APOLLO 13 (1995) | FIRST TIME WATCHING | Reaction & Commentary

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  • Опубликовано: 23 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @ShanelleRiccio
    @ShanelleRiccio  Год назад +5

    Catch the full length version on Patreon! www.patreon.com/shanellericcio

    • @robertsmith3883
      @robertsmith3883 Год назад

      Shanelle ..I own this on bluray and cry as much as you. Ron Howard is such a great director. You know what space movie that you will love 2018's "First Man" it a movie about Neil Armstrong.

    • @js0988
      @js0988 Год назад +1

      13 is just a number like any other number, it has absolutely no significance. Unicorns aren't real and neither are gods, and certainly not unlucky numbers.

    • @robertsmith3883
      @robertsmith3883 Год назад

      @@js0988 right like a dozen eggs ..and a digital clock showing 1.11 all the way to 12.12 ...and no 13th floor in hotels

    • @GGE47
      @GGE47 11 месяцев назад +1

      The number 13 has never been lucky or unlucky to me. Even Friday 13th has been just another ordinary day. I was 22 when Apollo 13 was launched. I lived through this and tried to be positive, but there were times. When they went behind the moon I went outside and looked at it. My stomach was tied in knots. When they emerged from the other side and an hour later when they fired the LM engine to speed up to get back sooner, I felt better but they weren't home yet. I was able to go out with my father to eat supper even though my stomach was still queasy. I got it all down. They had to power everything down to a bare minimum and they got really cold. Can you imagine living in a refrigerator for three days? That is what it was like for the astronauts until they splashed down in the Pacific. When I saw those three big beautiful; parachutes, I knew they made it. I almost forgot the Richmond Braves were to open their season that night, but still went to the game. All of those 13s were a bit unusual but were just a coincidence.

    • @808INFantry11X
      @808INFantry11X 4 месяца назад

      @ShanelleRiccio i get your adversion to the number 13 but look at it from NASA these are scientists they are not the superstitious type. Neither am i 13 is just a number just anything else.

  • @mikerhodes8454
    @mikerhodes8454 Год назад +272

    The captain who welcomes them home on the recovery ship is the real Jim Lovell making a cameo.

    • @mem1701movies
      @mem1701movies Год назад +13

      My friend was on that ship during filming

    • @JoePlett
      @JoePlett Год назад +15

      And the guy 'on TV' talking about the paper-thin reentry window was Jim's co author on Lost Moon.

    • @tremorsfan
      @tremorsfan Год назад +30

      Ron Howard wanted to make him an admiral but Lovell refused saying he would never play a rank higher than he had in real life.

    • @alanholck7995
      @alanholck7995 Год назад +13

      Plus he already had the uniform. 😀

    • @doug6014
      @doug6014 Год назад +2

      Your observations, genuine reactions and insight always keep me coming back for more!!!
      Sooooo good!!!😎

  • @SirPaladin
    @SirPaladin Год назад +254

    Tom Hanks went on to produce a series called "From The Earth To The Moon" exploring the full history of the US Space Race. absolutely worth a watch.

    • @coloradochris3952
      @coloradochris3952 Год назад

      NASA admits we can't even go beyond low Earth orbit today which starts at like 90 miles up so this is obviously all fiction to anyone that does a small amount of research and uses common sense

    • @baz2324
      @baz2324 Год назад +3

      i bought the box set when i saw the cast , well worth the watch

    • @andrewcharles459
      @andrewcharles459 Год назад +3

      He put a ton of Easter Eggs into his movie "That Thing You Do" too. Hanks is a space geek, god love him.

    • @cincinnatus230
      @cincinnatus230 Год назад +7

      Yeah and I haven't really seen anyone react to that series, unlike the similarly inspired Hanks production Band of Brothers.

    • @MrBibi86
      @MrBibi86 Год назад

      thanks for letting us know. I will have to check it out

  • @aldenallen28
    @aldenallen28 Год назад +109

    When I was a kid my teachers used that O2 filter scene to explain what engineers do. Today I've been an engineer for 16 years

    • @davidwilliams1820
      @davidwilliams1820 Год назад +7

      My wife suggested to her elementary school teacher friend that she could show that scene to her class as an example of problem-solving. The teacher said no, she couldn't use it. Why? Because it depicted people smoking cigarettes.
      My, how things have changed.

    • @tnerbsg8134
      @tnerbsg8134 Год назад +6

      ​@David Williams as a teacher myself, the person you speak of is overbearing. ALOT of people smoke cigarettes and, to be honest, how much different is it from vaping? Kids aren't dumb, they know smoking is bad.

    • @rbrtck
      @rbrtck Год назад +2

      CO₂ filter. 😁

    • @aldenallen28
      @aldenallen28 Год назад

      @@rbrtck it wad abbreviated 😉

    • @rbrtck
      @rbrtck Год назад

      @@aldenallen28 O, I C. 😉

  • @randyshoquist7726
    @randyshoquist7726 Год назад +70

    The movie critic for my home town newspaper wrote, "I've seen so many people die in movies this year, so many populations on the brink of distruction, but the first time I was really scared by a movie was watching a story which I knew, for a fact, had a happy ending."
    I've watched this many times, and when Lovell's little boy asks, "Was it the door?" my heart drops every time.

    • @KabukiKid
      @KabukiKid Год назад +7

      I feel this exact way every time I watch this movie... it gets me stressed and worried for the crew, despite knowing full well that everything will just be fine. How can a movie be crafted so well to bring you that feeling?! I marvel at it.

    • @logandarklighter
      @logandarklighter Год назад

      UGH... PUNCH IN THE GUT...

  • @zmarko
    @zmarko Год назад +89

    Jim Lovell spoke at my college graduation a few weeks before this movie came out. It was a great speech about perseverance and solving problems through life. Very moving speech, and this movie holds a special place for me because of that speech.

    • @ShanelleRiccio
      @ShanelleRiccio  Год назад +15

      WOW !!! That's unreal!!

    • @phj223
      @phj223 Год назад +4

      @@ShanelleRiccio For more space related movies, check out The Right Stuff (1983). It follows the early space program (called Mercury), which preceded the Apollo program, with the selection process for the first seven astronauts, and their first missions into space. Funnily enough Ed Harris is in that one too, along with so many highly recognizable actors. :)

    • @lawrencebirkenfeld8644
      @lawrencebirkenfeld8644 Год назад +2

      I don't usually go through other replies but based on what she was saying yes she needs to know this really did happen Apollo 1 is tragic but we did lose another 14 astronauts and our endeavour to go into space but like other great explorers in the end it's necessary

    • @ryanhill48
      @ryanhill48 Год назад

      @@ShanelleRiccio hey I have a request for a movie anaconda and wearing gloves

    • @808INFantry11X
      @808INFantry11X 4 месяца назад +3

      ​@@ShanelleRiccio jim Lovell was the real deal he was in his day the most reavelled astronaut in the world he had more time in space then anyone. I do love that this movie shows how NASA was our best problem solvers. I also get your aversion 13 but NASA is bunch scientist they dont believe in luck bad or otherwise. To them 13 is just another number i agree as well.

  • @Mike_Sierra_2711
    @Mike_Sierra_2711 Год назад +92

    Just a few things:
    1. Swigert was as experienced and as well trained to pilot the Apollo 13 mission as Mattingly. He was even THE Apollo program's expert for emergency procedures for accidents like the one that happened during the mission.
    2. When you listen to the real radio recordings of the mission, you'll hear how calm and focused they all were right after the explosion. You'd think nothing actually bad has happened.
    3. The three astronauts never had a fight on board.
    4. They already knew how to connect the LEM's filter with the filters from the command module. They just rebuilt it to make sure it would really work.
    5. Same thing with Mattingly in the simulator. They already had all the procedures ready to restart the command module, they just wanted to make sure it'll work and that they get all the things right.

    • @Caseytify
      @Caseytify Год назад +5

      Yeah, the astronauts were a cold-blooded bunch, in the best way. But that made for a boring movie, so they added the arguments to make it more relatable to the audience.
      ... From what I've read, they had to develop the restart procedures, but it wasn't all Mattingly's doing. Again, storytelling took precedence over history.

    • @StoryMing
      @StoryMing Год назад +7

      On the other hand, Marilyn’s wedding ring really did drop down the drain (I think they managed to retrieve it, but it did actually happen).

    • @GeekyGarden
      @GeekyGarden Год назад +2

      @@Caseytify Wally Schirra would like a word. There's a photo of him riding his Mercury capsule like Slim Pickens. 😂

    • @Jessica_Roth
      @Jessica_Roth Год назад +1

      @@Caseytify Ken wasn't working alone; the other two astronauts of the back-up team, John Young and Charlie Duke (who walked on the moon in Apollo 16 while Ken was orbiting) were there, too. Charlie was over the measles by then.
      When 16 rolled around, the three astronauts were sent on a trip to Hawai'i to simulate conditions on the moon by walking around the lava beds. Charlie somehow managed to catch pneumonia (in Hawai'i, no less!) and they were worried he wouldn't be over it in time for the launch in March (this was December). However, other technical problems necessitated pushing the launch back to April, which not only proved lucky for Charlie, but also the mission as the delay let them catch a problem with the fuel bladders, saving another aborted (or worse) mission.
      (There was no discussion of just doing a one-for-one swap if Charlie hadn't been ready; NASA had learned their lesson. So if the March launch had stayed on the calendar, NASA would have used the back-up crew, with Fred Haise in charge of Stuart Roosa and Edgar Mitchell, and Charlie would have screwed Ken out of TWO trips to space, lol.)
      When the Apollo 16 astronauts were in quarantine before the launch, Charlie was spotted around the hotel pool and NASA was furious. Except it wasn't him, it was his twin brother, Bill. Oops.
      And then they went to the moon and everything was fine. Charlie Duke, after all the drama, became the youngest person ever to walk on the moon. At least, for now. Manned moon landings are supposed to resume in 2025 with the Artemis 3 mission, but none of the 18 astronauts that are candidates for Artemis would be young enough to break Charlie's record (he was 36 years and 6 months old), so it's safe until we get a new candidate pool, assuming the program lasts.

    • @tommcewan7936
      @tommcewan7936 Год назад +1

      @@Caseytify I think Stanley Kubrick is the only director who ever did it properly and had realistically stoic, unflappable astronauts in 2001: A Space Odyssey, which ironically *isn't* based on a true story.

  • @sirjohnmara
    @sirjohnmara Год назад +82

    I RECOMMEND: "The Right Stuff (1983)" For Space, Flight and Movie making - that is a GREAT watch! Also it's a free history lesson. 🙂

    • @UnclePengy
      @UnclePengy Год назад +8

      Agreed! The Right Stuff and Apollo 13 make for a great double feature night! :) (And Ed Harris is in both.) Also I think Jeff Goldblum had his first role in that movie.

    • @rpg7287
      @rpg7287 Год назад +3

      Agreed as well! Too few people react to this classic also based on historical events. It’s a fantastic movie.

    • @CoastalNomad
      @CoastalNomad Год назад +4

      I Second this Recommendation..... Awesome Movie.... Awesome Cast...... Ed Harris shines as John Glenn.....

    • @UnclePengy
      @UnclePengy Год назад +4

      And the soundtrack alone is EPIC.

    • @TreantmonksTemple
      @TreantmonksTemple Год назад +6

      No bucks, no Buck Rogers.

  • @rogerlincoln451
    @rogerlincoln451 Год назад +10

    26:20 "Can we all agree this is two and half hours of torture?"
    I'm old enough to remember when it was many days of torture. I understood this was a big deal even though I was only 8.

    • @lindawendt5372
      @lindawendt5372 Год назад +3

      Me too, glued to the TV in real time, 4 days, not 2 1/2 hours. Great movie.

  • @timgardner3681
    @timgardner3681 Год назад +50

    I was in elementary school when the Apollo 13 drama unfolded. All our classes were suddenly cancelled, and instead the school rolled in television sets for us to watch the re-entry and splashdown. I was happy about the classes being cancelled, but then I noticed that all the teachers looked scared. And I clearly remember the re-entry radio silence thing. One young teacher was really freaking out during those silent minutes, if I recall. And then the teachers began cheering when we saw the capsule and parachutes. We all cheered. It was very, very dramatic.

    • @mena94x3
      @mena94x3 Год назад +8

      I was in 5th gr, watching in class, when the Challenger exploded. We were all stunned.

    • @Deathbird_Mitch
      @Deathbird_Mitch Год назад +4

      I was in 1st grade as they rolled in those televisions and we then watched as The Challenger exploded.

    • @tcsam73
      @tcsam73 Год назад +3

      I was in 6th grade when the Challenger exploded. We weren't watching it on tv. The classroom I was in didn't have intercoms, they had a phone on the wall that had a light that would flash if the teacher got a call from the office. The phone started to flash, the teacher picked it up, and after a moment or two she looked visibly shocked. She collected herself, turned to us and told us the Challenger blew up.

    • @waynehatchell6343
      @waynehatchell6343 9 месяцев назад

      I was a senior in high school when the Challenger exploded. The high school teacher I had was a personal friend of Christa McAuliffe , which they attended the same school. Until the day of the disaster, I had never seen a grown man fell to the floor, ball up into a fetal position while sitting on the floor and broke down into a flood of tears for a very, very long time. As a class we were completely stunned. R.I.P. Christa McAuliffe and the valiant crew of the Challenger.

  • @Silas.Marner
    @Silas.Marner Год назад +16

    Leiutenant Dan: if you're ever a captain....that's the day I'm an astronaut.
    One year later......

  • @mikelundquist4596
    @mikelundquist4596 Год назад +10

    Gravity- fiction.
    Interstellar - fiction.
    The Martian - fiction.
    Apollo 13 - real life.

  • @legionaireb
    @legionaireb Год назад +11

    1:33 - The difference between those movies and this is this one is REAL.
    11:34 - It comes after 12, Shanelle.
    29:35 - That man shaking Tom Hanks' hand is the REAL Jim Lovell.

  • @watchthis7767
    @watchthis7767 Год назад +17

    How good is this movie? You knew what was gonna happen, you even tried to fool yourself into not being stressed. And still, at the end, you were in tears. Great reaction, thanks for the watch.

  • @benhairston1434
    @benhairston1434 Год назад +36

    Saw this in the theater when it came out, and it was breathtaking. It hasn't lost any of its magic over time either. I can still watch today and feel the same things. It's a very primal story. People are thrust into an environment and situation where they just have to survive and not know how or what the next step is until it presents itself. I think that's what makes the stress the astronauts are in translate to the viewer so easily. Such a good movie...

    • @TheMarcHicks
      @TheMarcHicks Год назад +2

      Same here. I feel so blessed to have seen this film in all its full-screen glory. Still watch the film regularly almost 30 years later.

  • @ur_quainmaster7901
    @ur_quainmaster7901 Год назад +25

    This movie was behind me building my first home theater, and the beginning of my quest for true low frequency, shake the walls sound.
    October Sky is a great true story follow on movie.

  • @laurakali6522
    @laurakali6522 Год назад +28

    Ya know it’s a great movie when even though you know what happened you are fully invested and stressed.

    • @michaelmiller6709
      @michaelmiller6709 Год назад +2

      Not only did I know the story, I'm not really a fan of this kind of 'blockbuster' movie. And I still wept like a child at this one. :)

  • @corneliusoverton2617
    @corneliusoverton2617 Год назад +20

    The great thing about Hank's "From the Earth to the Moon" miniseries, is that each episode explores the space race from a different angle. I especially like the geology episode and how it makes you passionate for it. Despite the setbacks, it's one of the most hopeful things you'll ever watch, in movies or on TV.

    • @fallingstar9643
      @fallingstar9643 Год назад +2

      Although "From the Earth to the Moon" does introduce a bit of a plot hole with "Apollo 13"; in the latter, the public affairs officer, Henry Hurt, says to Marilyn Lovell, "One of them said we made going to the Moon as exciting as taking a trip to Pittsburgh." Whereas we see in "From the Earth to the Moon", the episode which focuses on Apollo 12, clearly that isn't true.
      Either that or NASA made the wrong decision to not simply have Pete Conrad on VOX the whole way.

    • @logandarklighter
      @logandarklighter Год назад +1

      @@fallingstar9643 Having Pete Conrad on VOX all the way WOULD make things a LOT more exciting. But not in a way that NASA would ever... EVER... want! Conrad was a pro. But he was absolutely NAVY down to his almost complete lack of a language filter! LMAO!!! 🤣🤣🤣

  • @jamielandis4308
    @jamielandis4308 Год назад +38

    Ron Howard is a great filmmaker. Another excellent Howard flick is “Backdraft.”
    The Apollo 13 mission is epic. The movie is based on the book, “Lost Moon,” by Jim Lovell. The true genius of this movie is that everyone knows how it ends but Ron keeps us all stressed the entire time. I’ve seen this movie so many times but I still cheer every time. I can’t imagine how it is for people without knowledge of the incident.
    Gene Krantz’s wife made him a vest for every mission, thus the significance of the vest. With the exception of the argument between the astronauts, all of this stuff happened.
    You need to watch the HBO 10 part series, “From The Earth To The Moon.” Tom Hanks did it after this movie. It’s like “Band of Brothers,” and “The Pacific.”
    Also, do “The Right Stuff.” It’s about the creation of NASA and the Mercury program.

    • @John_Locke_108
      @John_Locke_108 Год назад

      From The Earth To The Moon is required viewing after watching this.

    • @RossM3838
      @RossM3838 Год назад

      The vest indicated which shift the person was on and indicates position

  • @jd-zr3vk
    @jd-zr3vk Год назад +33

    To simulate weightlessness, they used a jet plane that made parabolic climbs and decents. At the apex, the occupants a virtually weightless. There are videos of Stephen Hawking on a parabolic flight. He had people help him during the weightlessness.

    • @ShanelleRiccio
      @ShanelleRiccio  Год назад +20

      It was the vomit comet!

    • @jamietaylor5570
      @jamietaylor5570 Год назад +7

      @@Kriszilla727 Yes, they leased it from NASA.

    • @rantman4521
      @rantman4521 Год назад +4

      @@ShanelleRiccio 🤢🤮😂

    • @Mitheledh
      @Mitheledh Год назад

      @@ShanelleRiccio They built the sets for the spacecraft inside the vomit comet and then filmed at the times they were weightless

    • @nicolivoldkif9096
      @nicolivoldkif9096 Год назад +2

      Small technical correction. The zero G effect starts well before the apex when the pilot begins applying down elevator on the upper leg of the parabola.

  • @ozonepat
    @ozonepat Год назад +9

    "Did this really happen?" re: the CO2 scrubber. It definitely did - a family friend was one of the people in Mission Control on the Apollo 13 mission, and was part of the team who improvised that fix. He was either an electrical or mechanical engineer (can't remember which), and these events inspired him to go to med school and become a physician.

  • @bobbabai
    @bobbabai Год назад +17

    Besides all the other great stuff in this movie, one thing I really love is watching groups of people who really know their stuff making quick and correct decisions even when it's not the decision they want. "We just lost the moon"

    • @ShanelleRiccio
      @ShanelleRiccio  Год назад +4

      Yes that was SO so cool! everyone was at the top of their game

  • @rhonafenwick5643
    @rhonafenwick5643 Год назад +2

    I had to laugh a little when you mentioned how good the "screenplay" was when Marilyn lost her wedding ring down the drain. _Apollo 13_ is probably as close to a straightforward reenactment of the actual events as Hollywood's ever gotten. Marilyn dropping her wedding ring into the drain, her nightmare in the lead-up, the square-canister-in-round-hole problem, Fred Haise contracting a UTI, Jim Lovell removing his bio-sensors, the longer-than-expected radio blackout after re-entry - it's all basically true to actual events as recounted by Jim Lovell, with only small alterations (Marilyn did end up recover her wedding ring, Ken Mattingly wasn't exposed to true measles but to rubella (German measles), that kind of thing). The story is simply so extraordinary all on its own that there was no need to add any major fictionalised elements to the screenplay at all. An incredible movie about a real catastrophe overcome by the ingenuity and courage of real people

  • @tweak991
    @tweak991 Год назад +12

    The best thing about this film and Ron Howard's direction is that it still makes you think they might not make it back even though you know the outcome. One of my favorites.

  • @izzonj
    @izzonj Год назад +14

    Amidst all the technical stuff, Kathleen Quinlan (Marilyn Lovell) really gives the movie its heart.

    • @BedsitBob
      @BedsitBob Год назад +1

      Did you know that Tom hanks and Kathleen Quinlan spent a couple of days at the Lovell's house, to prepare themselves to play the parts?

  • @nickitacocat
    @nickitacocat Год назад +12

    If you haven't already you should watch Hidden Figures. It's about Katherine Johnson who unfortunately was omitted during this film. Mathematical genius.

  • @Kae6502
    @Kae6502 Год назад +8

    I was 10 years old when Apollo 11 landed on the Moon. I got to stay up late that night and watch the whole Moonwalk live on TV as it happened. I'll never forget how I felt that night or the look on my Dad's face while it all took place in front of our eyes. Several years ago I got to hear a presentsation by Gene Kranz at the EAA Museum in Oshkosh and later I got to meet Fred Haise who sat one seat away from me and chatted with several of us Space geeks. What an amazing man. Thanks for another great video!

  • @johnnehrich9601
    @johnnehrich9601 Год назад +14

    One of my favorite movies which I guess you could call it a "space movie" is Hidden Figures. It is about the early days of NASA. Along with this movie and the Martian, it seems sort of like a trilogy of the important steps in getting into space.
    Of course, with Hidden Figures, it is also how some critically important contributors were for a long time overlooked. Movie tears me up no matter how often I watch it.

  • @mem1701movies
    @mem1701movies Год назад +12

    It was actually “Houston we’ve HAD a problem.” In a very matter of fact way. Because they were cool and didn’t freak out in real life.

  • @dereknolin5986
    @dereknolin5986 Год назад +5

    I love this film, because it's one of the few films where it's not a single heroic figure that saves the day, it's an entire team of people who do. It's a testament to the amazing things humans can accomplish when they work together, and I think feeling that possibility is part of what makes this film so emotional.

  • @Leafsdude
    @Leafsdude Год назад +1

    Love that we finally have an answer (tentatively) to Lovett's (via Hanks) last question. We'll be going back to the moon December 2025. I can't wait!

  • @StephenLuke
    @StephenLuke Год назад +12

    My mom’s parents were in high school at the time and they witnessed the launch of Apollo 13 on TV.

  • @robbyrob0723
    @robbyrob0723 Год назад +6

    They took the weightless shots in a Nasa plane called the Vomit Comet. You climb to altitude then dive towards the ground gets everyone weightless for like 30 seconds. So, they did all those shots in that plane for those durations. Pretty cool!

  • @lesmartin9920
    @lesmartin9920 Год назад +4

    as an aerospace engineer - the best part - " We need to fit this into the hole of this - using only this" such greatness

  • @chrisedwards7095
    @chrisedwards7095 Год назад +6

    The real incident happened when I was a kid, so I knew Ron Howard picked a great story.
    There are four Howards in the movie - Clint (little brother) at Mission Control, Rance (dad) as a priest, Jean (mom) as Jim Lovell's mother, and Bryce Dallas Howard standing next to Kathleen Quinlan before the launch.

    • @StevesFunhouse
      @StevesFunhouse Год назад

      FIVE (5) ... You missed Cheryl, Ron's wife. Additionally, in case you're interested, the real Jim Lovell played the "Captain of USS Iwo Jima" (uncredited) and his wife, Marilyn Lovell played an "Onlooker at Launch Site" (also uncredited).

  • @andrewmadeloni7173
    @andrewmadeloni7173 Год назад +6

    "The Right Stuff" definitely worth a reaction if you have not done it...

  • @terrylandess6072
    @terrylandess6072 Год назад +3

    Growing up, Walter Cronkite was the man. His voice and delivery gave weight to the information he passed to us. I enjoy hearing it today.
    I flew the 'Vomit Comet' in a flight sim mission. Upon reaching a specific altitude at the proper speed and climb rate, we begin to nose down at a specific rate which is like some roller coasters when you leave your seat. Losing altitude and increasing speed is why 20 seconds is the safety margin to begin leveling the plane. It's not a fighter jet :)

  • @kendramalm8811
    @kendramalm8811 Год назад +8

    This was based on Jim Lovell's memoir originally titled "Lost Moon" later retitled "Apollo 13" to tie-in to the movie. Nearly everything in the movie occurred in real life, though dramatically heightened. Definitely a great read!

  • @mark-be9mq
    @mark-be9mq Год назад +1

    One note, can't overlook how the Astronauts had to use trigonometry & algebra to work out the numbers as they were transferring data from module to LEM. All had equations and slide rules (instead of calculators).
    Under pressure.

  • @judyodom994
    @judyodom994 Год назад +3

    I saw this in the theater but also in real life.
    All of America was glued to the news 24-7.
    My strongest memory was laying with my mother while we waited for Apollo 13 to come around the dark side of the moon.

  • @davidludwig1492
    @davidludwig1492 Год назад +13

    You are so good at this. Always entertaining.

  • @SYLTales
    @SYLTales Год назад +3

    They couldn't pay you enough to go to the Moon? I'd gleefully give them every last penny I have to go to the Moon.
    I was four when Armstrong set foot on the Moon. It's mixed in with my sister's birth, which happened a week apart, but I remember it.
    I remember Apollo 13 as a disaster for which there could be no rescue. Only later in life did I learn about how harrowing it was. Ron Howard took some liberties with events and time -- it was actually _worse_ than what Howard portrayed. However, it's close enough that it doesn't matter.
    Excellent film. I never tire of it.

  • @Caroline_Tyler
    @Caroline_Tyler Год назад +15

    I was around 12 when the real life event happened. The film really captured it well, the small changes Ron made to heighten the tension worked great without making it too far from what actually occurred. As a space follower my whole life I am always amazed when I find out people don't know the history.

  • @mdeluxe1929
    @mdeluxe1929 Год назад +3

    They did the cryogenic stir (edit) more often than they should because of a weird signal in the oxygen sensor. If they had done the stir on schedule, Swiggert would have been by himself in the command module and the entire crew would have been lost because they needed the LEM to survive.
    Swiggert being on the mission was a huge bonus. He literally wrote the book on emergency procedures for the astronaut. Plus he was beefier so he had more mass to draw on while being dehydrated.
    The Houston crew went to an actual movie a few months before Apollo 13 launched. It was about astronauts who were stranded due to an electrical failure. Which started a discussion regarding what to do in an emergency.
    Duct take was used for the first time on the mission which was used to make the CO2 filter.
    At one point during the emergency, they could not close the hatch. If they had locked down the hatch, they would have delayed transferring to the LEM.
    Lovell was on Apollo 8 and he did some tests where he navigated using the Earth. This was in case of computer loss. So they had the right person on the job.

  • @munkeypantsman
    @munkeypantsman Год назад +1

    One of the few details they got wrong was the nozzles of the five F-1 engines during the launch scene. The real nozzles were clad in inconel sheet metal for thermal shielding which gave them a very scrappy looking appearance. It was among the final steps in assembling the rocket before flight, so none of the unused engines that went to museums include the cladding. The film's artists used museum pieces for reference, thus missing the detail.

  • @bloodyuk8452
    @bloodyuk8452 Год назад +3

    What I love about good space movies (most notably this one and The Martian) is that there are no bad guys. Just smart problem solving, people coming together to help other people survive. Comes to show that a good story doesn't necessarily needs a villain.

  • @bcriswell
    @bcriswell Год назад +4

    What's so amazing is how tense and on the edge of your seat this movie keeps you, even if you already knew how it all turned out before you started watching.

  • @markjesik424
    @markjesik424 Год назад +5

    I saw this movie at a drive-in theater, and it's one of the inspirations for my career as an engineer.

  • @Caseytify
    @Caseytify Год назад +2

    You cut my favorite line, when Lovell's mom (played by Ron Howard's mom) said "Don't worry honey. If they built a washing machine to fly, Jimmy can land it." with absolute certainty. She was one of the treasures of the movie, for met.
    If memory serves, Kathleen Quinlan was nominated for an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress in this role.
    ... The music had a tremendous impact in this movie.
    There really was a Gunter Wendt, and "I vonder vere Gunter vent." was a tag line among the astronauts. There were a lot of German engineers that came to America after WW2. Werner von Braun was pivotal in designing the Saturn rocket.
    It sounds like you haven't seen The Right Stuff (1983) yet. It covers the early period of manned American space flight. Ed Harris was in that one as well.
    It's not _in_ space, but another good movie is October Sky (1999), set right after the Soviets launched Sputnik. If memory serves it was Jake Gyllenhaal's first film role.

  • @RickieReacts
    @RickieReacts Год назад +3

    One of the best movies ever. We know how it ends, we know what happens, we know they make it… but it’s SO stressful every time! Ron Howard’s masterpiece!

  • @SweetLou0523
    @SweetLou0523 Год назад +2

    For space nerds I always suggest the BBC podcast: 13 Minutes to the Moon. Season 1 is all about the early Apollo program leading up to Apollo 11 moon landing. TONS of amazing info and trivia that many dont know. Season 2 is all about Apollo 13 and is just as good as Season 1. Very much so worth listening to.

  • @b1blancer1
    @b1blancer1 Год назад +3

    "Steely eyed missile man" is one of the highest compliments a person can receive at NASA. The real ending wasn't quite that dramatic. They started receiving telemetry from Odyssey right when they were supposed to.

  • @uosdwiSrdewoH
    @uosdwiSrdewoH Год назад +1

    I can't imagine how difficult this was to shoot for everyone involved. The plane that makes zero g possible can only create such an effect for 25 seconds at a time. That's assuming everything and everyone immediately gets used to zero g when everything starts floating all over the place. Staying in the moment as the character having to stop and start every 25 seconds while filming incredibly emotional moments would be incredibly difficult. It just makes the whole thing even more impressive watching with that in mind. There's a bunch of behind the scenes footage of the actors prepping for what it would be like and other stuff with Ron Howard actually filming. They also had to build their tiny set in the interior of the plane so it wasn't like they could pull the side off and get great angles. They had to shoot where the camera could fit. Again, that it looks as good as it does is a minor miracle.

  • @z8kfltgeek
    @z8kfltgeek Год назад +5

    The thing that always gets me about the radio blackout sequence is its similarity to the Columbia shuttle disaster... when there was only silence.

    • @andromeda331
      @andromeda331 Год назад +2

      Yeah, ever since the Columbia shuttle disaster that's what I think of every time it gets to that line in the movie "there will only be silence".

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver Год назад

      _Columbia_ was cut off mid-sentence, though.

  • @davidward9737
    @davidward9737 Год назад +1

    Shan. This is better than Gravity. It is not a movie but a life event. Everytime I see the rocket launch. Gives me chills. I'm terrified from heights.

  • @eugeneoman
    @eugeneoman Год назад +4

    Great reaction, Shanelle! I saw this movie in the theater with my Dad. He especially liked Dick Cavett's line: "I like those ingenious girl watchers who put on Con Edison
    helmets and dig trenches in the street..." (My Dad is a Con Edison retiree who worked there for over 45 years.)

  • @bizjetfixr8352
    @bizjetfixr8352 Год назад +2

    The Command module and LEM interiors were made by SpaceWorks in Hutchinson, Kansas, a shop affiliated with the Kansas Cosmosphere, (the best aviation/space museum that nobody has ever heard of).
    The recreations were loaded on a 707, then flown in parabolic arcs with cameras on board, to film the weightless shot.
    One of the best shots in the movie, IMO, is when they take their helmets and gloves off after the launch. Paxton and Bacon seem to be genuinely amused seeing all their gear floating around.

    • @bizjetfixr8352
      @bizjetfixr8352 Год назад

      The Apollo 13 command module "Odyssey" is displayed at the Kansas Cosmosphere, along with "Liberty Bell 7", Gus Grissoms Mercury "spacecraft", which was recovered from the bottom of the Atlantic in 1999.
      Along with a Russian Soyuz, and (reportedly) the largest display of Russian/Soviet space equipment outside of Russia.
      Really. A fantastic museum, especially when you consider where it is. The locals decided they wanted to have a first class space museum, and they made it happen.

  • @daveweston5158
    @daveweston5158 Год назад +4

    Other movies to consider include (but are certainly not limited to) 'The Right Stuff', 'Hidden Figures' , and 'Apollo 11' (Which was made entirely from NASA archive footage). On a personal note, I was 7 years old when we first landed on the moon, and was captivated by news reports as they became available concerning Apollo 13... Watching this movie in 1995, I found myself holding my breath, and on the edge of my seat despite knowing the eventual outcome. It is a true pleasure to watch others watching this film for the first time, and recapturing just a bit of the wonder of experiencing something for the first time...😄

  • @Eidlones
    @Eidlones Год назад +1

    I bring this up, just cause she mentioned that they did a similar thing in Gravity, using orbit.
    How movement in space is treated in movies is pretty unrealistic, overall. Gravity is movement, and speed is distance. Outside of course corrections and speeding up/slowing down, all movement in space is based off orbit. Speeding up increasing your orbital path, slowing down decreasing it.
    So for getting to the Moon from Earth, part way up you change angle to get into orbit. You then speed up to increase your orbital path until it crosses paths with the Moon's orbit. Once you're within the Moon's gravitational field, you can alter to use that as your new center for your orbital path.
    It's why they have to leave at very specific times. The less fuel they need to use to line up an intersection with the Moon's orbit, the better.
    Saying "We just put Issac Newton in the driver's seat" is like saying "We just put the steering wheel on the car"

  • @Silas.Marner
    @Silas.Marner Год назад +3

    The real Captain Lovell said "Houston, we've had a problem." Ron Howard changed the line because he thought "we've" would confuse the viewer.

  • @gregleighton6172
    @gregleighton6172 Год назад +1

    For those interested the re-entry capsule for Apollo 13 is at the Cosmosphere in Hutchinson Kansas. It's pretty awesome. Still has the scorch marks on it from re-entry. It's a world class space museum. They even have a moon rock there.

  • @christopherkaylor2940
    @christopherkaylor2940 Год назад +5

    Two good Tom Hanks comedies from the beginning of his career are Dragnet based on the old television show and The Money Pit, "Two weeks"

  • @katheryns1219
    @katheryns1219 Год назад +1

    I remember the events well since I was in high school. Much of the world was holding its breath before they landed, and I saw the landing in real time myself. I also saw the film in the theater when it came out. The most impressive things were when the capsule was reentering the earth's atmosphere and was a stream of fire. Then the huge red and white parachutes opening had the crowd cheering. Most of the black and white news footage was real. The only thing that was really different from reality was them arguing in the capsule. That didn't really happen, but they added it for the story. (As if it needed more suspense!)

  • @paulwagner688
    @paulwagner688 Год назад +4

    The wedding ring thing actually happened. The hotel was able to recover the ring.

  • @davidnagel5795
    @davidnagel5795 Год назад +2

    Hydrogen fuel cells create electricity to run the ship. Oxygen is not just used for breathing, it is also mixed with the hydrogen to create electricity and the byproduct would be water for drinking.

  • @MagicAl56
    @MagicAl56 Год назад +3

    That was a wonderful reaction, Shanelle. I suppose another sign of a truly great movie is that even if you know the history, and even if you've seen it a few times before, the movie still affects you just as much. For me, this is one of those rare movies, and I hope it will be for you as well.

  • @tawogtrailers
    @tawogtrailers Год назад +1

    20:44 Yes that did really happen. They did have to make a co2 filter from only parts and materials they had on board

  • @ironcode
    @ironcode Год назад +6

    Haha, they couldn't pay you a million dollars to go to space, yet others would gladly pay that to go themselves 😂

  • @RetroClassic66
    @RetroClassic66 Год назад +2

    I did see this in the theater back in 1995 and it was simply riveting! Still one of the very best movies about the space program ever made, and it’s hard not to watch it to the end whenever I happen upon it while flipping channels. The way it shows the NASA engineers as heroes is a rare delight in movies. It’s not often that you see guys with slide rules and pocket protectors being treated like superheroes but these guys really were!
    I second the suggestion that you watch Philip Kaufman’s outstanding 1983 epic THE RIGHT STUFF soon. Although it takes a few creative liberties here and there with the historical reality, much of it is truthful and it’s just so wonderfully crafted and told that it’s very hard to not simply love it. A stellar ensemble cast, a sharply written script, top notch direction, beautifully accomplished visual effects, and an unforgettable Bill Conti score make it an absolute must-see!

  • @ryanh603
    @ryanh603 Год назад +10

    I remember seeing it in theaters back in ‘95 without researching the actual mission and it’s outcome, it was an emotional rollercoaster. One of Ron Howard’s trademarks is casting his family members in just about every film he does. His brother Clint was the ECON technician; father Rance was the priest at the Lovell residence, and mother Jean was Jim’s mom.

    • @John_Locke_108
      @John_Locke_108 Год назад +1

      Same here. Saw it when I was 18 at the drive-in on a date. Good date but I have zero recollection of the movie.

    • @brendaclark8344
      @brendaclark8344 Год назад +1

      And his wife is his wife in real life'

  • @z8kfltgeek
    @z8kfltgeek Год назад +1

    One more comment... during the ending voiceover, the naval officer that shakes Tom Hanks' hand is the actual Jim Lovell. Trivia: he refused to wear an admiral's uniform for the shot, as he hadn't earned it... the uniform is that of a naval captain, which is his actual rank.

  • @joanjobs4359
    @joanjobs4359 Год назад +7

    Ed Harris does a reprisal of his role, of sorts, as the voice of mission control in Gravity. Great reaction as always 👍🏻

    • @carlanderson7618
      @carlanderson7618 Год назад

      He also played Astronaut John Glenn in the 1983 move The Right Stuff

  • @rakitoon
    @rakitoon Год назад +2

    I was 14, and still very well remembered the deaths of astronauts Grissom, White, and Chaffey in the Apollo 1 fire. My most vivid memories of Apollo13 were the clear knowledge that the entire globe had stopped doing anything except holding their breath for all those days, hoping and praying. And I was terrified by the discription of the paper-thin angle of atmospheric entry that would bring them home, rather than burn them alive, or send them skipping off to their death in space. What a time. You think watching the 2-hour movie is stressful. LOL!!

  • @jw870206
    @jw870206 Год назад +3

    This movie and “Forrest Gump” introduced me to Tom Hanks.

  • @michaeldezego340
    @michaeldezego340 Год назад +2

    The balding guy in Mission Control is Ron Howard’s brother Clint. The woman who played Jim Lovell’s mother is Ron Howard’s mother. Ron Howard’s father Rance has a part as the priest sitting with the families watching the splashdown.

  • @3dbadboy1
    @3dbadboy1 Год назад +2

    The part where Ed Harris tears up after he fell back in his chair was a lot of work for him. The director watched an interview with Gene Crantz where he was so emotional talking about what happened that he almost couldn't contain his tears. The director then told Harris "that's what I want from you."

    • @Dayboot33
      @Dayboot33 Год назад +2

      It's a wonderful moment. Amidst all the clichéd cheering and paper-throwing, the true emotional reaction to a good outcome after several days of relentless tension is exactly as portrayed by Ed Harris.

    • @fallingstar9643
      @fallingstar9643 Год назад +3

      In Gene Kranz's autobiography "Failure is Not an Option", he describes the tense final hours in Mission Control; his sweaty palms curling the corners of the log-book, the deep gouges cut by his pen as he notes various events, the "seconds [turning] into minutes and minutes into infinity".
      It was a full 1 minute 28 seconds past the expected time before they had acquisition of signal. There was a brief cheer or gasp for breath around the room, but as the real Gene noted, "if a controller ever did that before the mission was over and the crew was on the carrier, that would be the last time he sat at a console." Because they were professionals. Consummate professionals.
      Even when Gene found "himself crying unabashedly, then I try to suck it in, realizing this is inappropriate. But it doesn't work; it only gets worse. I was standing at the console crying."
      ... it's an amazing book, well worth a read.

  • @johnnehrich9601
    @johnnehrich9601 Год назад +2

    Ron Howard as kid played 10-yo Winthrop Paroo in the classic 1962 Music Man (singing Gary Indiana). He also played Sheriff Andy's son on the tv series, Andy Griffith Show. As a teenager, he was a main character in Happy Days. All this before his successful career as a director.

  • @mael6834
    @mael6834 Год назад +5

    Great movie of a heroic event.

  • @1953jazzman
    @1953jazzman Год назад +1

    One of the things I most love about this movie on a personal level is that I get to see so much of real TV anchor Walter Cronkite! He was widely known as The Most Trusted Man In America! No joke. I still miss him every day.

  • @flyflorida2001
    @flyflorida2001 Год назад +3

    If you ever get to Houston, check out the tour that lets you see the original Mission Control room

  • @3dbadboy1
    @3dbadboy1 Год назад +1

    Some aerospace experts watched the simulated launch footage and saw the part where the flames seem to go in reverse under the rocket. They asked Ron Howard "How did you know that's what happens during launch?" Ron said that he didn't. That's just how it ended up.

  • @shainewhite2781
    @shainewhite2781 Год назад +3

    Nominated for 11 Oscars including Best Picture but won for Best Sound Editing and Best Film Editing.

  • @billbabcock1833
    @billbabcock1833 Год назад +1

    The news footage in the movie is actual news footage from television at the time. I was in high school when this happened and absolutely everyone was just glued to the TV. Because there was no internet or 24/7 news channels to get information it was random breaks in TV shows for information.

  • @jaymantisgaming
    @jaymantisgaming Год назад +3

    I love this movie. the whole 'houston, we have a problem'' thing, even though it WAS taken from the audio logs of the actual mission, has got to be the most over-quoted and joked-to-death things to ever come out of hollywood. we're even seeing kids movies with characters named ''Houston'' JUST so they can make that reference at one point. It gets old. Anyway, enough of my old-man ranting. thanks for the video Shanelle. It was great watching you enjoying this modern classic

    • @Parallax-3D
      @Parallax-3D 8 месяцев назад

      It’s not even a correct quote. Lovell said, “Houston, we’ve had a problem.”

  • @deano42
    @deano42 Год назад

    14:37 : "We can isolate it there, we can save what's left." And there he is, ladies and gentlemen, none other than Clint Howard ... Ron Howard's brother. He makes appearances as a character actor in many films, and I always take great joy in finding him. Like the way Bill Murray's brother, Brian Doyle Murray, shows up from time to time (the Mayor of Punxsutawney in Groundhog Day). So glad that Clint made the cut in this reaction! 😁

  • @shrodingerschat2258
    @shrodingerschat2258 Год назад +6

    It still wrecks my brain to think how important it was to have Ken Mattingly stay behind so he could figure out a startup sequence in the simulator. If he hadn't been bumped from the flight, they might not have made it home. Like Lovell ha said, you never know what events are gonna transpire to help get you home safely!

    • @vraspir123
      @vraspir123 Год назад +2

      Mattingly's work on the ground was overstated in the movie. It was very important, but he was a part of a team that worked out the procedures together.

    • @shrodingerschat2258
      @shrodingerschat2258 Год назад

      @@vraspir123 that's a very good point, it was indeed a team effort. Still his intimate familiarity with the command module as pilot cannot be overlooked and was probably vital to them being able to formulate a startup proceedure.

    • @AdamNisbett
      @AdamNisbett Год назад

      They had a whole team that were just as expert and they all helped. Swaggert had actually written the manual on emergency procedures so he was just as much an expert as Mattingly rather than a newbie as is portrayed in this movie.

  • @carlanderson7618
    @carlanderson7618 Год назад +2

    I recommend the movie The Right Stuff (1983) as a good prequel to this movie.

  • @jeffherald8542
    @jeffherald8542 Год назад +3

    "It comes after 12."

  • @flibbidyx2
    @flibbidyx2 Год назад +1

    "If you're ever a shrimp boat captain, that's the day I'm an astronaut." -Lt. Dan (Gary Sinise) to Forrest Gump (Tom Hanks). A year after that movie came out, Apollo 13 was released, and they both played astronauts.

  • @martinbraun1211
    @martinbraun1211 Год назад +13

    Please give the STAR TREK franchise a chance. 🖖

  • @garybrockie6327
    @garybrockie6327 Год назад +2

    I turned 13 one month after Apollo 13 launched. The movie largely gets things right.

  • @ll7868
    @ll7868 Год назад +15

    As a massive science geek who loves all things astronomy, cosmology and astrophysics the reason I love this movie is that it's the most historically and scientifically accurate movie ever made, ever, in all of human history. Full stop.

    • @ShanelleRiccio
      @ShanelleRiccio  Год назад +5

      I had no way of confirming but it felt that way!!

    • @ll7868
      @ll7868 Год назад

      @ShanelleRiccio I just remembered this video on Astrum's channel called "Artemis 1's Attempts To Reclaim The Moon Blew Us Away", a short 17 minute documentary on NASA's Artemis missions to colonize the moon. The space-test dummies are named Compos after Arturo Compos, the engineer who designed the fix for the Apollo 13 oxygen tank disaster. Did you know he won the Medal of Freedom for doing that? Humans will be going to the moon again in a couple years or less.

    • @ll7868
      @ll7868 Год назад

      Video is 3 weeks old (er than this video) sobit's pretty much up to date in the mission timeline.

  • @joshridderhoff2050
    @joshridderhoff2050 Год назад +2

    A couple of Howard cameos in this one: Ron’s brother Clint in mission control with the thick glasses, and Ron’s mother plays Jim Lovell’s mom.
    If you loved this, you should definitely check out the Hanks HBO miniseries ‘From the Earth to the Moon’ about the entire Apollo program. 12 episodes; absolutely stunning!

    • @radiocameron
      @radiocameron Год назад +3

      Ron's dad, Rand, plays the priest (or reverend) near the end of the film.

    • @warre1
      @warre1 Год назад +1

      Also at about 9:23 girl in yellow dress is Ron's daughter Bryce Dallas Howard.

  • @tom6039
    @tom6039 Год назад +3

    Christoper Columbus discovered the America that you are living in today.

    • @Parallax-3D
      @Parallax-3D 8 месяцев назад

      No.

    • @tom6039
      @tom6039 8 месяцев назад

      @@Parallax-3D yes

  • @bobbabai
    @bobbabai Год назад +2

    I was hoping to see the funniest moment of the movie in your video....
    That's the scene where Marilyn wants Jim's help with the oldest daughter who wants to go out wearing something Mom doesn't want her to wear. The girl asks if it's okay, and Jim's not paying attention (because he JUST FOUND OUT HE'S GOING TO THE MOON) and says, "Yeah, sure". Marilyn freaks out and Jim wakes up, suddenly realizes the gravity of the situation and he toes the line... "NO!!"
    It really showed how everyone lives in the real world and has to sometimes fulfill more than one role at a time.

  • @iKvetch558
    @iKvetch558 Год назад +3

    Keep working on the intros...but please, don't ever try "Shan Shan" again...I don't think it is the direction you want to go. LOL

    • @steriopticon2687
      @steriopticon2687 Год назад

      We are happy to see you, so not much work needs to be done.

  • @jthomann71
    @jthomann71 Год назад

    The brilliance is in the execution of a plot you know the end of before it starts and yet still manage to feel every ounce of the tension the characters feel.

  • @johnsample7391
    @johnsample7391 Год назад +1

    I attended a talk by Jim Lovell. He stated that the scene in which Haise confronts Swigert about his stirring the tanks did not actually occur.
    Just a bit of foreshadowing created by the screenwriters prior to the crew learning of the the rising CO2 levels.

  • @JoePlett
    @JoePlett Год назад +2

    I saw it first as a kid, on TV over the course of a week as it happened in real-time. This film was remarkably accurate. IMO the most accurate 'space movie' outside of documentaries. Another ....kinda... 'historical' film is Phillip Kaufmann's The Right Stuff - although the script, and the Tom Wolfe book that it was based on is (imho) more of a 'tone poem' loosely woven around actual historical timelines, it still captures the zeitgeist of the dawn of space exploration. A good movie, but I wouldn't write a history paper off it. (Although with Apollo 13, you could probably get away with it). Thanks for letting us watch it with you - and thanks for not Googling what actually happened before watching.
    One more annoying piece of trivia - there was a fictional space disaster movie called Marooned that came out around that time. THAT could not have helped Marilyn Lovell's apprehension!

  • @JeepersCreepers2013
    @JeepersCreepers2013 Год назад +1

    I saw this in a theater. The thing that amazed me is even back in 1995 it seemed that very few people knew this story, so the movie truly had you gripped all the way through. There's a bonus DVD set with Jim and Marylin Lovell commenting over the entire movie. It's literally priceless in my opinion. You get to hear them talk about what actually happened and what was Hollywood. The car stalling and the ring were all true but when you see the movie you're thinking no way did this all happen.