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In The Shadow Of The Moon
By Rich Drees
On May 25, 1961, President John F. Kennedy challenged the nation to
put a man on the moon. While he never lived to see that dream
realized, a small handful of Americans lived it in a way no others
would, by actually making that perilous trip through the void of
space to become the first humans to set foot on a non-terrestrial
body. And while much has been produced about the Apollo Moon
Missions and the men who flew them, In The Shadow Of The Moon
is perhaps the most comprehensive and intimate telling of those
events, in the words of the astronauts themselves.
Although often
presented as possessing a sort of cowboy courage, the Apollo
astronauts in both archive film footage and the contemporary
interviews done specifically for the film come off as highly skilled
professionals who knew the dangers of what they were attempting and
who made sure that their training was thorough enough to not let
them take reckless chances. In fact, some of them were downright
skeptical and a bit apprehensive about the moon program at it’s
start. “It looked like a quick way to have a short career,” recalled
Jim Lovell, referencing the problems NASA was having with keeping
their Atlas booster rockets from explosively malfunctioning.
The film never
treats the Apollo astronauts as figures chiseled into the marble of
history. Instead, it lets them be themselves, telling their stories
often with a touch of humility and, more often than not, more than a
touch of humor. The biggest laugh in the film comes from Buzz
Aldrin’s slightly red-faced confession of what he was the first man
on the moon to do. Conversely, Gene Cernan talks about the guilt he
felt over working on the Apollo program while others were fighting
and dieing in the jungles of Vietnam. It was something he had only
discussed with a few close friends and family members before now and
though he has long since come to terms with these feelings, we can
still see the pain and discomfort it causes him to talk about now.
In addition to
the frank and revealing interviews with the Apollo astronauts, In
The Shadow Of The Moon is a must see for space program
enthusiasts for the spectacular archival film footage, much of which
has never been released publicly before. From being close-up to the
raw power of the Apollo rockets at liftoff to the fiery view out the
capsule window at the beginning of atmospheric re-entry, the film
puts us not only into the astronauts’ eyes’ view of the mission, but
any where we need to be to see the scope of the massive human
achievement that was the Apollo lunar program. |