Supernova

A 2000 science fiction film produced by MGM and Hammerhead Production. Starring James Spader, Angela Bassett, Robert Forster , Lou Diamond Phillips,Wilson Cruz, Robin Tunney, and a pre-Twilight Peter Facinelli. Voice Actress Vanessa Marshall provides the voice of ship's computer, "Sweetie".

The story begins with the Medical ship, Nightingale, and its crew -- Captain Marley (Forster), ship's doctor Kaela Evers (Bassett), Medics Yerzy Penalosa (Phillips) and Danika Lund (Tunney), and computer expert Benj Stomejar (Cruz). Into this mix comes new co-pilot Nick Vanzant (Spader), a recovering "Hazen" addict. There is tension between Nick and Kaela, as she has a dislike of Nick, as her abusive ex-lover, Karl Larson, was also a Hazen addict.

The ship receives a distress call from an abandoned mining station, and the message is from Kaela's ex, Larson. The crew makes an emergency jump that, and the ship too close to the gravitational pull of a blue giant star. When the crew retrieves a pod from the mine, it contains not Karl, but his son, Troy Larson (Facinelli). Scanning the ship, they find an alien artifact that Troy claims to have found buried in the mine.

Your Mileage May Vary as to whether or not the film squanders its promising beginning to become a slasher film in space. (And whether or not that's a bad thing.) Director Walter Hill had his name removed from the finished film (using the post-Alan Smithee name "Thomas Lee" instead.)

There's also apparently a British Sitcom with the same name. ---

This film contains the following tropes:
""Your strategy was both subtle and forceful, Benjamin, You can play with me anytime.""
 * A Fate Worse Than Death: The
 * A.I. Is a Crapshoot:
 * Alan Smithee: the name was retired by the time this film was made, so director Walter Hill used "Thomas Lee" instead.
 * Aliens Are Bastards:
 * Artificial Gravity: the Nightingale uses rotation to create its own gravity.
 * Artificial Intelligence
 * Babies Ever After: for . Averted for , who actually wanted to have children together.
 * Blind Jump: Averted; however, even with precise calculations the Nightingale ends up too close to a blue giant star,
 * Boarding Party: Of one -- in the deleted scenes,
 * Came Back Wrong:
 * Captain's Log: Captain Marley keeps a log that's actually his doctoral thesis.
 * Casual Interstellar Travel: Averted oh so hard -- Captain Marley states that "if they want to reach the mine within our lifetimes", they need to jump within a certain amount of time.
 * Chekhov's Gun: the joke Benj tells about the "creature" formed from the two astronauts sharing the same dimensional stablization units. Not two minutes later,
 * Also,
 * Culture Police: The captain, while narrating his dissertation, mentions that violent animation like Tom and Jerry has been outlawed.
 * Executive Meddling: MGM recut AND reshot the film without director Walter Hill's input, and he removed his name from the finished film in response.
 * Explosive Decompression: Averted.
 * Faster-Than-Light Travel: called "dimensional jump" or "d-jump" in this story.
 * Gone Horribly Wrong: what happens when
 * Also, what happens to, in the deleted scenes.
 * Hey, It's That Guy!/Hey, It's That Voice!: As noted in the first paragraph.
 * Hyperspace Is a Scary Place: Anyone who tries to go through a jump unshielded gets warped into a horrible abomination, still alive and probably begging for death. Even two people riding in a shielded pod is dangerous. Hell, normal, single-person travel in a shielded pod is said to be disorienting (one guy complains of irregular bowel movements), and they have to travel naked.
 * Robosexual: Benj is just a little too close to Sweetie, the ship's computer:


 * Subspace Ansible: Averted. It takes five days for the Nightgale to receive the distress call from the mining colony.
 * Played straight in that its from over 320 light years away.
 * Thrown Out the Airlock: happens twice,
 * Trailers Always Lie: the trailer for the film makes it seem like it's a horror comedy.