Think you know all about the July 1969 Apollo 11 space flight when men first landed upon and explored the surface of the moon? (No, not really.) Saw it live when you were a kid back then? (I did.) Read all about over the past fifty years? (Some, but, no, not much.) Saw the movie "First Man" last year? (Well, yeah, I did.)
Regardless of how you answer those questions, you haven't seen anything yet until and unless you see the new documentary, "Apollo 11", from CNN Films. It is complied from thousands of hours of film that was taken by NASA to document the Apollo 11 mission, and when you watch this, you will see it from points of view that you have never seen, or can probably even imagine. I'll give you just two examples:
- The cameras in place at the foot of the rocket as the spacecraft is launched from the Cape Kennedy launch pad.
- The film from Columbia as the Eagle comes into view, approaches, and then docks with the the command module upon its return from the surface of the moon.
There is no narrator in this film. No current interviews with participants looking back on the event. Just films taken as the events were happening, from the transport of the rocket ship to the pad at Cape Kennedy to Eagle's landing at Tranquility Base to Armstrong and Aldrin frolicking on the lunar surface to the splashdown of the ship in the Pacific.
Seeing this movie from the perspective of fifty years after the fact makes you still marvel and wonder about the total magnitude of the entire undertaking. "Apollo 11" is an engrossing and amazing look at perhaps the most significant scientific and technological event in all of history. Awesome in the truest meaning of the word.
Four Stars from The Grandstander.
Armstrong, Aldrin, and Collins
each turned 39 years of age in 1969
That command module was 320 feet
off the ground when on the launch pad
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