by Thumper » Tue Nov 06, 2018 12:54 pm
EDIT: I guess I should say there are spoilers below. Yes, this is history everything has already happened and the movie is almost out of theatres. But I know some may wait to see it on Netflix and such. I do talk specifically about many scenes including the final scene of the movie.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
I saw it last night, the culmination of "Space Week:" An all day visit to the Kennedy Space Center, followed by going to see Scott Kelly speak again, and finally this.
Let's see, regarding Gemini. Like I said, I could have used more detail because I'm a junkie. But this wasn't a movie based on the entire space program. I think they needed as much of the Gemini 8 mission as they did for a couple of reasons. First, they quickly tried to show the uncomfortableness of switching crews around. Neil and Ed had been training together as backups and were due to be on a Gemini mission together. Then they moved Dave Scott with him which made Neil uneasy, then Ed gets tapped for the first Apollo launch which will prep him to be the second man on the Moon. The crew shifts, usually orchestrated by Deke Slayton did cause some issues.
Second, the malfunction of their capsule came within seconds of killing them. It led to many changes in equipment, mission rules, and protocol. Many people believe the Apollo 1 fire actually saved the program. It might have died with Neil and Dave. They were out of contact with mission control at the time, as they were still building the worldwide communications network. Even as Neil was able to work the problem and saved their lives, he poured over the data wondering what else he could have done; did he do something wrong? He felt the mission was a failure because it did not meet all it's objectives. And he was focused to learn from it. That was the point they tried to hammer in the movie. He was singularly focused on objectives and goals. And he did everything possible to not let family, emotions, or anything else distract him. He was accused of distracted flying back at Edwards, he was never going to let that happen again.
As for being an A-hole, other than the rude comment to Ed in his back yard after Elliot's funeral (and who knows if that conversation actually took place), I don't think they showed him as an A-hole. I think they tried to show his focus and his detachment from emotions that sometimes came across as arrogance.
The Moon landing sequence was a little overly dramatic and didn't have to be. They seemed to show the LM constantly pitching and rolling, almost out of control. That didn't happen. Neil did take manual control to overfly the intended landing field that would have been too dangerous, and they did have the computer errors that had not occurred in sims. The landing radar lost its fix on the surface on several occasions. And he landed with about 12 seconds of fuel left. Isn't that enough? Also, it appeared that about 5 people were talking to him from the Mission Control as they tried to land. Only one person, the Cap Com on duty, also an astronaut, speaks to the crew while they are in space.
It was hard as they introduced characters, because I knew they were going to be dead before the movie was over. But the most emotional scene to me was the final scene. I don't know how they pulled it off but it was brilliant. Neil is still in quarantine and his wife is shown into a room to visit him behind glass. Not a word is spoken. He is arguably going to become the most famous person in the history of the Earth. Yet they are still just a man and a woman in a very strained marriage who still love each other. The space program chewed up lives, and marriages, and families. And it leaves even this huge fan wondering if it was worth it. That's saying something.
Look for the Helpers. You will always find people who are helping.
-Mr. Rogers' Mom