more efficiency in the comings and goings. Then the danger element would be elimin
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David Larsen
November 12, 2016
From the beginning the "acting" falls like a lead weight into a supermassive black hole. It's atrocious and you couldn't care less about the smug self-satisfied expressions on their faces. Human arrogance at its finest. Twaddle like this is the reason we can justify genocide against our fellow Earthlings who don't happen to share our DNA blueprint, endless natural resource theft, habit destruction, over-hunting and fishing, and limitless human population growth.
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