Dennis Quaid is smokin' in this movie. ROWR.
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Monday, 28 July 2008 17:43 (seventeen years ago)
RIDLEY, MAKE ANOTHER NOTE, WOULD YOU? MY NAME... JOSE JIMENEZ I JUST THANK GOD I LIVE IN A COUNTRY WHERE THE BEST IN A MAN CAN BE BROUGHT OUT. I MEAN THAT. WHO'S THE BEST PILOT YOU EVER SAW? FUCKIN'-A, BUBBA ... YOU WERE PROBABLY JUST GETTING WARMED UP, JOHN. NEXT TIME, I'D DOUBT I'D WIN [Σ]
― gabbneb, Monday, 28 July 2008 18:50 (seventeen years ago)
I have never seen this movie
― Shakey Mo Collier, Monday, 28 July 2008 18:58 (seventeen years ago)
which is kinda odd considering how into the space program I am
no Shearer & Goldblum, no cred
― Dr Morbius, Monday, 28 July 2008 19:13 (seventeen years ago)
Need a parallel poll for the wives.
― Pancakes Hackman, Monday, 28 July 2008 19:16 (seventeen years ago)
so is this actually any good?
― Shakey Mo Collier, Monday, 28 July 2008 19:17 (seventeen years ago)
more reverential than the book, but worth seeing
― Dr Morbius, Monday, 28 July 2008 19:17 (seventeen years ago)
Shakey Mo, you should go ahead and rent it this weekend. It's all kinds of good.
Fred Ward as Gus pwnz.
― Johnny Fever, Monday, 28 July 2008 19:18 (seventeen years ago)
no Hershey, Cartwright, Reed, Deschanel, no credibility no Stanley, Helm, Dano, no credibility no Moffat, Beach, no credibility
― gabbneb, Monday, 28 July 2008 19:18 (seventeen years ago)
I didn't like Moffat too much, although I guess you can't underplay LBJ.
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Monday, 28 July 2008 19:20 (seventeen years ago)
more reverential than the book
eh, i dunno about that
i don't unreservedly like it - some of the politics of the original material/figures even moreso than the movie are not mine - but it's basically my favorite movie of all time
― gabbneb, Monday, 28 July 2008 19:21 (seventeen years ago)
I'm thinking John Glenn never asked the wife if he was a Harry Hairshirt either
― Dr Morbius, Monday, 28 July 2008 19:23 (seventeen years ago)
Hershey should be in the 2nd list, actually
― gabbneb, Monday, 28 July 2008 19:24 (seventeen years ago)
Only arestronuts and test pilus have ritw stuff, nrz!!!!!!!
― Oilyrags, Monday, 28 July 2008 19:28 (seventeen years ago)
But yeah, there are a ton of great performances here that don't really fit in the poll.
like these?
"Southwestern Waltz" Performed by Bob Wills "Faraway Places" Performed by Margaret Whiting "I Got A Rocket In My Pocket" Performed by Jimmy Lloyd "Wheels Of Fortune" Performed by Kay Starr "Tennessee Waltz" Performed by Patti Page "Yablochka" Performed by the Andreyev Balalaika Ensemble "The Wayward Wind" Performed by Gogi Grant "Good Golly Miss Molly" Performed by Little Richard "Hallelujah Chorus" Performed by the London Philharmonic Orchestra "La Bamba" Performed by Chubby Checker "I Only Have Eyes For You" Performed by The Flamingos "Taiko Drums" Performed by Seiichi Tanaka "Anchors Aweigh" Performed by Banda Taurina "The Marines' Hymn" ['Performed' by Ed Harris] "The U.S. Air Force" ['Performed' by Dennis Quaid] "White Dawn" Performed by The London Symphony Orchestra "Mars, Jupiter & Neptune" Performed by The Boston Symphony Orchestra "Wake Up Little Susie" Performed by The Everly Brothers "Claire de Lune" (uncredited) "Breaking The Sound Barrier" Performed by The London Symphony Orchestra "Almost Ready" Performed by The London Symphony Orchestra "The Training" Performed by The London Symphony Orchestra "Glenn's Flight" Performed by The London Symphony Orchestra "Yeager's Flight" Performed by The London Symphony Orchestra
― gabbneb, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 06:02 (seventeen years ago)
Ebert's original review
of Yeager, this is probably true. of the others, not so much.
while the movie deals in interesting themes that weren't really present in the book, it's no journalistic enterprise. the whole Schirra storyline, which gets a not unimportant chapter in the book, was excised presumably because it wasn't sexy or funny enough - the best he gets other than the introduction is a cheap gag in the background.
― gabbneb, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 06:18 (seventeen years ago)
It's *very* good, and even if it wasn't, you'd still have to see it to remain a citizen of the US. They passed that law in the late 80's, iirc.
― kenan, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 07:54 (seventeen years ago)
The Bill Conti score is his fonest moment. Yeah, no shit -- better than Rocky.
― kenan, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 07:58 (seventeen years ago)
fInest
Totally otm. I refuse to vote in this poll on the grounds that it has no women in it, and the wives are as important as the badasses and daredevils. The movie spends a lot of time on that point, actually. How could you leave out the women, fer chrissakes? I'm not trying to be all cap'n save-an-astronaut-wife, but come on... Barbara Hershey didn't even cross your mind?
― kenan, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 08:05 (seventeen years ago)
And I will totally defend Moffat's LBJ against anyone who think's it's way over the top. It's maybe a *little* over the top. And if LBJ can't be comic relief, who can?
― kenan, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 08:07 (seventeen years ago)
(I love this movie, in case you can't tell.)
― kenan, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 08:12 (seventeen years ago)
no, really?
I did think about opening it up a bit, but there's no chixxors or Feddzors on the DVD box, so...
― Oilyrags, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 12:43 (seventeen years ago)
Also: TRS STRK poll is v good idea.
― Oilyrags, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 12:44 (seventeen years ago)
this thread could go on for 2 weeks without even mentioning Philip Kaufman's name, cuz he's not a Spike/Quentin-style self-promoter?
His Invasion of the Body Snatchers '78 is better than this, though.
― Dr Morbius, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 13:31 (seventeen years ago)
although I recently watched The Unbearable Lightness of Being again, and you'd have no idea why anyone thought it should be 3 hrs long if you haven't read the book.
Strangely haven't seen any of his others besides those 3:
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0442241/
― Dr Morbius, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 13:33 (seventeen years ago)
I (barely) remember Henry and June as being kind of yawnsome. Rising Sun sure looked like crap, but I never saw that either.
― Oilyrags, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 13:38 (seventeen years ago)
you've never seen Quills?
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 13:38 (seventeen years ago)
Kaufman was on a roll for a while: Anthony Minghella with an impish gleam.
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 13:39 (seventeen years ago)
xp: no, I saw the French movie about Marquis de Sade (D Auteuil) that came out around then instead.
― Dr Morbius, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 13:44 (seventeen years ago)
we apologize for not being as with-it as you. who do you propose to poll him against? caleb d? brooks? bergman? beatty?
quite obviously kaufman is not as bandied-about because he has far less discernable style, his movies by and large have little to do with youth culture let alone the present, and because he's an old man
― gabbneb, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 14:51 (seventeen years ago)
with-it, klassik
― Dr Morbius, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 15:44 (seventeen years ago)
i thot i shd use old-man terms
― gabbneb, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 15:52 (seventeen years ago)
Is the William Goldman bit about Kaufman and the screenplay online anywhere? Google is unhelpful.
― Pancakes Hackman, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 15:57 (seventeen years ago)
Can't believe no one has mentioned Scott Glenn yet. Dude is James Coburn with even more attitude.
I voted Scott Glenn.
― If Assholes Could Fly This Place Would Be An Airport, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 16:18 (seventeen years ago)
So did I.
― Millsner, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 16:23 (seventeen years ago)
gobb, you shd use old-man suppositories
― Dr Morbius, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 16:27 (seventeen years ago)
witty!
Dave Kehr, who didn't really get the movie (shocker), said the performances "range from the merely excellent (Scott Glenn) to the sublime (Ed Harris)"
― gabbneb, Tuesday, 29 July 2008 16:31 (seventeen years ago)
Automatic thread bump. This poll is closing tomorrow.
― ILX System, Wednesday, 30 July 2008 23:01 (seventeen years ago)
I voted Fred Ward cuz I love Fred Ward.
― Alex in SF, Wednesday, 30 July 2008 23:07 (seventeen years ago)
fuckin a, bubba.
― kenan, Wednesday, 30 July 2008 23:29 (seventeen years ago)
Automatic thread bump. This poll's results are now in.
― ILX System, Thursday, 31 July 2008 23:01 (seventeen years ago)
Yay Fred Ward!
― Alex in SF, Thursday, 31 July 2008 23:04 (seventeen years ago)
Those are five really good performances there that got votes.
the performances "range from the merely excellent (Scott Glenn) to the sublime (Ed Harris)"
this is very true
― omar little, Thursday, 31 July 2008 23:19 (seventeen years ago)
i saw this twice in the theater when i was 7, this is a really great, super entertaining movie. kind of hard to believe it's almost as long as godfather II.
― omar little, Thursday, 31 July 2008 23:20 (seventeen years ago)
"Ironic patriotism" or "ironic reverence" is a good description (except for the Yeager bits). I can't think of another big budget American film from the time that didn't take itself too seriously and was crazy-entertaining.
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Sunday, 28 December 2008 22:33 (seventeen years ago)
i still find that last flight of yeager pretty terrifying
― shook pwns (omar little), Friday, 9 January 2009 16:48 (seventeen years ago)
That wasn't a parachute dragging behind him at the end; it was his poop.
― •--• --- --- •--• (Pleasant Plains), Friday, 9 January 2009 17:03 (seventeen years ago)
man what a great fuckin movie. i think this might be my favorite cast ever - you put any 2 of those five main guys in a movie and i'll watch it, but all of em? yowie zowie!!! even the guy who plays yeager's mechanic is awesome. the women are great too - veronica cartwright, barbara hershey, mary jo deschanel, and pamela reed most of all - kim stanley's sorta wasted, but so is lance henriksen. im sure if they knew what they had on their hands in ol' lance they would've cooked up more for him to do~
― maghrib is back (Hungry4Ass), Thursday, 19 January 2012 21:35 (fourteen years ago)
terms of fuckin endearment won best pic, that movie had only one astronaut
― omar little, Thursday, 19 January 2012 21:43 (fourteen years ago)
re: the poll its gotta be ed harris. fred ward (who is one of my favorite dudes in the world) has his share of great scenes, especially panicking in the capsule and the aftermath with his wife, but harris has pretty much all the best bits - the tender scenes with his wife, the phone scene, the press conference, "those... darn russians!"
something i never realized: that's hall of fame left tackle anthony munoz playing gonzalez!
― maghrib is back (Hungry4Ass), Thursday, 19 January 2012 21:58 (fourteen years ago)
last time i saw this movie i noticed how ripped scott glenn was
― omar little, Thursday, 19 January 2012 22:01 (fourteen years ago)
haha same. i guess he's always been pretty sinewy. also was realizing how joker-like dennis quaid's smile is
― maghrib is back (Hungry4Ass), Thursday, 19 January 2012 22:05 (fourteen years ago)
i kinda like the vv subtle and maybe unintended implication about grissom kinda being a star-crossed (lol) astronaut, i mean of course that event did occur but to me it kind of foreshadows a bit.
― omar little, Thursday, 19 January 2012 22:08 (fourteen years ago)
Whatever happened to Oilyrags, anyway?
― Put another Juggle in, in the Juggalodeon (kingfish), Thursday, 19 January 2012 22:09 (fourteen years ago)
final post:
50 Great Neil Young Covers
― omar little, Thursday, 19 January 2012 22:10 (fourteen years ago)
This was great. Yeah maybe reverential or whatever but had a great sense of humor, like those repeated shots of Jeff Goldblum's super serious and always late g-man running to that office. And the scene where the dude has to pee and they keep cutting to, like, people drinking water, pouring tea, talking about how much coffee they drank, etc.
I mainly saw this cos i got into Jordan Belson a few years ago and heard he did some visual effects stuff for this. It was pretty impressive!
― Emperor Cos Dashit (Adam Bruneau), Sunday, 9 September 2012 19:48 (thirteen years ago)
This sucks so far when is it going to not suck
― Daithi Bowsie (darraghmac), Saturday, 23 April 2016 20:15 (ten years ago)
The Shite Stuff
― I never wanted to be your weekend lover (snoball), Saturday, 23 April 2016 20:22 (ten years ago)
Ok president office scene goldblum shearer it got great
― Daithi Bowsie (darraghmac), Saturday, 23 April 2016 20:29 (ten years ago)
man what a great fuckin movie. i think this might be my favorite cast ever - you put any 2 of those five main guys in a movie and i'll watch it, but all of em? yowie zowie!!! even the guy who plays yeager's mechanic is awesome.
yeager's mechanic is played by Levon Helm! yeah great role, perfect choice of a narrator for the film too.
― nomar, Saturday, 23 April 2016 20:32 (ten years ago)
The longer ed Harris goes without killing his wife the worse the tension gets
― Daithi Bowsie (darraghmac), Saturday, 23 April 2016 21:11 (ten years ago)
Jeff Goldblum Is Watching You Puke (off the side of an aircraft carrier)
― I never wanted to be your weekend lover (snoball), Saturday, 23 April 2016 21:17 (ten years ago)
SPEC-I-MEN
― kevin smith what a bro (Myonga Vön Bontee), Saturday, 23 April 2016 21:31 (ten years ago)
Best movie
― nomar, Monday, 31 July 2017 18:07 (eight years ago)
it's very entertaining but the tone is a bit have-yr-cake-and-eat-it
― ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Monday, 31 July 2017 18:11 (eight years ago)
mmm a right stuff cake would be great. "Let's light this candle!"
― nomar, Monday, 31 July 2017 18:12 (eight years ago)
Weird that Yeager is the only guy to outlive the actor who played him.
― to fly across the city and find Aerosmith's car (C. Grisso/McCain), Monday, 31 July 2017 18:18 (eight years ago)
test pilot in character
― ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Monday, 31 July 2017 18:20 (eight years ago)
Yeager in 1983 looked like an elderly guy next to Shepard, who was only 38 or 39 when they filmed it.
― nomar, Monday, 31 July 2017 18:21 (eight years ago)
that film was made 24 years after the selection of the astronauts, and is now 34 years old.
― ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Monday, 31 July 2017 18:22 (eight years ago)
NYers, showing in 70mm at MOMI tonight
― ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Friday, 1 September 2017 16:05 (eight years ago)
Pamela Reed sorely missing from this poll.
Scott Glenn is still ripped... he's a 78-yo martial arts nut.
Dennis Quaid, if you're lurking, i would still eat you out anytime.
― ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 2 September 2017 09:21 (eight years ago)
most of these guys aged into real charismatic weathered-leather ruggedness huh
god i love this movie, i'd kill to see it in 70mm
― pizzarro gizzarda (bizarro gazzara), Saturday, 2 September 2017 10:01 (eight years ago)
It's loud! But it has to be.
― ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 2 September 2017 15:24 (eight years ago)
― ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius),
fight you
― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 2 September 2017 15:29 (eight years ago)
guys, guys, there's enough ass for everyone, just be chill
― pizzarro gizzarda (bizarro gazzara), Saturday, 2 September 2017 18:48 (eight years ago)
good news fellas, there probably *is* a Quaid brother lurking here
― nomar, Saturday, 2 September 2017 18:50 (eight years ago)
i hope it's doug
― pizzarro gizzarda (bizarro gazzara), Saturday, 2 September 2017 18:53 (eight years ago)
put em up, Herbert Pocket
― ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 2 September 2017 19:04 (eight years ago)
Until last week, I would not have been able to name the iconic but little-remembered character actor who appeared in this and the original Twin Peaks series.
― ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 14:35 (eight years ago)
yes, it was '50s western fixture Royal Dano, who played the Minister aka Death in TRS and Judge Sternwood in TP.
He was also the Disney park voice of Lincoln for many years, after playing him on TV.
― ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 6 September 2017 02:57 (eight years ago)
Saw this when it came out, again a few years later, and not since till today (70mm screening at the Lightbox). Really good. Trying to think of a comparable film in scale from the past 35 years--not Apollo 13, which I remember as a much lesser version, not even necessarily space-related--something big and historical and free-wheeling...Carlos comes to mind, not much else. A reminder of how great Veronica Cartwright and Pamela Reed were. (The film's treatment of the women and the Hispanic NASA guy--the one who recoils from Scott Glenn's Bill Dana impression--felt pretty current.) Watching Ed Harris play a Boy Scout was extra funny--every time I see him nowadays he's like a George Kennedy caricature, growling "goddammit" and "son of a bitch" way too often. Goldblum and Harry Shearer and Donald Moffat as LBJ were funny. I don't really remember how this was received in 1983. I mean the tone--I know it got great reviews. Was it talked about as a film Reagan would love, a straightforward celebration of old-fashioned heroism? It seems a lot subtler than that.
― clemenza, Wednesday, 3 January 2018 08:39 (eight years ago)
i was thinking about this movie today due to First Man's recent release, and it's really a perfect flick. a couple other favorite elements i don't think were commented on: John P. Ryan as this character representing the publicly avuncular/occasionally duplicitous face of NASA, and the insect swarming sounds accompanying every appearance by the press and photographers as they chase down quotes and shots of the astronauts and their wives.
― omar little, Wednesday, 17 October 2018 23:19 (seven years ago)
this was ... pretty bad? baffled at the near universal praise in this thread. Alternated between reverential, ponderously slow recreations of events and then a bunch of corny "comical" sequences involving enema bags, urinating in space suits, and how much of an uptight jerk John Glenn was. I made it to Shepherd's launch and then bailed.
― Οὖτις, Monday, 4 February 2019 21:57 (seven years ago)
maybe it's the source material (I wouldn't know, you couldn't pay me to read Tom Wolfe. Seeing this after reading Oriana Falacci just made it seem juvenile and clumsy.
― Οὖτις, Monday, 4 February 2019 21:58 (seven years ago)
but was Dennis Quaid smoking', ROWR?
― ( ͡☉ ͜ʖ ͡☉) (jim in vancouver), Monday, 4 February 2019 21:59 (seven years ago)
Harris and his wife, Fred Ward's squirming, LBJ in the limo -- it switches from irreverent to affection quite well. The Shepard scenes are the most ponderous, the ones in the cafe the silliest -- the men waiting for news about who died remind me of the vultures in Splash Mountain.
― Your sweetie-pie-coo-coo I love ya (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 4 February 2019 22:01 (seven years ago)
it has that tricky balance of respecting the main characters while poking a bit of fun at them, regarding them as outsized heroes and then bringing them down to size in a way that is empathetic and understanding, and not cutting them down. the absurdities really work so well, i think as a satire of sorts it's very well-crafted and smart and of course super entertaining.
― omar little, Monday, 4 February 2019 22:10 (seven years ago)
that score too, my god. a truly great film that i've seen in full maybe once, but in parts dozens of times
― simmy simmy ya, simmy yam simmy yay (voodoo chili), Monday, 4 February 2019 23:00 (seven years ago)
theme song by NKOTB not bad either
― ( ͡☉ ͜ʖ ͡☉) (jim in vancouver), Monday, 4 February 2019 23:05 (seven years ago)
per an Apollo book, Chasing the Moon, reviewed in last Sunday's NYTBR, Chuck Yeager told other candidates in an aerospace trainee program not to speak to the sole black candidate, Air Force pilot Edward Dwight. Dwight was essentially forced out of the program by Yeager.
movies is movies
― a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 25 June 2019 23:38 (six years ago)
Edwards AFB released the complete film of Yeager's crash in the NF-104. 56 years ago today. (also, it's terrifying!)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e32CPRXEZ7s
― Elvis Telecom, Tuesday, 10 December 2019 22:08 (six years ago)
Big ol' new interview with Kaufman on it
https://www.vulture.com/article/how-philip-kaufman-made-the-right-stuff-movie.html
― Ned Raggett, Monday, 20 November 2023 16:52 (two years ago)
one of my earliest moviegoing memories was seeing this in the theater with my dad, so it was nice to watch it with both my dad and my kid this past weekend.
when i was a kid, the performances that really jumped out at me were Glenn and Harris, but also Pamela Reed, who is as good as anyone else in the film. So much so that my memory had her in this a lot more than she was.
it was probably a necessity of runtime but they really didn't do much with Lance Henriksen at all, though like most of the other actors playing the 7, they really nailed it in casting someone who looked like his real-life counterpart.
there's a lot of Maverick in Top Gun in Quaid's performance.
my kid loved the Shearer/Goldblum scenes, which gives the government side of the story the respect it deserves. this movie is really, really funny though, i appreciate the occasional cheap humor it goes for.
it remains absolutely unbelievable to me this didn't make a mint at the box office, but what Kaufman says about the promotion is probably right. the posters were terrible, it really needed something colorful and thrilling and Yeager-inclusive, not the bland one-sheet they released, it looked like it was a promotional flyer seeking new astronauts to join NASA.
― omar little, Tuesday, 12 November 2024 19:38 (one year ago)