Apollo 13 (1995) - Suiting Up Scene (2/11) | Movieclips
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- Опубликовано: 2 авг 2017
- Apollo 13 - Suiting Up: The Apollo 13 crew (Tom Hanks, Bill Paxton, Kevin Bacon) prepares for launch while Kranz (Ed Harris) receives a new vest from his wife.
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• Apollo 13 (1995) | Mov...
FILM DESCRIPTION:
This Hollywood drama is based on the events of the Apollo 13 lunar mission, astronauts Jim Lovell (Tom Hanks), Fred Haise (Bill Paxton) and Jack Swigert (Kevin Bacon) find everything going according to plan after leaving Earth's orbit. However, when an oxygen tank explodes, the scheduled moon landing is called off. Subsequent tensions within the crew and numerous technical problems threaten both the astronauts' survival and their safe return to Earth.
CREDITS:
TM & © Universal (1995)
Cast: Bill Paxton, Ed Harris, Kathleen Quinlan, Kevin Bacon, Tom Hanks
Director: Ron Howard
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Guenter Wendt (the guy shaking Jim’s hand) was affectionately known as the “Pad Fuhrer” for his strict discipline and following the rules on the launch pad. And he was probably the most respected person around there who wasn’t an astronaut! Wally Schirra said he would never have climbed into Apollo 7 if Guenter wasn’t there overseeing it!
"I guess we can go now, Gene" I've been in theater for twenty years and we live for lines like that.
Everything Ron Howard did on Apollo 13 was extraordinary: the costumes, the sets, the props, the musical score, the actors who do the characters, even the historical accuracy. He made one of the best docu-dramas in Hollywood history.
The only problem was the real Lovell and Haise didn't like how they treated Swigert's character.
The score, the platform walk, and handshake give me the chills every single time!
The people who say the ISS if fake. Need to be locked up in a mental institution.
@@ryancool-pq5vu People who say the whole moon landing was fake need to be locked up in a mental institution.
The guy who shakes his hand is Gunter Vendt. The leader of the pad. Was affectionately known as the "Fuhrer of the launch pad" as a testament to how respected he was by astronauts and ground crew alike for his almost fanatical view of safety!
Yes! So good
2:35 Fun Fact: Gene Krantz (Ed Harris) had a different vest for each mission, handmade by his wife.
I love how it's not just Jim, Jack, and Fred suiting up before the launch, but it's also Gene "suiting up" before the launch with the vest his wife made him.
His autobiography is an incredible read; I highly recommend it!
The white team was the best 😉, all the flight directors had a color, for anyone who was thinking this had to do with race. 😔 I have to even mention that.
@@cloverazar5315 You mean failure is not an option. It's a good book. One thing he remembers very vividly is the moon landing in 69
@@Drummerchick2003 Of course it had nothing to do with race. It was just to help them differentiate between each other
@@operation1968 one of my favourites! “Tough/Competent” is literally my personal mantra of choice.
Favorite line: “thank you Tom, I was starting to get worried”
The other mission control workers had been making fun of his last vest, but gene pays no mind and I just love it
His wife made him a vest every launch, almost like a good luck charm.
@@Drummerchick2003 plus Gene's wife would make vests (in the color of the Lead Flight Director's team color) for missions that Gene wasn't flight director on (he worked only the odd-numbered Apollo missions until Apollo 15, then worked on Apollo 16 and Apollo 17, after which he moved to the back row of Mission Control consoles reserved for the "brass" (being the JSC Director Bob Gilruth and his successor Christopher Kraft, Apollo Program director George Low, Dept. of Defense flag officers, etc.), as well as colorful "splashdown vests" (the most famous being the red, white, and blue striped vest for Apollo 17's splashdown).
@@rwboa22 yeah took me a long time to realize that every FD team had a color 🤣, the more you learn.
I love the handshake at 2:32, such a simple gesture, a gesture of respect and admiration, a gesture that transpires space and time between two men to remind each other to remember one another when one of them steps into the great unknown despite the unpredictable. :)
Love that moment when he gives him a very subtle nod that's powerful I think, it's ultimately what I love about NASA, what I wouldn't quite literally give to even just sweep the floor in the places where they make that kind of thing ugh lol.
No serious its respectful hugely everyone that works there no matter who you are or where you come from it's NASA's sort of ethos and I freaking love it!
That's supposed to be Günter Wendt.
That was actually beautiful
Auf Wiedersehen Guenter Wendt
it was a powerful moment
RIP Bill Paxton. The only actor to go to the moon and survive an F5 tornado on screen!
Every launch, Gene Kranz's wife would sew him a vest. It's so beautiful.
I keep forgetting that Mary Haise was pregnant with her youngest child when this all happened. Also the whole thing with the vest was what Kranz's was known for. He liked wearing three pieced suits so his wife would make him a vest for every mission and this started all the way back in the Gemini mission days. So Kranz not wearing a new vest for mission would be a big deal.
I have heard that the vest worn during the Apollo 13 mission is now in the Smithsonian.
@@grizzfan08 It is, and from what I understand, this movie made it quite the popular attraction for some time after it was released!
@@19TheFallen We call it a waistcoat
I think you're right. I went to that museum in DC a few years ago. God it was awesome. I was compulsive and taking pictures in the hundreds like a guy on crack. I was like a hyperactive kid being let loose in a candy shop while already on a sugar rush
You know Gene Krantz wrote a memoir about his NASA career and I think he says says something about that. I've read most of it, still meaning to finish it someday 😅
R.I.P. Bill Paxton (1955-2017)
This was one of my first favorite movies. Used to watch it all the time as a kid, sitting on the rug in pajamas while trying to build the Saturn V out of legos. Definitely played a big part in my lifelong love of space.
I'd be lying on the floor with my legs up on the sofa for launch and reentry
My dad used to put me in a detached car seat and shake it, of course he only showed me the launch scene ...until he left the tape running while he was on a phone call and by the time he came back all he and mom could do was sit with me and help me see it through to the end.
I did the same thing.
My old man got me a three foot complete Saturn V model when this movie was my life. Took a detour from a trip back home to WA from FL going all the way DC just for the Smithsonian gift shop, because his little son said he wanted a Saturn V when asked what he wanted from Florida. We really didn't have the money for that detour. I played with that thing non stop and you can bet your butt that it was always Jim, Jack and Fred in the command module. Got it signed by Buzz Aldrin two years later. It was a beautiful time.
Same. When I watched it as a kid, and even now, I absolutely loved this movie. When I was a kid, I loved it so much, I would watch it, rewind the VHS, watch it again, rewind the VHS, and repeat. I think the most I watched it in a day was 5 or 6 times?
RIP Bill Paxton
RIP James Horner
RIP Jack Swigert
Johnny Cash died September 12, 2003
Bob Hope died July 27, 2003
Steve Jobs died October 5, 2011
No more jobs no more cash no more hope!
Kevin bacon PLEASE DON’T DIE!
@@76tennboyNah, Kevin Bacon'll live to 93, mark my words :)
2:26 I just learned about that guy who tightens the straps and talks with an accent. That's Günter Wendt. A German-born American pad crew supervisor. He worked on pretty much ALL of the manned space flight missions. He's the last guy the astronauts would see before the hatch was closed. He's probably the guy who was most respected by the astronauts. Look it up. That's an amazing detail just to hear that short line said with a German accent. This movie is a masterpiece.
First they are secretly terrified about going into space,then a foot comes down and beats the hell out of them.
The best thing is that he didn't work for NASA, he worked for McDonnel Aircraft who built the Mercury and Gemini capsules. He was so well liked by the astronauts that when Gemini ended and Apollo started he was persuaded to move to North American Aviation who built the Apollo spacecraft so he could keep doing the same job.
He would also wear a swastika on his hat, he became such a pre launch good luck superstition that when NASA told him to lose the swastika and he refused the pilots said they wouldn't do another flight without him and NASA conceded.
0:14 I’m gonna give these guys a beautiful ride.
The way that Kevin Bacon said that line was masterful.
It's my favorite too! Love Kevin Bacon!
Confession time... I'm won't tell how many times I've watch Apollo 13 but it's way more than 20 plus, plus, plus times. And it's on right now. I stopped by to see one of my favorite scenes:
JIM LOVELL - Ah, Guenter Wendt! [with heavy German accent] I wonder where Guenter went!
GUENTER WENDT - Jim... Ha, ha... You walk on ze Moon eh?
JIM LOVELL - Ja, ja. We'll walk, and we talk on ze Moon :-)))
In real life, the "Vonder vere Geunter vent" line was Donn Eisle on Apollo 7....kinda glad they snuck it in here.
I'm watching it rn
At this point, I’ve seen the movie so many times that it’s less like a movie and more like a love affair. It’s perfect, the acting, the score, the timing, the dialogue, all of it
Apollo 13's cinematography and visual effects, are better than even some films today!
I love how they even got the detail of them in the right seats for the launch. The commander sat in the left seat, the command module pilot in the center, and the lunar module pilot in the right. To make it even better, they got the seating right for the landing too, since the command module pilot and commander would swap places.
1:02 the music here is sublime, it makes me feel the adventure of going into outer space.
That is so sweet that Gene actually appreciated his wife making that for him. What a nice touch to this movie.
Oh god, the score
This one part always sends tingles down my spine.
Gorgeous.
Beautiful work by James Horner, God rest his soul.
^ well that was weird
1:45 The White Vest has arrived This is what makes Gene (The Bulldog) Kranz Gene (The Bulldog) Kranz now we can have a mission.
I love the score when they're suiting up and getting ready to launch into space!
i love it when space movies have that moment when the main astronaut has that nervous/will we make it? kind of face when they're suiting up or after they close the hatch to the canopy
@@deaniture true, astronauts are usually positive
That's how I dress to go food shopping now
LOL
This movie was worthy to be a Best Picture winner.
2:39 love the way Gene (Ed Harris) brushes off their applause like "Oh stop it you guys... ", you can tell that he and the other staff of mission control have quite a close bond that is also evident with their bantering remarks ("Hey Gene! I guess we can go now" and "Save it for splashdown")
Gene: Opens a box with a vest
Random Tech: GOOD JOB GENE!!!!
The first i watched this film was in 2020 on Netflix and I was truly awed at how well it was made. I quickly recognised the titanic music in the film, hich was also an amazing movie. Apollo 13 is one of the timeless films alongside Titanic, Star Wars and Lord of the Rings which never get boring to watch over and over :)
I remember seeing this in the theater and as the suspense was building toward the launch, I jumped when the hatch locked. It seemed unusually loud in the theater. Lol
Love this movie
Lucky, i’d have loved to have seen this in the theatre
One of the greatest movies ever
Amazing music in this movie. Timeless.
Those costumes are phenomenal. They look like real, functional suits.
2:48 I really like the hatch part because of the sound effect
There is a foreboding quality to this scene involving the hatch to Apollo 13.
The beginning of the movie, we see the Apollo 1 fire and the astronauts couldn’t get out because of the sealed hatch
And when Apollo 13 is being secured for launch, we get another shot of the updated hatch. Locking the astronauts in the rocket.
Like this ship will either save your life, or be your grave.
That's a great point! There's so much wonder in the mechanics but at the same time so much foreboding in that shot. The very loud sound of the lock, the sense of final separation from the outside world, the eye contact. One of my favorites shots for sure
Brings a tear to my eye. Humans are amazing
I like that waistcoat gift for gene 🎉
If you ask me being an astronaut is the most admired profession
Who’s watching during the launch today
Soyouz is becoming prehistorical ! In term of confort, no more "sardine" in space !
@@bo2web I am from russia.I think Elon Musk rocket is not only American achievement,i think that it is a global achievement
After the discussion in Lovell’s son’s bedroom about the fire and the hatch that couldn’t be opened, director Howard shows the 13 hatch bing closed and secured. And the audience can see what a complex structure it is. That’s visual storytelling.
1970 was the last year we peaked as a society, it's all been downhill since. Too bad. We had such selfless wonderful men and women of courage!
Am I the only who finds the term
“I’m gonna give these guys a beautiful ride”
EXTREMELY DOUBLE MEANING
1:34 goosebumps!
It’s a really nice vest. White for White Team too (aka Tiger Team), one of the three Mission Control Teams.
Stunning soundtrack
One of if not the biggest injustice in the history of the academy awards.
Certainly second to Denzel in Malcolm X.
Apollo 13 lost to Braveheart for best costume.
These are 100% accurate replica A7-L Apollo Spacesuuts.
It has been demonstrated that NONE of the costumes in Braveheart were historically accurate.
And people want to deny this ever happened so they can feel big.
Ikr
And in the end, it just makes them look.......small, if you ask me.......
The score... James Horner at his best!!
I love Apollo 13 crew named Jim Lovel Fred Haise and Jack Swigert
that is such a bill paxton thing to do, i can't suspend my disbelief long enough to imagine he became an astronaut.
Interesting factoid. Those were not costumes. Those were real NASA pressure suits Tom, Bill and Kevin were being put into. Kevin even commented by saying when you're in a real pressure suit when you haven't been trained physically for it, that they make you incredibly sleepy. The feeling of having your entire body so constricted and having to rely on the oxygen being pumped through the suit.
Imagine if it had 13 clips
1:27 I would never have the courage to do that! The courage they must have had. Wow! Risking their lives for science. How do they do it.
Short answer: it was the 1960's. And men were very different back then, than today.
That look at 2:34 is so powerful. He knows there's a not-insignificant chance that he's shaking the hand of the last man who will see him alive if something goes wrong during the launch if the emergency abort fails.
If you get a chance go the Space Center in Huntsville Alabama. They have some great displays including an example of the catwalk leading to the rocket and mock up of the booster rockets. It’s well worth the trip.
Great music too !
Is it just me, or does it look like the ground camera mounts are based on the M-16 or M-15 Multiple Gun Carriage Mounts, just with cameras instead of .50 cal. Machineguns?
In this scene you can see and even feel what the 3 men feel when the hatch closes and it is just them.
Tom Hanks is sooooo young
He was in his 30s when this movie was filmed
Tom hasnt aged NEARLY as much as Ed Harris has tho
R. I. P. Bill Paxton (May 17, 1955-February 25, 2017)
R. I. P. James Horner (August 14, 1953-June 22, 2015)
R. I. P. Jack Swigert (August 30, 1931-December 27, 1982)
RIP Guenter Wendt
Cutting this scene down to three minutes is an injustice.
I would have been freakin nervous as hell. I can feel their tension in this scene
Music is great in this scene. Rip Horner and Paxton.
Strange but true: Even though we could go to the moon in 1969, we could not today, even if we wanted to use the exact same rocket we used back then.
The rockets are gone, the factories that made the rockets and all the other parts for it are gone. All those trained workers that worked in those factories are either retired or dead.
Even many of the blueprints and designs for all those parts are either gone or rolled up in some drawer, half torn up by now. Basically, the people and the knowledge for that type of technology is now gone. It's incredible when you think about it.
Happens to all complex technology that you stop building for 50 years which involves a lot of manual tweaking by experienced engineers, because you can put almost everything into blueprints except experience.
I recall a story that Jaguar wanted to make a very limited anniversary edition of one of their cars from 40 or 50 years ago and they could not get the windshield right whatever they tried. They had to get an old glassmaker out of retirement in order to make them a few of them exactly to spec. If that guy would not have been alive, they would have been left with the choice to either build it not to original specs, to keep trying to get it right or simply don't make it at all.
The woman with the Red Hair at 1:21 is the actual Marilyn Lovell.
Where at exactly?
@@scoggins07 next to the woman in the pink dress
America was great and will be great. We will get through these tough times!!
Just realised that Lovell was older than Kranz
Fun fact. It was actually Don Eisle that said "I Vander vere Gunter Vendt".
The damn zoom Cameras look like the Teenagers from the Army could use them.... Or at least those trained on AA Guns.
Rip that will be rememberd
2:36 Plot twist: this is the actual suit up scene
Thanks
I've been in a full diving drysuit, which is restrictive. Those suits were very restrictive and claustrophobic. Hats off.
Bill Paxton RIP Ture American Hero
Will this ever happen again ? I was 15 when Apollo 11 landed on the Moon in 1969 and we didn't even have Cell-Phones yet !
The biggest takeaway from this movie is the absolute reverence and professionalism every single person put forth for NASA. The golden age of USA was so short lived.
We are going back to the moon.
I do like Apollo 13 and I'm going to be an Astronaut and go to space, be in a rocket and wear boots, space suit, headset and space helmet with visor
2:36 LOL
Imagine giving a middle finger inside the suit
Never ask a man his salary, a woman her age, or what Guenter was doing between 1939-1945.
"I goT30days tiL this bLasT off"
Everything in the suit is spot on, except one thing, I think: the snoopy cap strap. It didn't cover their chins but went close to the throat. Why did they come up with something so different from the real thing?
Gene Kranz still using those vests in every interview...he´s 86 now...
You can't argue with tradition.
It’s buzz light year!
I would feel terrified knowing that the suit I have on could be the only thing between me and certain death in the empty void of space.
Every inch of you and surrounded by death
I can never remember Gene's last name. I always get it mixed up with Kerman because I play too much Kerbal Space Program lol
0:56 That's actual Marilyn Lovell on right side, behind that man with camera. :)
It’s Blast Off time 🚀
Great
They get off of their suits when engine cuts off
The future will be better in time.
2:15
Sad the true the excitement of going the moon had worn off by that time. I think some people thought they would find something mysterious up there. And the public opinion was all the money it was costing.
0:50 Somewhere in there is supposed to be Marilyn Lovell. The real one.
1:21 THERE she is...
Damn it took you a whole month to find her
It is exciting to think that finally we're going back there. Another crew of Americans will soon be suiting up just like this.
Really neilarmstrong is great. He is one of the god.
astronaughts have already landed on the moon. sadly apollo 13 is mostly remembered because the mission was a failure.
Regarding Apollo 11.... where were these assistants hiding in the lunar module?