APOLLO 13 is out of this WORLD! (sorry for the pun.)

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  • @jhorton1600
    @jhorton16003 ай бұрын

    The Admiral shaking hands with Tom Hanks on the ship at the end was THE ACTUAL Jim Lovell.

  • @ShuffleUpandDeal32

    @ShuffleUpandDeal32

    3 ай бұрын

    And Jim's wife also appears

  • @EvelyntMild

    @EvelyntMild

    3 ай бұрын

    He's a Captain. Ron Howard wanted to make him an Admiral, but Lovell had retired a Captain and didnt want to play any higher rank than what he'd earned. And that was his own uniform.

  • @RamonPalomino85

    @RamonPalomino85

    2 ай бұрын

    I'm pretty sure Jim Lovell had another cameo as a news anchor with then live TV Walter Cronkite

  • @k1productions87

    @k1productions87

    24 күн бұрын

    @@RamonPalomino85 That was Wally Schirra, one of the Mercury Seven.

  • @MravacKid
    @MravacKid3 ай бұрын

    The best thing about this movie is that everyone was like "no way they'd be that calm if all of that was happening to them" and then you listen to the original recordings of the actual missions and the real guys are way calmer :)

  • @thewallet

    @thewallet

    3 ай бұрын

    And that's why they're astronauts in the first place.

  • @divemonkeys

    @divemonkeys

    3 ай бұрын

    Most people don't realize that those astronauts were not 'ordinary' men. All were chosen because of their ability to stay calm in incredibly stressful situations and extremely smart. A lot were test pilots before NASA and had gone to school for engineering. Some of the systems on the rockets, and modules might have been designed by the astronauts flying them.

  • @DaveF.

    @DaveF.

    3 ай бұрын

    @@divemonkeys Yup - Buzz Aldrin wrote the book on orbital rendezvous. Literally - it was his PhD thesis.

  • @radwolf76

    @radwolf76

    3 ай бұрын

    One of the few departures the movie makes from the actual history is the fight they have, which was added for dramatic purposes.

  • @TheGoIsWin21

    @TheGoIsWin21

    3 ай бұрын

    People who do those kind of highly intense and dangerous jobs almost all know that the worst thing to do in an emergency is to lose your head. Staying calm and focusing on problem solving is the best possible thing to do. Astronauts have trained and trained and trained this, and as most of them (back then) were former test pilots of experimental aircraft, they're probably all pretty experienced with having to do so. Absolutely fascinating stuff.

  • @laudanum669
    @laudanum6693 ай бұрын

    The fact that Ken Mattingly was grounded from Apollo 13 was a good thing. Without him on the ground and going thru the checklists and finding ways to help get the wounded space craft back to earth the mission may have turned out negative.

  • @kevinlewallen4778

    @kevinlewallen4778

    2 ай бұрын

    This film follows the history pretty well, but there are some parts that are pure fiction. No one doubted Jack's ability to fly the mission. And Ken played a part in the return, but not the essential part the movie suggests. Sure, it's a great story that the disappointed, grounded astronaut regains his mojo to get his friends home, but it just didn't happen that way.

  • @dnasty312

    @dnasty312

    2 ай бұрын

    Also Jack Swigert wrote the emergency procedures for the _Odyssey,_ so who better to fly in such a situation

  • @jamiemacdonald436
    @jamiemacdonald4363 ай бұрын

    If you didn't already look up the reason for Fred's sickness, it was a UTI that developed into a kidney infection.

  • @dnasty312

    @dnasty312

    2 ай бұрын

    Jim said they were trying to conserve water but probably a little too much

  • @rcrawford42
    @rcrawford423 ай бұрын

    "Baby Tom Hanks"? Ashleigh needs to watch an episode of "Bosom Buddies".

  • @curtismartin2866

    @curtismartin2866

    3 ай бұрын

    Here's a movie I haven't seen in years - Nothing in Common - starring Tom Hanks and Jackie Gleason. I believe it marked the start of Hanks' pivot from Bachelor Party Tom Hanks to Dramatic Actor Tim Hanks. I don't believe I have seen a reaction to this anywhere.

  • @markplott4820

    @markplott4820

    3 ай бұрын

    Tootsie , but she already saw that.

  • @Savethetomboys

    @Savethetomboys

    3 ай бұрын

    Or the movie Mazes and Monsters and the episodes of family ties he's in.

  • @thegeekyouseek8229

    @thegeekyouseek8229

    3 ай бұрын

    Don’t forget his episode of Family Ties as the alcoholic uncle visiting

  • @Scorpius65

    @Scorpius65

    3 ай бұрын

    Great show

  • @dr.burtgummerfan439
    @dr.burtgummerfan4393 ай бұрын

    My two favorite lines in the movie were from the Lovell ladies. "They can take it up with my husband. He'll be home on Friday" and "If they could get a washing machine to fly, my Jimmy could land it."

  • @J4ME5_

    @J4ME5_

    3 ай бұрын

    mine is "I believe this will be our finest hour."

  • @roccosfondo8748

    @roccosfondo8748

    3 ай бұрын

    Agreed, they are truly strong women.

  • @danmonges1539

    @danmonges1539

    3 ай бұрын

    When Ashleigh asked if she was going to cry I thought Grandma might do it. Asking the granddaughter if she's scared and telling her that great line makes me tear up every time I watch it!

  • @dr.burtgummerfan439

    @dr.burtgummerfan439

    3 ай бұрын

    @@J4ME5_ Definitely a good one!👍

  • @danholmesfilm

    @danholmesfilm

    3 ай бұрын

    Jommy Be Goob

  • @KS-xk2so
    @KS-xk2so3 ай бұрын

    I love the scene with the Grandma. They are all tiptoeing around trying to break this difficult news to the "frail old woman" and she just like "Look, my son's a fucking stud, he'll be home Tuesday."

  • @Caseytify

    @Caseytify

    3 ай бұрын

    Fun Fact: that was Ron Howard's mom.

  • @dylanholman3

    @dylanholman3

    3 ай бұрын

    @@Caseytifynow that you say that, I can see it

  • @singingwolf3929

    @singingwolf3929

    3 ай бұрын

    "If they could get a washing machine to fly, My Jimmy could land it." 😭😭😭

  • @SciTrekMan

    @SciTrekMan

    3 ай бұрын

    @@Caseytify And the priest at the Lovell house was his father, and was of the technicians at Mission Control (the balding one) was his brother, Clint.

  • @MusikCassette

    @MusikCassette

    2 ай бұрын

    frieday

  • @thomastimlin1724
    @thomastimlin17243 ай бұрын

    This was a REAL event in 1970. I was 14. The whole world watched, prayed for the astronauts, Russia even offered help....meanwhile, back in Vietnam...🙄 My favorite lines in this movie is from the flight controller [Ed Harris]: "Failure is not an option." He was nominated for best actor in this role. The line "Houston we have a problem" came from this mission, and everyone repeated it for years every time something went wrong at work or the doggy pooped on the carpet...At the end the Navy officer in white greeting Tom Hanks was the REAL Jim Lovell. I am very fond of this movie because it was the last movie dad and I saw together before he passed away.

  • @richelliott9320
    @richelliott93203 ай бұрын

    Gary Sinise is so damn good especially in the scene when he's told he's not going

  • @markplott4820

    @markplott4820

    3 ай бұрын

    Gary & Tom are Great, who will take over after they have Aged out ?

  • @pvanukoff

    @pvanukoff

    3 ай бұрын

    @@markplott4820 No worries. We'll have AI actors soon.

  • @brianmatthews1736

    @brianmatthews1736

    3 ай бұрын

    @@pvanukoff AI actors is a BAD thing, it takes jobs and money away from human actors, and may be used to replace actors period. THAT is one reason the actors, and the writers who support them were on strike for months for a little while back. We should say NO to AI actors in regular roles and ONLY say yes to them for green screen type that regular actors simply can't do, which is very rare thing. Support HUMAN actors!

  • @fayesouthall6604

    @fayesouthall6604

    3 ай бұрын

    He helped so much to save them.

  • @pvanukoff

    @pvanukoff

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@brianmatthews1736 Good, bad or otherwise, it's going to happen whether people want it to or not. Strikes won't slow it down (on the contrary, it makes AI look more appealing). Boycotts can slow it a little bit, but not enough to make a difference.

  • @phoenixheart79
    @phoenixheart793 ай бұрын

    The little boy asking "was it the door?" when being told about the accident breaks me every time I watch this film.

  • @peterradsliff527

    @peterradsliff527

    3 ай бұрын

    Absolutely kills me, every time

  • @jeden75

    @jeden75

    3 ай бұрын

    Same! I don't think I've watched this movie without crying at that sweet little boy's words.

  • @annanderson6992

    @annanderson6992

    3 ай бұрын

    In Huntsville, Alabama there is White Elementary, Chaffee Middle School, and Grissom High named for the astronauts who died in the capsule fire.

  • @doctaflo

    @doctaflo

    3 ай бұрын

    Furious she talked over it

  • @phoenixheart79

    @phoenixheart79

    3 ай бұрын

    @doctaflo I do wonder how much of all these films she misses because the nature of her content - the audience receiving her raw reaction - requires her to talk.

  • @randyshoquist7726
    @randyshoquist77263 ай бұрын

    "I don't think I've ever been this stressed out by a movie." (Ashley) The movie reviewer in my hometown newspaper (The Oregonian) wrote, "I have seen so many people die in movies this year, so many populations on the brink of destruction, but the first time I was actually scared by a movie was watching a story, which I knew for a fact, had a happy ending." Like you, I was on the edge of my seat for the last two thirds of Apollo 13, even though I lived through the actual event and knew the story well.

  • @caseyd9471

    @caseyd9471

    3 ай бұрын

    I've seen this movie countless times and I STILL get emotional at the end, every time. It's just that damn good.

  • @KabukiKid

    @KabukiKid

    3 ай бұрын

    I just posted the same thing... this movie gets you on the edge of your seat EVERY SINGLE TIME! Movies just don't do that to me... this one does it... always.

  • @sk70091

    @sk70091

    2 ай бұрын

    I saw this in theater, and it was the only time I've ever had to go to the bathroom in the middle of a movie because I got so nervous.

  • @oscarphile

    @oscarphile

    Ай бұрын

    It's a credit to a team of filmmakers at the top of their game that they were able to build and sustain the suspense so skillfully as to make us all forget how this story ends! Not only that; they were confident enough in the suspense that they created that they dared to sneak in several tiny episodes that foreshadow the catastrophic mechanical failure, often in a semi-ironic or even darkly humorous way; some examples: Jim's car breaking down in the middle of the intersection, Marilyn's nightmare, her wedding ring going down the drain while she's showering in the Florida motel room, Ken's last-minute grounding, Jack's disastrous first day in the simulator, Fred vomiting shortly after the launch, that little joke he plays on the crew during the broadcast, etc.

  • @El_Bueno
    @El_Bueno3 ай бұрын

    Ken wasn’t diagnosed with the measles. He just didn’t have them before. (Which would make him immune like chicken pox) He was exposed to someone who did have the measles. They weren’t going to take the chance.

  • @MightyDrakeC

    @MightyDrakeC

    2 ай бұрын

    Actually, measles and chicken pox aren't related. Chicken pox is a form of herpes.

  • @grahamers
    @grahamers3 ай бұрын

    Ron Howard (director) filmed the zero-G scenes aboard a KC-135 airplane, which can be flown in such a way as to create about 23 seconds of weightlessness, a method NASA has always used to train its astronauts for space flight. Howard obtained NASA's permission and assistance to obtain three hours and 54 minutes of filming time in 612 zero-g maneuvers. Filming in 25-second bursts of weightlessness was "charged and frenetic" but the cast and crew only suffered from bumps and bruises, and most injuries occurred when they bumped on non-padded items. The cast and crew of Apollo 13 describe the weightlessness experience as being in a "vomit comet" and "roller coaster ride", but the motion sickness afflicted only a few members.

  • @Sam_on_YouTube

    @Sam_on_YouTube

    3 ай бұрын

    OK Go used the same technique to film a music video. They managed to get it in 1 take, using slight slow motion to record their verses that were just a little too long for the weightless segments and finding spots they could pause and hold on stationary during the parts where they weren't weightless. It was very hard, they nearly stitched different segments together, but managed to get one full good take on their last run.

  • @captwrecked

    @captwrecked

    3 ай бұрын

    the aircraft they do this in are affectionately called "vomit comets" as the fly parabolic arcs with about 30 seconds of 0g at a time. Adam Savage/Mythbusters flew on one if you can find the ep on yt

  • @davepalliaser4798

    @davepalliaser4798

    3 ай бұрын

    Answering the important questions. Thank you, I wondered how they did that too.

  • @Sam_on_YouTube

    @Sam_on_YouTube

    3 ай бұрын

    @@captwrecked The best way to think of how it works, it throws everything inside high into the air and flies along the same path, basically flying around you as you get fling up and then come back down, before gently catching you and doing it again.

  • @MegaForrestgump

    @MegaForrestgump

    3 ай бұрын

    The vomit comet!

  • @LogicalNiko
    @LogicalNiko3 ай бұрын

    The zero-G scenes were filmed onboard the Vomit Comet. The production company leased out NASAs KC-135 and built copies of the sets inside the cargo hold. Each take they had about 7-10 mins of Zero-G. They originally were almost not going to be able to do it, but the real Jim Lovell stepped in and pushed to allow Ron Howard full access to the facilities.

  • @javieruranga9028

    @javieruranga9028

    3 ай бұрын

    It was only about 30-40 seconds of weightlessness. Take a good look and you’ll notice that not one single shot of zero g scenes is longer than 30 seconds.

  • @billroberts7881

    @billroberts7881

    3 ай бұрын

    Sorry. I posted my comment about the weightless in space scenes without looking at ALL of these comments, but you clearly beat me to it, so good on you!

  • @LogicalNiko

    @LogicalNiko

    3 ай бұрын

    @@javieruranga9028 yep my mistake, it is generally 25 seconds each dive.

  • @k1productions87

    @k1productions87

    3 ай бұрын

    I wish they would someday be able to add the Vomit Comet to the Space Camp curriculum :P

  • @ilionreactor1079

    @ilionreactor1079

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@k1productions87You can buy rides on one in Vegas and Orlando. It is not inexpensive.

  • @Jessica_Roth
    @Jessica_Roth2 ай бұрын

    Jim is still with us, having turned 96 at the end of March. Alas, 2023 was rough for him: Marilyn passed in September, Ken died on Halloween, and his Apollo 8 commander, Frank Borman (seen on the magazine cover with Jim and Bill Anders, and being introduced by Dick Cavett right before Ken turns off the TV) died in November. Fred is also still with us (turned 90 last November) as is Charlie Duke, who got over the measles. With Ken switched to Charlie and John Young's crew (the back-ups; John was there to back up Jim and Charlie was Fred's back up, just as Swigert was Ken's), he went to the moon on Apollo 16, as mentioned. That nearly didn't come off, either, as when they were doing a publicity tour of Hawai'i in December 1972 (partially because the lava beds were similar to the moon's surface, but also just for publicity), Charlie somehow caught pneumonia. Yes, it was December, but it was also Hawai'i. So NASA had to make a decision…switch to the backups again (which would have made Fred and Stuart Roosa and Edgar Mitchell the active team, but would have screwed over Ken, again) or swap Charlie for Roosa, or just push the mission back from March 1973 to April and wait for Charlie to get better. They went with the last option, which was a good idea, as during the delay they found a few things wrong with the ship, or else Ken might have had another calamity. And then, just before Apollo 16 took off, somebody spotted Charlie around the hotel pool and thought that he had broken quarantine. But that was actually Charlie's twin brother Bill, so it was all right. (In a soap opera, of course, Bill would be the Evil Twin, planning to knock Charlie out and take his place on the mission, but fortunately, that didn't happen. At least, as far as we know…) And so Ken flew Apollo 16 to the moon, and John Young (John is in the film, played by Ben Marley. He's in a lot of scenes, but with few lines) and Charlie Duke walked on the moon. Charlie, age 36 at the time, became the youngest person to walk on the moon, a record he still holds and will continue to hold, even if the upcoming Artemis 3 mission goes as planned. (Artemis 3 was originally scheduled for December 2025, but has been pushed back to September 2026. None of the possible astronauts for that mission will be as young.) One small correction to the film: it wasn't that Alan Shepard had an ear infection or anything that led them to move Jim, Fred and Ken up from Apollo 14 to 13. Alan, the first American in space in the Mercury program (early 1960s) had retired rather than continue with the Gemini program in the mid-1960s (when John Glenn became the first to orbit the Earth). Deke Slayton had talked Alan into coming back for the Apollo missions, but the higher-ups thought he needed more training to be familiar with the new procedures, and so Jim's team was moved up and Alan walked on the moon in Apollo 14. (He's the guy who brought a golf club and hit a ball, becoming the original logo for MTV, among other things.) Other surviving Apollo astronauts are Bill Anders (Jim's Apollo 8 mission-mate, now age 90,) Buzz Aldrin (now age 94), the commander of Apollo 15, David Scott who will turn 92 in June), and Harrison Schmitt, the geologist who was on Apollo 17, and thus became the only scientist to ever walk on the moon. (Schmitt, currently 88 years old, later served as a Senator from New Mexico.)

  • @oscarphile

    @oscarphile

    Ай бұрын

    Damn, Charlie Duke had some unlucky breaks concerning his health!

  • @ToABrighterFuture
    @ToABrighterFuture2 ай бұрын

    Saw this in a theater when it came out. Near the end, when Lovell radios back, "Hello, Houston, this is Odyssey. It's good to see you again," everyone in the theater, me included, jumped up for a standing ovation, and there was not a dry eye anywhere in the house. This was old-fashioned movie magic of the best kind.

  • @mikeking7710
    @mikeking77103 ай бұрын

    This was pretty accurate and true to life. The captain of the recovery ship USS Iwo Jima, was indeed the real Captain James A. Lovell. Howard wanted to make him an admiral in the movie, but he declined, and insisted on representing his actual rank and wore his own uniform. This film was also based on the book "Lost Moon", which Lovell had co-authored.

  • @tremorsfan

    @tremorsfan

    3 ай бұрын

    It was because he didn't think it was right to take a rank higher than he had ever achieved in real life.

  • @mikeking7710

    @mikeking7710

    3 ай бұрын

    @@tremorsfan Right, and he retired as a captain.

  • @shawnmiller4781

    @shawnmiller4781

    3 ай бұрын

    I would debate the accuracy part to some extent. Most of the tension was played up by the actors for the movie Even Jon Lovell stated that their radio calls after the tank exploded sounded “like they were reading from the phone book”

  • @BedsitBob

    @BedsitBob

    3 ай бұрын

    And the real Marylin Lovell was in the crowd, during the launch sequence.

  • @LeopoldoGonzales-og9wc
    @LeopoldoGonzales-og9wc3 ай бұрын

    Ashleigh, if you liked Apollo 13, then you really like The Right Stuff from 1983. A lot of future stars in that one.

  • @marybethgoeggel4658

    @marybethgoeggel4658

    3 ай бұрын

    Talk about BABY faces!!!

  • @gville612

    @gville612

    3 ай бұрын

    Including Ed Harris, who was in both films.

  • @connieleighton4375

    @connieleighton4375

    3 ай бұрын

    Yes please it is the best movie about nasa and the space program

  • @KBTibbs

    @KBTibbs

    3 ай бұрын

    THE HATCH JUST BLEW! IT WAS A GLITCH! A TECHNICAL MALFUNCTION!

  • @bill.godwin-austen

    @bill.godwin-austen

    3 ай бұрын

    Yes! An excellent movie. All about the earliest days of manned space flight, air speed records, and the "Project Mercury" program that put America's first men in space.

  • @dorothyzbornak9974
    @dorothyzbornak99743 ай бұрын

    Fun fact: At the end of the film, when they’re onboard the ship, Tom Hanks shakes hands with the ship’s commander in the white uniform. That was the real Jim Lovell!! Oh and Ashleigh, Ken Mattingly was played by Gary Sinise who also played Lieutenant Dan in Forrest Gump!!!

  • @shirleydurr411
    @shirleydurr4113 ай бұрын

    Don't forget to give some kudos to Ron Howard who directed this film. He won a Golden Globe and a Directors Guild of America Award for his efforts. BTW: I was in the crowd in Chicago that cheered these 3 amazing astronauts in a parade the city had in their honor. School was let out for the celebration. We weren't the only city to have a confetti throwing parade.

  • @waterbeauty85
    @waterbeauty853 ай бұрын

    40:39 Fred has a kidney infection. I had one after having a kidney stone removed. It got so bad that the toxins the bacteria were producing were causing my blood pressure to plummet, and I was going into shock. The doctor who saw me at the outpatient clinic told me "We're sending you to the ER and admitting you to hospital." I couldn't resist referencing "Airplane!" and asked her "Hospital? What is it?" She earnestly explained basically what I explained above about infection and toxins. Then I told her "No. You're supposed to say 'It's a big building with patients, but that's not important right now.'" She was too young to get the joke, but the paramedics got it.

  • @chrismaverick9828

    @chrismaverick9828

    2 ай бұрын

    Having spent several days with a 103+ fever and the associated hallucinations (brain creating really stupid youtube vids every time I closed my eyes) from a viral blood infection, I can definitely say that at its worst you're just freezing and sweating and wishing for some way to get some decent sleep. But you can keep a sense of humor.

  • @mmarzett

    @mmarzett

    Ай бұрын

    I wish I had been in there to answer that question. Because I would have absolutely used the "Airplane!" definition.

  • @hectorsmommy1717
    @hectorsmommy17173 ай бұрын

    They had a computer that filled a room. When this movie came out in the mid-90's, the reviewers were typing their reviews on laptop computers that were more powerful and had more memory than the roomful of computers that sent men to the moon. For those of us old enough to remember doing calculations on a slide rule, that fact really hit home.

  • @colormedubious4747

    @colormedubious4747

    3 ай бұрын

    My WATCH has more computing power than existed throughout NASA in 1969.

  • @gitchegumee

    @gitchegumee

    3 ай бұрын

    I still have my sliderule. Four function calculators came out when I was a senior in HS (cost a fortune) and none of our teachers would let us use one in class.

  • @henrytjernlund

    @henrytjernlund

    3 ай бұрын

    I still have my slide rule.

  • @hammathguy3995

    @hammathguy3995

    3 ай бұрын

    @@gitchegumee We seem to be about the same age. My math teacher (I had Mrs. Watkins all 4 years of high school.) wouldn't even let us use the slide rule. Pencil and paper only.

  • @hectorsmommy1717

    @hectorsmommy1717

    3 ай бұрын

    @@hammathguy3995 We used the slide rule in Physics but everything else was pencil and paper. Dad was an auditor so he had his own 10 key manual adding machine and did taxes on that. We thought we were fancy.

  • @BedsitBob
    @BedsitBob3 ай бұрын

    Jim Lovell *was* Neil Armstrong's backup for Apollo 11. The way the rotation worked was, you were backup crew, skipped two flights, then you were prime crew, hence why Jim Lovell and his crew were originally assigned to Apollo 14.

  • @bobbyclarkston8836
    @bobbyclarkston88363 ай бұрын

    Ken wasn’t diagnosed with the measles. The Flight Surgeon was concerned that because he had never had them before (and a person can only contract them once) that he was susceptible since another person he worked with had come down with them. It’s basic quarantining.

  • @smylyface
    @smylyface3 ай бұрын

    My entire family gathered at my Grandma's house and watched this unfold live on a little 19 inch television. We had sleeping bags but no one slept longer than an hour or two at a time. The movie is incredible at recreating the stress we all were feeling while waiting for them to splash down. The moment those parachutes opened up has forever been etched in my memory, not only because of the event but it was also my very first time seeing a color television set. That scene always makes me cry.

  • @peterradsliff527
    @peterradsliff5273 ай бұрын

    As a Baby Boomer, I was totally entranced by the Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo space programs, and later the Space Shuttle, growing up. I watched Apollo 11 land on the moon live. It was an incredible thing, the world over. The thing that drove me to tears in Apollo 13 was seeing the actual TV newscasters, Jules Bergman and Walter Cronkite, because they were our link to the space program on our TVs at home. So seeing them made the movie “real” and “personal” in a powerful way. Yes, the acting was amazing and no doubt someone in these comments will tell you the guy playing the Admiral on the aircraft carrier was the real Jim Lovell. And that Flight Director Gene Kranz’s wife made him a new vest for each mission. But Ashleigh, to try and tell you how expansive the Apollo space program was, at its peak, 400,000 people were to directly support the program plus it required the involvement of over 20,000 industrial firms and universities. Apollo ran from 1961 to 1972. And now, Artemis is going back to the moon sometime before the end of this decade, possibly as early as 2026 or 2027. One last thing, as the movie portrays, the collective world really did hold its breath for the return of the Apollo 13 astronauts. It was the biggest drama on earth unfolding in real time of the space of a week. I'm so glad you enjoyed Ron Howard’s movie.

  • @danmonges1539

    @danmonges1539

    3 ай бұрын

    I was fortunate to see the Apollo launch of the Apollo-Soyuz mission in 1975. Technically not an Apollo mission but used the Apollo equipment from the cancelled post Apollo 17 missions. Our last manned mission until the start of the space shuttle program.

  • @rabidsamfan

    @rabidsamfan

    3 ай бұрын

    There are some amazing kids books that look at all the Apollo team a few years ago.

  • @markquintero5994

    @markquintero5994

    3 ай бұрын

    I like how she said she wished she could see it live. Make me feel old I remember looking up in the moon in 1969 as a kid in thinking there's men on their!

  • @kinokind293

    @kinokind293

    3 ай бұрын

    I still miss Walter. One of the last of the absolutely reliable newsmen. If Walter said there were Martians invading, I'd have known it was true.

  • @Nimbus1701

    @Nimbus1701

    3 ай бұрын

    Great comment and brief summary as well. As mentioned, we are expected to go back to the moon sometime within the next 5 or 6 years. I was born in 1973 and missed the lunar landing, but did see both of the more recent space shuttle accidents, with the last one having an astronaut that went to my high school. It is a personal thing here where I live with multiple memorials our city has built. If I'm lucky, I may be able to see a landing on Mars before I die. I suspect that event may be the same type of significant event for the newer generation, just like the moon landing was for my parents and grandparents. Let's all hope that funding for those programs aren't cut before those missions. Bluntly speaking, there are plenty of other areas where the budget could be cut without interfering with the space program. With the potential there is to eventually mine celestial bodies, it could very easily pay for itself and likely provide vast amounts of resources that are beneficial to everyone, and it could realistically occur within the next 75 to 100 years. I'd love to see younger generations as excited and proud of these monumental accomplishments, just like mine, and older generations were about so many advancements in science, medicine, and the space program. It could be the spark that might just jumpstart younger people into having and believing in a national pride and identity again.

  • @Capohanf1
    @Capohanf13 ай бұрын

    In 1969, I watched the moon landing in Church! Mom was VERY religious and we were in church EVERY Sunday morning and night and the night of the moon landing we were too. As we entered I got the shock of my life BECAUSE in the front of the church along the Alter Rail were 8 portable, Black and White TVs. I had NEVER seen a TV in a church before! The Pastor announced that sometime during the service they were going to land and when that happened he would stop the service and we all would watch the landing on the TVs. I watched Neal Armstrong step onto the moon in church!

  • @nrgmanifest

    @nrgmanifest

    3 ай бұрын

    How does a Pastor believe in the Bible AND space? If the sun revolves around us like the Bible says then space and everything they've told us about space is fake...not to mention the firmament

  • @Capohanf1

    @Capohanf1

    3 ай бұрын

    @@nrgmanifest This Is one reason I am NOT a fan of "Organized" religion. That church, where we were located had a HIGH number of College educated scientists and doctors that stuttered EVERY time you brought up the question about the Earth being created in 6 days!

  • @ohnoZomBri

    @ohnoZomBri

    3 ай бұрын

    That’s so cool that the church found the event important enough to watch during service. Glad you have that memory!

  • @thisspaceforrent5737

    @thisspaceforrent5737

    2 ай бұрын

    @@nrgmanifest Nearly all of them believe in the Bible and space. I can't think of any passage where the Bible says the sun revolves around the Earth.

  • @nrgmanifest

    @nrgmanifest

    2 ай бұрын

    @@thisspaceforrent5737 So in I Chronicles AND Psalms it says the Earth is "immovable" or "fixed" while in Joshua it says "the sun stood still and the moon stopped". So just from that the Bible tells us the Earth doesn't move but the sun and moon does(except for that 1 day in Joshua). And since we see the sun and moon daily then it MUST mean they revolve around us, not vise versa.

  • @newmoon766
    @newmoon7663 ай бұрын

    This is one of the best movies ever made. Ron Howard asked for advice in telling the story, and was told, "Just tell it the way it happened." And he did.

  • @DamianBartolacci
    @DamianBartolacci3 ай бұрын

    "She's crying about it?" dude, its the freaking Beatles. lol

  • @weldonwin

    @weldonwin

    3 ай бұрын

    I remember when the British boyband Take That broke up and there was this footage of this German teenage girl crying "How dare they break up, I'LL KILL THEM!!!" so imagine that, but times a thousand when the Beetles broke up

  • @TJinMO

    @TJinMO

    3 ай бұрын

    I also cried off and on for a week. I was so mad at Yoko!!

  • @jsharp3165

    @jsharp3165

    3 ай бұрын

    And I repeat, "She's crying about it?" I mean, I didn't cry when Creed broke up. 😜

  • @louhillen8254

    @louhillen8254

    3 ай бұрын

    PREACH!! 😂

  • @diane39istockphoto

    @diane39istockphoto

    3 ай бұрын

    Yeah...I laughed at that. MILLIONS of people were crying at that.

  • @Kdrive23
    @Kdrive233 ай бұрын

    Lovell/Hanks said "this was my call" because he's a very good leader. The buck stops with him. Loved that scene.

  • @bob_._.

    @bob_._.

    3 ай бұрын

    Because he did make the call; he chose between the two options given.

  • @shawnmiller4781

    @shawnmiller4781

    3 ай бұрын

    And Ken knew that was the case as well

  • @TraciPearson-ok2tr

    @TraciPearson-ok2tr

    3 ай бұрын

    Jim Lovell said, in his book on Apollo 13, that the flight surgeon and flight director actually made the call, that the choice wasn't his at all.

  • @FJA---
    @FJA---3 ай бұрын

    Every time I hear about this movie I remember something an old roommate told me. He worked at as an assistant manager at a video store when this movie came out. A lady came in and asked when it was going to be released. They told her to look at the rather large cutout she was standing next to. Then she turned to them and asked, “Do you have Apollo 1 thru 12 in stock?”, they were all speechless and couldn’t even answer her.

  • @gritnix
    @gritnix3 ай бұрын

    The navy officer in white that Tom Hanks is shaking hands with there at the end is the real Jim Lovell.

  • @d.-_-.b
    @d.-_-.b3 ай бұрын

    Of all the facepalmy questions she could've asked, the one that got me was "What's a Typhoon?" 🤦‍♂

  • @logandarklighter

    @logandarklighter

    2 ай бұрын

    I'll give her a pass on that one. Didn't know for sure what it was myself until I was in my mid 20s. But Hurricane, Typhoon - it's the exact same thing. Just depends on what Ocean it is in as to what you call it. Atlantic = Hurricane, Pacific = Typhoon.

  • @d.-_-.b

    @d.-_-.b

    2 ай бұрын

    @@logandarklighter It's called a cyclone where I'm from, but I still knew what typhoon meant.

  • @TomboUK
    @TomboUK3 ай бұрын

    From Wikipedia "Judith Love Cohen (August 16, 1933 - July 25, 2016) was an American aerospace engineer. She was an electrical engineer on the Minuteman missile, the science ground station for the Hubble Space Telescope, the Tracking and Data Relay Satellite, and the Apollo Space Program. In particular, her work on the Abort-Guidance System is credited with helping save Apollo 13. She was the mother of computer scientist and engineer Neil Siegel and actor-musician Jack Black"

  • @SareyGamp

    @SareyGamp

    3 ай бұрын

    She was in ACTIVE LABOUR with Jack when she helped work out how to get them home! She’s so damn cool.

  • @nonMuggle

    @nonMuggle

    3 ай бұрын

    That is MONSTROUSLY impressive. Damn.

  • @DaviniaHill

    @DaviniaHill

    3 ай бұрын

    His name is not Jack.

  • @SareyGamp

    @SareyGamp

    3 ай бұрын

    @@DaviniaHillbut if you call him Thomas Black most people won’t know who you’re talking about. He’s famous by his stage/nick name

  • @motodork

    @motodork

    3 ай бұрын

    @@DaviniaHill You do know everybody in the world knows him as Jack and not Thomas, right?

  • @bobwallace1880
    @bobwallace18803 ай бұрын

    In an interview I read Ron Howard gave a lot of credit to Andy Griffith for helping him become a director. Also how to respect actors and the crew. Great post I love this movie. I remember watching it with my family, we cried and cheered when the parachutes opened. Thanks Ashley.

  • @lazyperfectionist1
    @lazyperfectionist13 ай бұрын

    3:26 "Did he name a _mountain_ after her? That's cute." He was the command module pilot of _Apollo 8._ As Swigert explained earlier, they were the first ones to reach the Moon. This put them in a position to get a better, more detailed view of its surface than anyone on Earth had ever come _close_ to, before. Thus, he spotted a mountain no one on Earth had ever seen before, and he named it after her.

  • @greenmonsterprod

    @greenmonsterprod

    3 ай бұрын

    And, to the best of my knowledge, the Astronomical Union refused to accept the names that the Apollo 8 crew gave the sites as official. Which was a real jerk move by the Astronomical Union, in the eyes of the astronauts and many others.

  • @stephaniefox896

    @stephaniefox896

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@greenmonsterprodYes that is true but everyone at NASA calls Mount Maryland

  • @BrutusRocky1
    @BrutusRocky13 ай бұрын

    I saw this film multiple times in theaters. Every single time when you hear Jim's voice saying "Houston, this is Odyssey " the audience would erupt with applause and you would hear big sighs of relief. Every single time. This movie holds up so well....

  • @joelyost1760
    @joelyost17603 ай бұрын

    The actual Jim Lovell plays the captain of the ship that retrieves the crew at the end. He and Tom Hanks shake hands.

  • @donsample1002

    @donsample1002

    3 ай бұрын

    And Marilyn Lovell was in the stands in front of Kathleen Quinlan during the launch sequence.

  • @elizabethbetts3834

    @elizabethbetts3834

    3 ай бұрын

    I came here hoping someone knew this!!! 🎉

  • @stankulp1008
    @stankulp10083 ай бұрын

    there was a documentary done about the Apollo 13 flight many years ago. One of the most telling scenes was a montage of people praying in mosques and temples and churches while the narrator mentioned people praying for the astronauts in all parts of the world. The breakdown of the situation was, arguably, impossible to recover from on the many levels of this incident.

  • @canadianicedragon2412
    @canadianicedragon24123 ай бұрын

    From what I heard... one of the astronauts said that aside from the "blame" and conflict in space this was a very accurate portrayal. Even knowing the story, and the outcome... it still hits me every time.

  • @stilettoheelslover
    @stilettoheelslover3 ай бұрын

    FYI: According to astronaut Chris Hadfield, it takes very roughly twice as long to recover from zero-G as the time you spent in zero-G.

  • @PhilBagels

    @PhilBagels

    3 ай бұрын

    Which makes me wonder about that "best sex of their lives" when they got back that Ashliegh mentions. If their muscles are all atrophied, they might have some difficulty. But if the wives do most of the work, I guess...

  • @tasnica2438

    @tasnica2438

    3 ай бұрын

    They'll have the best sex of their lives... in two weeks.

  • @RideAcrossTheRiver

    @RideAcrossTheRiver

    3 ай бұрын

    See the press conference with Shuttle astronaut Heidi Piper.

  • @ddiamondr1
    @ddiamondr13 ай бұрын

    Unfortunately, the Apollo capsule accident with the fire did happen. And I still remember that time. I was in high school when Apollo 13 went up. My friends and I were playing pool when the time came to wait for them to come around the dark side of the moon, and we were all waiting for the communication blackout to end. It was live on the radio and we stopped our pool game to listen, and we were so happy when their signal was recovered. And then, of course, we were all watching TV when they returned. There were worldwide events in those days where the world seemed to pause. It was a collective event across the globe. I’m in Canada.

  • @jules3048

    @jules3048

    2 ай бұрын

    That’s cool to know actually. I was feeling like when Merilyn was listening to the blackout that it was unreasonable cause it would have just been at command. But it’s cool to know that she did actually hear it along w others. Just for storyline reasons

  • @stanleywiggins5047
    @stanleywiggins50473 ай бұрын

    P.S. I was in primary school when Neil Armstrong set foot on the moon, the entire school was hearded into the principal's class room, some sitting on the floor, some sitting in chairs, some sitting on desks, & others standing on desks.. we watched it live here in Australia... And at the time of Apolo 13 were practically holding our breath & praying for them

  • @YodatheHobbit
    @YodatheHobbit3 ай бұрын

    How in the heck are people not educated about this still in school? I was back in 1999, 9th grade for me.

  • @jackhagens8964
    @jackhagens89643 ай бұрын

    Gene Kranz was the epitome of everything a leader should be. Unquestionably in charge, but didn’t try to take charge. Let the team be a team, let each expert in each area do their job, told them what he ideally needed and listened when they told him what they could provide, and every time a new problem arose, he rolled with it and remained remarkably calm. Also, what I love about how well made this movie is, is that I knew the story, I knew the outcome, and yet the film builds unbelievable tension….the few minutes waiting for re entry are some of the most tense minutes in any film. The only other example of this I can think of, where incredible tension is built on a true story film, is another Tom Hanks film, Captain Phillips

  • @juvandy

    @juvandy

    3 ай бұрын

    I do a lot of small team leadership for my work, and while I've never faced anything anywhere near to this in terms of challenges, when everybody starts getting hyped up about something I always go back to 'one at a time people, one at a time'.

  • @harrytsamas4961

    @harrytsamas4961

    3 ай бұрын

    Look up The Kranz Dictum - he was on board when the Apollo 1 fire occurred. His words inspired the engineers to excellence...

  • @chrismaverick9828

    @chrismaverick9828

    2 ай бұрын

    The numerous times I've seen Kranz on TV or in a documentary he never failed to impress me on how rock solid he was as a leader. You can see it in someone like him in an instant.

  • @oscarphile

    @oscarphile

    Ай бұрын

    And that detail about those lucky vests that his wife custom-made for him to wear for each mission he directed is absolutely true; the unboxing of the mission vest was a tradition at Mission Control throughout Gene's tenure, and it gave his characterization for this film just the right touch.

  • @richdurbin6146

    @richdurbin6146

    Ай бұрын

    Gene Kranz was definitely the real deal. For purposes of the film they focused on him, but there were two other flight directors. They worked in 8 hour shifts. I’m sure they all put in a lot of overtime that week.

  • @Gargess
    @Gargess3 ай бұрын

    Oh Ashley, measles are actually a big deal. Like not a death sentence but there would be chance your kids would die of it from fever or infection of the brain. That's why it's a big deal that it's making a comeback these days with people not wanting to vaccinate their kids.

  • @markplott4820

    @markplott4820

    3 ай бұрын

    Meales are Resurging, because ANTI-vaxers and wont hold Measles Partys . next is POLIO & RICKETS resurgence.

  • @John_Locke_108

    @John_Locke_108

    3 ай бұрын

    I couldn't believe it when the doctor asked if we wanted to give our kids immunizations. I was was like, why is that even a question? Of course I want my kids to be protected from stuff like measles.

  • @ivanboston8582

    @ivanboston8582

    3 ай бұрын

    In the 60's there was an average of 450 deaths per year from measles which was down from over 5000 earlier in the century and there were a large number of kids that were made deaf or intellectually impaired by it. The other horrible thing about it is it erases your bodies "immune memory" so you can now get stuff you have had in the past again and that was NASTY!

  • @alanmacification

    @alanmacification

    3 ай бұрын

    People need to visit an old cemetery where they have special children's sections.

  • @dlunas81

    @dlunas81

    3 ай бұрын

    Yup. 1 in 1000 die from it, but so many more suffer real bad from it.

  • @darrenrunning5415
    @darrenrunning54152 ай бұрын

    The gentleman questioning Tom Hanks about continuing funding for the Apollo space program is director/producer Roger Corman, who gave Ron Howard his first role as a director with the movie "Grand Theft Auto". Roger helped launch the careers of many award winning directors and he's still with us at age 98.

  • @dscotthoward7467

    @dscotthoward7467

    2 ай бұрын

    R.I.P. Roger Corman. The movies lost s bright light today!

  • @oscarphile

    @oscarphile

    Ай бұрын

    Pretty cool that Roger mentored so many of today's best directors and routinely made himself available to play bit parts in his proteges' films.

  • @countzero1136
    @countzero11362 ай бұрын

    I was 7 years old when the events of Apollo 13 took place. The most amazing thing about this movie is how incredibly tense it is even when you know what's going to happen in the end. A genuine masterpiece of the kind that they just don't make anymore

  • @davedaymont5454
    @davedaymont54543 ай бұрын

    I recommend watching the HBO miniseries From the Earth to the Moon with Tom Hanks as a producer and narrator. 12 hours total with each episode an hour (with each episode covering a different mission). Lots of big stars and historically pretty accurate

  • @edithroberts8959
    @edithroberts89593 ай бұрын

    My uncle worked at NASA during the Apollo Missions. He helped design the lunar modules. My dad was military and we were stationed on Okinawa when this Apollo mission happened.

  • @mikepalmer7620
    @mikepalmer76202 ай бұрын

    The last line of this movie, when he asks "when will we be going back?" It was this February 22nd, 2024. Not a crewed mission, but a soft lunar landing of a scientific probe vehicle to prepare the way for a return to crewed missions to the moon, near earth orbit, and eventually, Mars. That question went unanswered for 54 years. Now we know - it happened on a Thursday.

  • @susanstrand5599
    @susanstrand55993 ай бұрын

    My dad’s company worked on a lot of NASA clothing, blankets, containers that went into space. He would bring home samples to us kids. I remember being so impressed with the Astronaut blankets and material that was used to keep astronauts alive per se!! And who could forget Tang!!

  • @elizabethpalladino8301

    @elizabethpalladino8301

    2 ай бұрын

    I remember drinking Tang.

  • @andrewouellette4998
    @andrewouellette49983 ай бұрын

    Tom Hanks and Ron Howard created a TV series called "From the Earth to the Moon" which tells the story of the entire "Apollo" missions. It is well worth checking out. Another space themed movie that you may like is "October Sky" which is based on the true story of high school boys who fly rockets after seeing "Sputnik". The live in a coal mining town in the 1950s.

  • @rabidsamfan

    @rabidsamfan

    3 ай бұрын

    Seconded.

  • @Wired4Life2

    @Wired4Life2

    3 ай бұрын

    To be honest, I'm kinda disappointed at how there doesn't seem to be a single reaction to HBO's _From the Earth to the Moon_ online.

  • @wwoods66

    @wwoods66

    3 ай бұрын

    And in between, _The Right Stuff,_ about the Mercury program.

  • @ChefPatrickChase
    @ChefPatrickChase3 ай бұрын

    Ron Howard’s whole family was in this film. His dad Rance played the priest in the watch party scene at the end of the film , his mother Jean played the role of Jim Lovell’s mother Blanche and his brother Clint played the role of Sy Liebgott (balding coke bottle glasses guy in flight control)

  • @chrismaverick9828

    @chrismaverick9828

    2 ай бұрын

    Spot the Howard is my favorite movie game.

  • @seantlewis376
    @seantlewis3763 ай бұрын

    It took dozens of people on the ground to make this happen the way it did. Mattingly's dedication to going through the simulation procedures over and over again until he had the procedure right was key to the success of getting A13 back safely. The zero gravity chamber you ask about is a modified C130 used by NASA to train for 0G. It's called the Vomit Comet. It operates by going to maximum altitude then going into freefall for a while before pulling up. Ron Howard got special permission to film scenes in there. That's why the cutaway shots are all less than 20 seconds long. Also, a bit of trivia: by coincidence my father, a military photojournalist, happened to be on the ship picking them up out of the ocean. He was on the ship doing a fluff piece about sailors' life at sea when the ship got redirected for the pickup. If you've seen still photos of the splashdown and pick up, they were taken by my father.

  • @cbc8716
    @cbc87169 күн бұрын

    “From the Earth to the Moon”. You’ll love it.

  • @thestig9716
    @thestig97163 ай бұрын

    The older officer, Captain, is the real Jim Lovell shaking Tom Hanks hand.

  • @dimensionalvintage
    @dimensionalvintage3 ай бұрын

    "That's a cute little vest, you weirdo" had me on the FLOOR girl

  • @marcw6875

    @marcw6875

    3 ай бұрын

    It's his crisis vest. :)

  • @oougahersharr
    @oougahersharr2 ай бұрын

    When i saw this in theatres, I forgot that the real events happened 11 months before I was born. They let us out the back fire exit, instead of the main doors, and the entire theatre audience was crying. We walked out into sunshine and I was stunned and confused as to why no one outside the large audience was crying. It took several minutes to remember that we had been watching the movie re-enactment, not the actual events as they unfolded. I got a letter from Jim Lovell shortly after, and it was fascinating to hear his own words about the value of the space program. This was significant to me, as when I was in tenth grade, in school, we watched live as the Challenger imploded. Ad the space program was in a decline after that. Mister Lovell was trying to get the space program back on it's feet. He was one of the consultants for Apollo Thirteen. Apollo was the mission no one wanted to watch i the beginning but by the end, the whole world was watching and rooting for those brave men.

  • @shrapnel77
    @shrapnel772 ай бұрын

    "How do you get ready to go to space? It's six months." At this point in his career, Lovell was a highly experienced astronaut. He flew in Gemini 7 and 12 missions, and the most famous was his Apollo 8 mission in which they orbited the moon and saw the "Earth Rise' on their return trajectory. Lovell knew about flying in the Saturn 5 rocket because of Apollo 8. He was most definitely ready. By the way, he is still alive and kicking at 96 years. Amazing man.

  • @SYLTales
    @SYLTales3 ай бұрын

    Being 59, I was around for all of the Apollo missions. I was only 4 when Armstrong set foot on the Moon. Oddly enough, while I know I watched Armstrong live, I have no clear memory of it. My sister was born that same week, so it's all mixed-in with memories of her birth Like many early Gen-X scifi fans, I knew _everything_ about how the missions worked. I knew more about the spacecraft than most adults. When the Apollo 13 disaster occurred, I was generally glued to the TV. As a young child, I didn't understand what the phrase, "no possibility of help," really meant. It was only as I got older that I learned just how bad it really was. The film does a good job with the key events. It takes a few liberties with time. The film's portrayal of Jack Swigert as a rookie pilot who might make a mistake was pure Hollywood. In fact, Swigert had been training with the backup crew from Day One and was still training with them when he had to replace Mattingly. Backup crews don't stop training because a launch date is coming up. They train almost until the spacecraft is off the ground. No one had any doubts about Swigert's abilities. Many sources have specifically said that the finger-pointing conversation did not and would never occur between any two pilots in that circumstance. When you dive into it, the disaster was actually much worse than what Howard was able to portray in the screen time he had. He only hit the highlights. He didn't hit on "little things." For example, the crew had to learn to re-fly the LM. It was never designed to push the CM, so the center of mass, fuel-to-weight ratio ... it was all wrong. Controls worked almost opposite from the way they'd trained to use them. The umbilical from the CM to the LM wasn't designed to be reversed the way Mattingly wanted, to get more power to re-start the CM. The pilots had to work their way into cramped spaces to manually rewire it with a soldering iron. There were a million details like that which had to be glossed-over for time. It was a non-stop crap-fest from the moment the O2 tank blew until they jettisoned the LM. All the audio from the mission is available. I suggest that you listen to the audio to compare it to the film. It's very interesting to see how they kind of Hollywooded it up. Howard changed a now-famous quote. Here's what happened: The initial explosion happened and Swigert radioed down: "Houston, I think we've had a problem, here." That explosion caused the radio antenna to shudder, and Houston got a slightly garbled transmission. They asked Swigert to repeat what he said. Then the main explosion happened, causing Lovell to jump onto the comms. It was then that he radioed down: "Houston, we've had a problem." Ron Howard changed the line to, "Houston, we have a problem," because "we've had" seems like it happened in the past and was now over. It should be mentioned that Lovell didn't ask Swigert what he'd done in the moments following the initial explosion. He stuck his head up because he thought Haise had hit a pressure reset valve -- a prank Haise enjoyed. It made a bang and gave the other two pilots a moment of stress, but was otherwise harmless. When Lovell looked at Swigert and saw the perplexed look on his face, he knew it was no reset valve -- and by extension, they were probably in a lot of trouble. That's when the main explosion happened that took out an entire side panel of the Service Module. All those nits picked, the film does an extraordinary job at executing the disaster, the people involved, and the world's reaction, in a way that's consistently moving. It's a master class in directing. Ron Howard has said that the Apollo 13 launch is the most cinematic thing he's ever shot. Marilyn Lovell has said that Hanks got Jim's mannerisms and speech patterns so perfectly that when she saw his portrayal, she just said, "That's my Jimmy." This movie is an 11/10 on so many levels.

  • @timamherst-clark2699

    @timamherst-clark2699

    3 ай бұрын

    I was 5, and I do remember my father coming into my room, waking me up and saying, "You should see this. This is history in the making!"

  • @hephner78

    @hephner78

    3 ай бұрын

    i was born about 30 days after Armstrong landed(8-69) , but wasnt old enuf for 13 to make an impact on me (abt 2.5 or 3) , i mostly remember the Shuttle missions, but absolutely love this movie

  • @firedoc5

    @firedoc5

    3 ай бұрын

    I'm 58 and remember my father telling my brother and I to be quiet during the Apollo 11 moon landing telling us that history was being made.

  • @mrwomby5007

    @mrwomby5007

    3 ай бұрын

    I was 19 and because I was in the UK the moon landing occurred in the middle of the night. However as I didn’t have a TV it didn’t make a lot of difference!

  • @jimmiller8687

    @jimmiller8687

    3 ай бұрын

    I was 6. I remember it because it was the first night I was allowed to stay up past 9pm. My dad and i went out on the front porch and stared up at the moon after Neil touched down.

  • @nancyd510
    @nancyd5103 ай бұрын

    Fred Haise had a urinary tract infection that went all the way up to his kidneys, that’s why he was so sick during the flight. This is one of my favourite movies, great reaction I’m glad you enjoyed it!

  • @ReadingRambo152
    @ReadingRambo1524 күн бұрын

    You can listen to the actual radio recordings between Houston and Apollo 13, and it's incredible how calm everyone is. They actually had to seriously over act that scene in order to make it more dramatic because in actuality everyone was incredibly calm.

  • @RealTechZen
    @RealTechZen3 ай бұрын

    “Apollo 13” is, as you now know, very much based on a true story, with very little dramatization needed. One part of the story it doesn't tell is that much of the country, probably much of the world, functioned on minimal sleep from the moment we first heard about the problem until we saw the live pictures of the astronauts aboard the USS Iwo Jima. Everything about human spaceflight is rehearsed until it becomes a series of automatic reactions, but the one thing rehearsed more than anything else is staying perfectly calm. The worse the crisis, the greater the calm. That's why bureaucrats never solve anything; their first consideration is their emotional response. Ken Mattingly wasn't diagnosed with measles, his son was. But Ken had never had measles and so he had no immunity to measles. The fact that he didn't develope measles after being exposed to his contagious son is one of those frustrating medical mysteries. I was looking at Tyler's spreadsheet last week, thinking about the movies I've added to it and wondering what single common factor connects that diverse selection of 80 titles. When you said during your outro at the end of “Ratched” that this was coming up, I went back through the spreadsheet and included the titles I would have sent if somebody else hadn't already done it, and the linking quality became clear; believability. Whether reality based or purely fictional, the combination of story and performance is strong enough to cast aside any skepticism; the suspension of disbelief entirely succeeds. One of the movies where it fails because of one tiny flaw is “Conspiracy Theory”. It's an excellent movie, except that Patrick Stewart in the role of the morally bankrupt master villain is tragicomic, at best. The failure to suspend disbelief is why none of the Marvel or other Superhero shows have ever held my interest more than briefly. Unbelievable heroes hiding in plain sight due to equally unbelievable secret identities are suddenly confronted by unbelievable super villains committing a massive holocaust on the helpless ordinary population. After an unbelievably violent conflict wreaks rampant destruction on an enormous segment of the world of innocents, a victory is declared for the heroes, without any permanent resolution because the villains were driven away but not destroyed. Then the world of innocents is somehow magically restored (this is never explained, just like no one runs out of ammunition or uses a restroom) and the common people go on with their mundane lives because, why not? They know they're hopelessly screwed and don't get any say about it anyway, right? Re-ink the stamp, increment the list of main characters and press out the next copy. WOOHOO, it's a FRANCHISE! 🦸🦇🐿️😊

  • @ToEuropa
    @ToEuropa3 ай бұрын

    I was 6 years old when Apollo 11 landed on the moon, and a complete space nut. On that night, I was sick as a dog with the flu and couldn't get out of bed, and our color TV was broken. My parents folded out the sofa bed in the living room for me and set up our little black & white TV so we could all sit on the bed and watch it together. You should definitely check out the mini-series "From the Earth to the Moon", which was produced by Tom Hanks. It covers the entire Apollo program, with one episode covering each mission and each focusing on a different aspect of the mission and/or the training. Watching it, the series feels like an extension of this movie, with the same cinematic quality and a great cast (including a few folks who were in Apollo 13).

  • @carlanderson7618

    @carlanderson7618

    3 ай бұрын

    Also recommend the movie The Right Stuff (1983), could be considered a prequel to this movie.

  • @faxpaladin

    @faxpaladin

    3 ай бұрын

    And because the film covers what happened on the spacecraft and in Mission Control, the Apollo 13 episode of FtEttM focuses instead on news media and their relationships with NASA.

  • @mena94x3

    @mena94x3

    2 ай бұрын

    Yes. That's a great series.

  • @leeswhimsy
    @leeswhimsy3 ай бұрын

    Fred had a bladder/kidney infection...I know from experience that they can make you VERY ill. I've been to the ER with one before. And I've also tested negative for one, and two days later had one, so it could have been missed on the pre-flight medical exam. Especially, at that time, I don't know what kind of tests for it they had, or if they just went by symptoms, or how accurate those tests were....We saw in the film how the measles tests could be wrong. I watched this at school, just like his son, as the entire school did. Our teachers were so great, and answered all of our questions (I think I was 10 or so???) You could hear the entire school cheering when they touched down. I miss people being excited about the Space Program. In our house growing up, we watched every press conference, every launch, every news story about it. ALL of these people are HEROES, those in space and those on the ground. And YES, it was real.

  • @fayesouthall6604

    @fayesouthall6604

    3 ай бұрын

    Yep it’s horrible

  • @janleonard3101

    @janleonard3101

    3 ай бұрын

    Wouldn't the catheter increase the risk of UTI?

  • @leeswhimsy

    @leeswhimsy

    3 ай бұрын

    @@janleonard3101 I would think so, yes.

  • @Kiki-cs8xv

    @Kiki-cs8xv

    3 ай бұрын

    Oof. Speaking from experience, the pain from a kidney infection is enough to make you want to die.

  • @karlsmith2570
    @karlsmith25709 сағат бұрын

    38:24 Fun Fact for you, Ashleigh: Director Ron Howard had cast 3 members of his family in this movie, his mother played Jim Lovell's mother, His father played the priest, and Ron's brother, Clint Howard, played one of the mission control members

  • @scryedknight
    @scryedknight3 ай бұрын

    I love this movie so much. It literally became my guidebook for how to deal with stressful situations and helps me remember how to work through a problem.

  • @mikeking7710
    @mikeking77103 ай бұрын

    Ed Harris also portrayed Astronaut John Glenn in "The Right Stuff", another great film about the early days of space.

  • @rmhartman

    @rmhartman

    3 ай бұрын

    If you watch both, try to remember he's a different person!

  • @mikeking7710

    @mikeking7710

    3 ай бұрын

    @@rmhartman That's for sure, he is a great actor. Another great performance was in A Beautiful Mind.

  • @melissahughes4205

    @melissahughes4205

    3 ай бұрын

    He played Virgil in The Abyss, which Ashleigh reviewed last month. I kept waiting for her to recognize him, but I guess she was a little stressed =)

  • @mikeking7710

    @mikeking7710

    3 ай бұрын

    @@melissahughes4205 That's very true. I also loved him in The Truman Show. That's another she needs to react to.

  • @manufran02

    @manufran02

    3 ай бұрын

    Not only that but as of recent Ed Harris has been in Top Gun Maverick

  • @tomfowler381
    @tomfowler3813 ай бұрын

    Next: The Right Stuff, about the Mercury Program. Consider it a prequel.

  • @captwrecked

    @captwrecked

    3 ай бұрын

    Make sure its the 80-s version BEFORE the remake TV series. lol.

  • @stalefurset9444

    @stalefurset9444

    3 ай бұрын

    And The Martian is a sequel.

  • @thomashiggins9320

    @thomashiggins9320

    3 ай бұрын

    @@stalefurset9444 Amusingly, Andy Weir (author of The Martian) and the authors if The Expanse (Ty Franck and Daniel Abraham) all have an informal agreement that the events of The Martian are historical canon in the setting of The Expanse. The TV series acknowledged that fun little idea with a scene that takes place on Mars, outside the door into the "Mark Watney Memorial Botanical Gardens." 😀

  • @KahluaMike67

    @KahluaMike67

    3 ай бұрын

    The Right Stuff is excellent! I just rewatched it 2 weeks ago

  • @MravacKid

    @MravacKid

    3 ай бұрын

    "But on that glorious day in May 1963, Gordo Cooper went higher, farther, and faster than any other American - 22 complete orbits around the world; he was the last American ever to go into space alone. And for a brief moment, Gordo Cooper became the greatest pilot anyone had ever seen."

  • @scgreek1114
    @scgreek11143 ай бұрын

    "Why couldn't they just land anywhere on Earth?" Young people are so precious. 😁 Love your channel!

  • @Eidlones

    @Eidlones

    3 ай бұрын

    That's not a "young people" issue lol

  • @elizabethpalladino8301

    @elizabethpalladino8301

    2 ай бұрын

    Honestly, I almost shouted, "Crash!! Splat!!!" at the screen at that point.

  • @christopherdale1745
    @christopherdale17453 ай бұрын

    I was pleased to hear you recognize how fortuitous it was that Ken Mattingly was bumped off the mission. A lot of people seem to miss that.

  • @janewatkins9801
    @janewatkins98013 ай бұрын

    Measels is a really serious illness. My ex-husband's cousin contracted it aged 6 and was left blind, as well as brain damaged. She spent the rest of her life in an institution. So I always feel sorry for the surgeon, brcause he did the right thing. Apollo 13 deserves every accolade though because it's amazing. I've seen it around 18 times, yet every time I'm terrified they won't get back alive.

  • @fayesouthall6604

    @fayesouthall6604

    3 ай бұрын

    I got measles when I was 10. I still remember.

  • @Geographus666

    @Geographus666

    3 ай бұрын

    Strangely enough in real life it was German measles not ... regular measles. No idea why they changed it in the movie.

  • @TriarchVisgroup
    @TriarchVisgroup3 ай бұрын

    Hey Ashleigh, if you enjoyed this one you should totally check out "From The Earth To The Moon" It is the "Band of Brothers" to Apollo 13's "Saving Private Ryan." It's really great stuff, with introductions by Tom Hanks for each episode. A lot of the same people worked on both.

  • @rmhartman

    @rmhartman

    3 ай бұрын

    Wednesdays are her day for series, so ....

  • @kurtshintaku6866
    @kurtshintaku68662 ай бұрын

    "...is this movie gonna make me cry, because I am having a great make-up day & I'll be real pissed if it makes me cry." 1. Oh no. 2. I LMAO when Ashleigh said that. 🤣 3. I love Ashleigh so much.

  • @logandarklighter
    @logandarklighter2 ай бұрын

    I recently learned two interesting reasons for the very long wait for Apollo 13 to get on the radio to Houston at the end. 1) They were indeed shallow. They were actually returning from the Moon with the highest velocity ever achieved by any of the missions - because they had sped up the return to get them home faster before the batteries died. Therefore they needed to account for that delta-V and bleed off speed with the heat shield. And they needed the longer, shallower ride through the upper atmosphere to do it. In fact, there was an unclosed vent valve on the LEM that had been very slowly bleeding off gas ( I forget if it was propellent or something else) and kept making their trajectory even shallower than they intended. Not fatally of course. But enough to cause them to skip across the upper atmosphere for an even longer time. 2) Jim Lovell was so concerned about the batteries that he waited until the parachutes opened and they could be assured of a safe return regardless of whether the capsule "died" in mid-air. So he didn't make a transmission until he saw the parachutes fully open. At that point, he considered them "safe" no matter if the batteries lost the rest of their power or not.

  • @axr7149
    @axr71493 ай бұрын

    Jim Lovell is in fact the oldest living former astronaut (he recently turned 96). He is one of only 3 people to orbit the Moon twice (John W Young and Eugene Cernan being the other 2) and he is the only one of the 3 to not land on either occasion (Lovell orbited the Moon on Apollo 8 and again on 13; Young and Cernan flew together on Apollo 10 (which tested the Lunar Module above the Moon's surface as the final test before the first landing on Apollo 11), with Young landing on Apollo 16 and Cernan landing on 17).

  • @hectorsmommy1717

    @hectorsmommy1717

    3 ай бұрын

    Marilyn Lovell passed away at 93 last September. They were married for just over 70 years

  • @terencemccormick8178

    @terencemccormick8178

    3 ай бұрын

    13 didn't orbit. Fly-by only.

  • @garytorborg8200
    @garytorborg82003 ай бұрын

    I'm 65, love your movie reactions, btw. I was a wide-eyed 10-year-old when they landed on the moon. I will never forget. I will also never forget the true events around Apollo 13 less than a year later. The whole country was tense. We saw the splashdown on a TV at school. We didn't see the flight crew erupt in cheering like they showed in the movie, but the word is that the movie was a pretty accurate depiction of what happened.

  • @xheralt
    @xheralt3 ай бұрын

    Reminded of this exchange in _Serenity:_ "Our landing could get pretty interesting." _"Define 'interesting'..."_ (deadpan) "Oh god, oh god, we're all gonna die?" _"Just get this thing on the ground!"_ "That part will happen most definitely."

  • @legionaireb
    @legionaireb3 ай бұрын

    17:47 - Have you ever heard of 'The Vomit Comet'? It's a plane used to simulate 0G by basically flying high into the sky and then free-falling for a while. On the way up and down it feels like 0G. They had to do this 612 times to get the 4 hours of footage they needed for this movie. You can give it a try, too, if you have a spare $5000. 23:13 - The 'space vehicle' of Apollo 13 consisted of two separate vehicles: the Command Module _Odyssey_ and the Lunar Module (LM or 'Lem') _Aquarius._ When he's saying 'Odyssey signing off' he's just saying they're switching from one part to the other. 26:49 - Neither did they. 31:20 - My favorite part about this whole situation is that the astronauts owe their lives to a smelly sweat sock. 33:55 - That's not a Hot Dog, it's a porksicle. 39:44 - It's a hurricane in the Pacific. 40:39 - Remember when he said it burns when he pees? He has a UTI. 44:47 - The old man Hanks is shaking hands with here is the REAL Jim Lovell. 45:51 - The dialog between Huston and Apollo 13 is taken almost word-for-word from the mission transcript. About the only thing in the movie that DIDN'T happen for real was the drama between the crew members.

  • @TC_Smitty
    @TC_Smitty3 ай бұрын

    Fun fact...well, for me anyway. The ship that recovered the capsule/crew was the USS Iwo Jima (LPH-2). In this movie portrayed by LPH-11 USS New Orleans, which was the ship my father served aboard during Vietnam. He was also on board when the New Orleans recovered Apllo 14.

  • @andromeda331

    @andromeda331

    3 ай бұрын

    That's so cool!

  • @TC_Smitty

    @TC_Smitty

    3 ай бұрын

    @user-cl5tk3dt7i my dad wanted to know if you were at the 2002 reunion in SanDiego. He was there, you may have met him. He'd have been one of the few plank owners there.

  • @Xonslaught1
    @Xonslaught13 ай бұрын

    This is the third movie Tom Hanks and Gary Sinise were in together, Forrest Gump, Green Mile, and this one. The measles is considerably worse as an adult than a child. The balding gentleman with the glasses on in the movie is Ron Howard's brother

  • @hectorsmommy1717

    @hectorsmommy1717

    3 ай бұрын

    Jim Lovell's mother is played by Ron Howard's mother and the reverend is Howard's father.

  • @Xonslaught1

    @Xonslaught1

    3 ай бұрын

    @@hectorsmommy1717 yes they are

  • @shawnmiller4781

    @shawnmiller4781

    3 ай бұрын

    @@hectorsmommy1717Yeah he had about his whole family in this one

  • @stvbrsn

    @stvbrsn

    3 ай бұрын

    I can’t remember Sinise being in The Green Mile. I guess the only thing for it is to watch it again!

  • @Xonslaught1

    @Xonslaught1

    3 ай бұрын

    @@stvbrsn he was the lawyer that sent Coffy to jail with the son with the bad eye

  • @moondom
    @moondom3 ай бұрын

    This is one of my favs, I'm always up for a rewatch, even though it's so tense! Even knowing it so well, and knowing exactly what's going to happen, it maintains the anxiety so perfectly. I'm glad you enjoyed!!!

  • @80MWH
    @80MWHАй бұрын

    43:07 - I remember seeing that moment in the theater. I almost jumped up and cheered.

  • @randy4768
    @randy47683 ай бұрын

    The Admiral at the end shaking hands was the real Astonaut Jim Lovell. Only man to go around the moon twice. First on Apollo 8, then on 13.

  • @RichardX1
    @RichardX13 ай бұрын

    Gene Kranz, the Flight Director for Apollo 13 (played in this film by Ed Harris with the nice little vest), was also the Flight Director for the Apollo 1 mission (the one where the astronauts were killed in the fire just before launch). His speech to his men after that incident is legendary. "Spaceflight will never tolerate carelessness, incapacity, and neglect. Somewhere, somehow, we screwed up. It could have been in design, build, or test. Whatever it was, we should have caught it. We were too gung ho about the schedule and we locked out all of the problems we saw each day in our work. Every element of the program was in trouble and so were we. The simulators were not working, Mission Control was behind in virtually every area, and the flight and test procedures changed daily. Nothing we did had any shelf life. Not one of us stood up and said, "Dammit, stop!" I don't know what Thompson's committee will find as the cause, but I know what I find. We are the cause! We were not ready! We did not do our job. We were rolling the dice, hoping that things would come together by launch day, when in our hearts we knew it would take a miracle. We were pushing the schedule and betting that the Cape would slip before we did. From this day forward, Flight Control will be known by two words: 'Tough' and 'Competent'. Tough means we are forever accountable for what we do or what we fail to do. We will never again compromise our responsibilities. Every time we walk into Mission Control we will know what we stand for. Competent means we will never take anything for granted. We will never be found short in our knowledge and in our skills. Mission Control will be perfect. When you leave this meeting today you will go to your office and the first thing you will do there is to write 'Tough and Competent' on your blackboards. It will never be erased. Each day when you enter the room these words will remind you of the price paid by Grissom, White, and Chaffee. These words are the price of admission to the ranks of Mission Control."

  • @peterradsliff527

    @peterradsliff527

    3 ай бұрын

    Incredible. I never knew this.

  • @codyknight8183

    @codyknight8183

    3 ай бұрын

    Wow, never read that before but Ed Harris definitely nailed this attitude in his performance.

  • @josephdunkle1152

    @josephdunkle1152

    3 ай бұрын

    Yep Ed Harris line "failure is not an option" excellent performance of Gene Kranz

  • @billbabcock1833

    @billbabcock1833

    3 ай бұрын

    I hadn't heard Gene Kramz's speech before. Wow. The opening was taken partly from a quote by a pilot in the very early days of aviation. “Aviation in itself is not inherently dangerous. But to an even greater degree than the sea, it is terribly unforgiving of any carelessness, incapacity or neglect." I'm a pilot and my first flight instructor gave me a framed picture of a biplane crashed into a tree with that quote underneath

  • @skwervin1

    @skwervin1

    3 ай бұрын

    Jim and the other astronauts from the Mercury and Gemini program were involved in the investigations and were scathing to the various manufacturers who were involved in the crappy production of the Apollo 1 module. Several of them were invited to go around the back of the building for a "personal discussion" when they didn't like the astronauts' attitude about their shoddy work putting their lives at risk.

  • @kevinmoore2929
    @kevinmoore29292 ай бұрын

    According to Wikipedia, Haise had a UTI and, later on, kidney infections. No word on how he developed them.

  • @Firefax
    @Firefax3 ай бұрын

    @44:57 The Navy commander who shakes Tom Hanks' hand is played by Commander Jim Lovell of Apollo 13. They had asked if he wanted to be an admiral for this scene and he declined sayin that he'd retired from the Navy as a commander and that's what he'd always be.

  • @socalpaul487
    @socalpaul4873 ай бұрын

    I watched the Moon Landing as it was broadcast. July 20, 1969. I was 8 yo.

  • @ivanboston8582

    @ivanboston8582

    3 ай бұрын

    same but I was four.

  • @thomashiggins9320

    @thomashiggins9320

    3 ай бұрын

    @@ivanboston8582 I was five years old.

  • @conniegaylord5206

    @conniegaylord5206

    3 ай бұрын

    I was 17

  • @LauraHenderson-wx6xy

    @LauraHenderson-wx6xy

    3 ай бұрын

    I was 5 , too cool ! 🌕🧑‍🚀👨‍🚀👩‍🚀

  • @oldbearbrian

    @oldbearbrian

    3 ай бұрын

    I remember watching it on our old black-and-white TV. Not quite 4 at the time.

  • @jeffsherk7056
    @jeffsherk70563 ай бұрын

    A typhoon is the same as a hurricane. The difference is that a hurricane is in the Atlantic ocean, and a typhoon is in the Pacific ocean. The atrophy issue only comes into play if one is in space for a long time, meaning several months or more. The Apollo program space flights lasted maybe nine or ten days at the longest, so muscle atrophy did not come into play there.

  • @alanholck7995

    @alanholck7995

    3 ай бұрын

    And in Indian Ocean they are called cyclones

  • @johnreese7973

    @johnreese7973

    3 ай бұрын

    And in the Arctic Ocean they're called curly Qs.

  • @alanholck7995

    @alanholck7995

    3 ай бұрын

    @@johnreese7973 I n the Antarctic are they called Q Curlies?

  • @jdwelborn

    @jdwelborn

    3 ай бұрын

    a Typhoon is also a GMC

  • @jeffsherk7056

    @jeffsherk7056

    3 ай бұрын

    @@jdwelborn Thanks! Help me out. What does GMC stand for in this context?

  • @RaderizDorret
    @RaderizDorret2 ай бұрын

    Jim Lovell has already seen Mount Marilyn up close because he was on Apollo 8 which went out to the moon but didn't land on it as part of the prep work for Apollo 11. He's already been to the moon and orbited it

  • @erich930
    @erich9302 ай бұрын

    To film the Zero-G scenes, they fly and airplane on a parabola, which is the arch an object follows when you throw it. The aircraft is effectively in freefall, and the aircraft and its occupants experience weightlessness. An orbit is just a parabola that wraps around the entire Earth, never reaching the surface.

  • @markdenio4537
    @markdenio45373 ай бұрын

    In 2008 I toured the Johnson Space Center on the VIP Tour. We got to go into the Apollo control room. On the wall is a plaque with a mirror from the three astronauts of Apollo 13. The plaque reads "This mirror flown on Aquarius, LM-7, to the moon April 11-17, 1970. Returned by a greatful [sic] Apollo 13 crew to ‘reflect the image’ of the people in Mission Control who got us back! James Lovell John Swigert Fred Haise".

  • @dawntilley8615
    @dawntilley86153 ай бұрын

    Thank all the gods Ken was grounded. He saved them, like a wee Samwise, saved 'em all.

  • @windsaw151

    @windsaw151

    3 ай бұрын

    In the actual event he was just one of a dozen people working as a team to work out the fine details of a procedure they already took into perspective months ago. Wouldn't be so suspenseful on film however.

  • @DaveF.

    @DaveF.

    3 ай бұрын

    Not really - the film leaves out 3 out of the 4 missions control teams and completely forgets about the rest of the backup crew - they simplified it down to just Ken Maddenly and John Aaron.

  • @sparroni
    @sparroni2 ай бұрын

    16:57 Ashleigh, it was The Beatles. And she was a teenager. My mom freaked out too when they broke up.

  • @sourisvoleur4854
    @sourisvoleur48542 ай бұрын

    I was very small, but I still remember my grandmother perched over the TV set, saying over and over in a shaky voice, "Oh those brave boys. Those brave boys. Those brave boys." My grandfather worked for Boeing, so aerospace was in the family so to speak. The nation was riveted to their TV sets.

  • @winstonsmith8441
    @winstonsmith84413 ай бұрын

    I was at Kennedy Space Center (KSC) in early 1995 for a Space Shuttle launch and saw, written in Sharpie on a Transporter/Crawler maintenance access cover, the signatures of Tom Hanks and Ron Howard. Bewildered, I asked one of the KSC employees about the signatures and he told me that they had been at KSC filming a movie about Apollo 13, used the Transporter/Crawler in a scene, and then signed it. That's how I found out about the movie.

  • @IgnisKhan

    @IgnisKhan

    3 ай бұрын

    Was this the Feb 2nd launch? I was there for my tenth birthday! When my mom found out there was a shuttle launch exactly on my birth date, that basically was the deciding factor on where our vacation was going to be.

  • @winstonsmith8441

    @winstonsmith8441

    3 ай бұрын

    @@IgnisKhan Yes, it was. It actually lifted off at about 1:30 am on the 3rd but the launch countdown began on the 2nd and you would have gotten there on the evening of the 2nd to get into position to see it. That was a great 10th birthday celebration! BTW, that mission had the very first female Shuttle pilot, Eileen Collins.

  • @IgnisKhan

    @IgnisKhan

    3 ай бұрын

    @@winstonsmith8441 I was about to ask if it was one of the first ISS-related launches (as my vague memory implied), but after googling it, it was a actually precursor to docking with Mir. It basically flew in formation with the Russian station and did a flyaround.

  • @winstonsmith8441

    @winstonsmith8441

    3 ай бұрын

    @@IgnisKhan Yep, that's it. They had a Russian Cosmonaut on board, Titov. We put a couple of astronauts on Mir later on for some extended flights but a series of on-orbit accidents, fire, collisions, system failures caused us to stop our Mir missions.

  • @CrashTestPilot
    @CrashTestPilot3 ай бұрын

    Fun fact. The Naval Officer in white that meets Tom Hanks on the aircraft carrier deck, is actually Jim Lovell, Commander of Apollo 13. He's still alive today.

  • @soylentgreen7074

    @soylentgreen7074

    3 ай бұрын

    I got to meet Jim in 2011 and I got a signed copy of his book. Such a kind humble smart guy and he was still sharp as a tack. I wish people like that could live forever.

  • @chanelle5889
    @chanelle58892 ай бұрын

    What do we have this spacecraft that's good? The crew! Ashleigh, I just found your channel, and this line was an absolute winner. The crew (including those on the ship and on the ground) was absolutely the biggest asset NASA had that day.

  • @mrkrinkle72
    @mrkrinkle723 ай бұрын

    I'm related to Gus Grissom. He was from Mitchell Indiana. He was a hero to us!

  • @peterradsliff527

    @peterradsliff527

    3 ай бұрын

    Sorry for your loss. He was a great man.

  • @mrkrinkle72

    @mrkrinkle72

    3 ай бұрын

    @@peterradsliff527 I was born in '72 so I never knew him. But, we'd go to Spring Mill state park to see his memorial. They had a real Gemini capsule there and you could touch it! I'd run my fingers over the scarred heat shield and think wow! This was in space!

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