APOLLO 13 (1995) | FIRST TIME WATCHING | MOVIE REACTION

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  • Опубліковано 3 чер 2024
  • APOLLO 13 (1995) | FIRST TIME WATCHING | MOVIE REACTION
    FULL UNCUT REACTIONS
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 194

  • @robertjewell9727
    @robertjewell9727 22 дні тому +32

    "I've tasted the moon and I've tasted the clouds" is probably the most poetic comment give a lever heard regarding this film.

    • @Charles-yt5ve
      @Charles-yt5ve 22 дні тому +3

      I'm trying to rationalize if it was poetic; I've listened to astronauts and one in particular described space in taste/smell. What was his response? "Gun powder." Ryl freaks me out, dude. She's so smart it's scary.

    • @larrybremer4930
      @larrybremer4930 22 дні тому +4

      @@Charles-yt5ve I had come to make that same comment, that the moon smells like gunpowder. Look at microscopic images of the lunar regolith and it looks like shards of broken glass, not anything you want to be breathing, its also incredibly abrasive to anything it gets on.

  • @llanitedave
    @llanitedave 22 дні тому +20

    The good news: The scene where Marilyn Lovell lost her wedding ring in the hotel shower actually happened, but she eventually got it back.

    • @lianabaddley8217
      @lianabaddley8217 22 дні тому +1

      Thank you! Every time i see this, it hurts my heart.

    • @dpiland2
      @dpiland2 21 день тому +1

      @@lianabaddley8217 If I recall the hotel staff jumped into action on this according to an interview I watched of the Lovells.

    • @lianabaddley8217
      @lianabaddley8217 20 днів тому

      @@dpiland2 wow! I can imagine her emotions going from OMG NO!! To. OMG! Thank you so much! One extreme to another.

    • @Trifler500
      @Trifler500 13 днів тому

      They were talking about the replacing the water treatment plant on the news recently, and the man they were interviewing said someone's fake teeth came through the system one day, and that person actually came down to get them. :)

  • @flannelguydiy6458
    @flannelguydiy6458 23 дні тому +54

    My uncle was one of the electrical engineers working for Grumman to help get Apollo 13 back down to earth. I learned most of what I know about how to work with electricity from him.

    • @bahhab9361
      @bahhab9361 22 дні тому

      Must really sucked to have work for an organization full of liars and con men. A nice little compartmentalized work environment. Mankind has not and will not ever leave the upper stratosphere. ua-cam.com/video/ghWfhMDRIqU/v-deo.html&ab_channel=EricDubay best of lucky young man, may you be guided to the truth and not fall under your preconceptions

    • @scottallen6160
      @scottallen6160 22 дні тому +1

      My cousin worked there too.

  • @Roddy556
    @Roddy556 22 дні тому +16

    The Captain who shakes Lovell's hand on the carrier is played by the real Jim Lovell.

  • @humanconnectionaddict6765
    @humanconnectionaddict6765 22 дні тому +20

    44:20 -- that man who is supposed to be a senior naval officer/admiral congratulating Tom Hanks is Jim Lovell -- the Jim Lovell.

    • @donsample1002
      @donsample1002 21 день тому +2

      He was a captain. They offered to make him an admiral, but he said he’d retired from the Navy as a captain, so he’d play a captain.
      Marilyn Lovell was also in the stands in front of Kathleen Quinlan during the launch sequence.

  • @theveryworstluck1894
    @theveryworstluck1894 22 дні тому +17

    If you listen to the actual recording of the real astronauts from Apollo 13, they never sound upset or scared. They're all cool as a cucumber throughout the whole ordeal. They had to add drama between the astronauts to make the movie more compelling, because, in real life, you don't get to be an astronaut without being cool under pressure.

    • @actaeon299
      @actaeon299 22 дні тому +3

      yup. Was just coming to make the same comment.

    • @petemiller2920
      @petemiller2920 21 день тому +4

      Ya, I found the audio when they had to do that engine burn on the way back from the moon to the earth. It didn’t sound like a big ordeal at all. That’s ok. I understand they want to make a movie entertaining. The real thing was still dangerous and an incredible feat of human collaboration.

    • @theveryworstluck1894
      @theveryworstluck1894 21 день тому +1

      @@petemiller2920 100%

  • @citylife80
    @citylife80 22 дні тому +17

    Every astronaut back then was given a Corvette Stingray from Chevy. That's why they all drive those cars.

    • @fixfalcon2628
      @fixfalcon2628 21 день тому +2

      They weren't "given" Corvettes. General Motors gave the astronauts a generous 1-dollar a year lease on GM vehicles, and most astronauts chose the Corvette.

    • @Nonya_Concern
      @Nonya_Concern 14 днів тому +1

      ​​@@fixfalcon2628 exactly. Frank Borman for instance chose a pickup truck (forgot what specific make/model) and even John Glenn chose a minivan if i recall correctly. Jim Lovell did have a corvette except it was blue instead of red as depicted in this movie.

  • @GaParanormal
    @GaParanormal 22 дні тому +49

    Jim Lovell is my Grandpa .... lol I love watching ppl react to this movie . I'm an astrophysicist, I worked at Nasa and now I'm in Geneva Switzerland working in the LHC .. just waiting on my turn to go up. !!

    • @Roddy556
      @Roddy556 22 дні тому +4

      That's awesome! I have a signed copy of Lost Moon.

    • @mem1701movies
      @mem1701movies 22 дні тому +3

      I don’t like how overly dramatic some parts are. In the actual tapes he sounds matter of fact and cool as a cucumber

    • @Roddy556
      @Roddy556 22 дні тому +4

      @mem1701movies I'm usually pretty critical of dramatizing historical events but even I would say an hour and a half of the crew being robotic wouldn't make for an amazing movie like this was.

    • @dragontears
      @dragontears 22 дні тому +1

      Woah. What a cool in comments discovery! Hope you get your eventual journey! And that its awesome!

    • @phillyphan1225
      @phillyphan1225 22 дні тому +1

      So you are an astrophysicist who worked at NASA? Do all astrophysicists have workout pic for their profile and make comments to reactors like you do? Lol😅😅

  • @wheelmanstan
    @wheelmanstan 22 дні тому +21

    You two are my favorite at reactions. Always the best films, no nonsense and you always have a great discussion after the film. And you appreciate the work and magic of film. Perfection!

  • @BouillaBased
    @BouillaBased 22 дні тому +10

    It says a lot about a movie based on actual events if knowing the outcome doesn't do much to dispel the tension of the ending. This one just full-on delivers. About the only unbelievable part was the conflict. That was all added for dramatic effect. If you listen to the communications of the actual mission, you will be bored to tears.

  • @justinpitcock5312
    @justinpitcock5312 22 дні тому +5

    Forrest and Lt. Dan, a winning combination that’ll make any movie better.

  • @chadro_g1145
    @chadro_g1145 22 дні тому +13

    The oxygen is used in a chemical reaction, this makes fresh air, heat, which turns into energy, fuel, and fresh water. Loosing that one thing crippled the craft damn near completely. That’s why power became an issue from just loosing oxygen.
    The reason he only figure the oxygen numbers for two people is based off of the craft they were in. If things had went normally, Jack would have stayed on the orbiter and the other two guys would have took the lander down. Everything they had rehearsed was based on just two people in the lander. It was math he was used to doing for their supply depletion rates.

  • @jackransom.
    @jackransom. 22 дні тому +4

    damn good flick. I remember getting teary eyed in the theater when he was imagining himself on the moon.

  • @GaParanormal
    @GaParanormal 22 дні тому +5

    The most accurate space film ever made ... right down to the physics ..and the exact dialog ....great movie ..other movies are cringe but this one is a masterpiece...they got soo lucky

    • @paulsander5433
      @paulsander5433 22 дні тому +1

      The "Apollo 11" documentary that came out around 2019 was pretty good, as was the "From the Earth to the Moon" TV mini-series.

    • @GaParanormal
      @GaParanormal 22 дні тому

      @paulsander5433 yup iv seen them all .... they had less than a 1% chance of making it back home . Cause of wat u do for a living I nitpick space movies lol I can't help it .. but down to the minutely small detail they nailed it ...physics and all .

  • @MoMoMyPup10
    @MoMoMyPup10 22 дні тому +2

    This is one of the most accurate portrayals of a true story ever filmed. The only real error was the guys arguing up there, which never happened.

  • @adriancastillo1957
    @adriancastillo1957 22 дні тому +3

    “I’ve tasted the moon. I’ve tasted the clouds.” I believe her.

  • @technofilejr3401
    @technofilejr3401 22 дні тому +3

    36:59 Most people only see the early astronauts as pilots. These guys were extremely educated many with Masters degrees and PhDs in various sciences and engineering.
    So when Swigert says “I can add” that was a serious over simplification. He was also one of the engineers designing systems for the flight.

  • @Charles-yt5ve
    @Charles-yt5ve 23 дні тому +16

    I love this channel, I love these two, and I love their reactions. And I lived through the 70s and 80s. This is almost the perfect movie.

    • @MoMoMyPup10
      @MoMoMyPup10 22 дні тому +1

      I take it you also lived through the 90's and 2000's? 😉

  • @chadro_g1145
    @chadro_g1145 22 дні тому +7

    The wives were taught how to answer the media by NASA. That’s why they added that “proud, happy, and thrilled” part. The DVD for this has two great extra audio tracks. One is Ron Howard, the director, giving a lot of technical details about how it was made. The lady playing Jim’s mom in the nursing home is Ron Howard’s mom. She’s has the best line in the movie about her Jimmy landing a washing machine. The guy that says the IRS is “no joke, they’ll jump on ya”, he’s Ron’s brother.
    The other audio track in Jim Lovell himself and his wife. They both add so much to the story. Hands down my favorite DVD ever.
    Gene Kranz, the real guy being played by Ed Harris, the one wearing the vest, wrote a book, I’ve got the audio version, about his time at NASA. It’s called “Failure is not an option”, just like the line in the movie. From the book he also adds so many details to this, and many other missions.

    • @SteveLeicht1
      @SteveLeicht1 22 дні тому

      I tear up when she says he could land a washing machine.

    • @paulsander5433
      @paulsander5433 22 дні тому

      Ron Howard's father played the priest who comforted Marilyn Lovell during the reentry.
      The naval officer who shook Tom Hanks' hand and shoulder on the deck of the aircraft carrier at the end during Tom's narration was played by Jim Lovell.

  • @chuckschulze6877
    @chuckschulze6877 22 дні тому +6

    There were several great movies about the early space program.
    "The right stuff" starts at the very beginning.
    It's long but it's well worth watching.
    "Hidden figures" is really really good as well.
    When you consider what they had to work with back then and what they accomplished....
    They did almost all the math by pencil and paper.
    The best computers we do big they filled warehouses and has less ability than a pocket calculator.
    Love the great reactions ladies. Keep up the great work

    • @llanitedave
      @llanitedave 22 дні тому +2

      Hidden Figures is a must see!

  • @chadro_g1145
    @chadro_g1145 22 дні тому +6

    I’ve always thought it must have been fate that got Ken grounded. He knew both spacecraft like the back of his hand. If he hadn’t been there to figure out the reentry procedure, who knows if Jack could have?

    • @ganymeade275
      @ganymeade275 22 дні тому +1

      Quite a few people,it coming from Mattingly was just the movie simplifying things, there was a team of astronauts and engineers working on that problem, although he was one of them

    • @llanitedave
      @llanitedave 22 дні тому +6

      Jack Swigert also knew the spacecraft like the back of his hand. He helped design it. The movie badly minimized his qualifications and his skill. If the roles had been reversed, and Mattingly had been in Space and Jack on the ground, he could have worked out the problems just as well.

    • @MightyDrakeC
      @MightyDrakeC 16 днів тому

      @@llanitedave Actually, Swigert didn't help design the Command Module. But, he did write the manual for the emergency procedures. So, he did know the systems intimately.
      Ken Mattingly wasn't the only perfectionist in the astronaut corp. All of them were serious Type A personalities.
      The movie greatly simplified things, and had a lot of consolidation characters, where one person stood for many people. Having said that, for a Hollyweird movie, this one has a much higher ratio of actual real facts than most movies.

  • @FrancisXLord
    @FrancisXLord 22 дні тому +3

    The LEM (Lunar Excursion Module) was only designed for two people, since the pilot was intended to stay in the command module orbiting the Moon. Thus it is understandable when Fred Haise accidentally calculated the carbon dioxide levels based on two people instead of three. A fundamental mistake that I could see myself making.

  • @reneerocha1796
    @reneerocha1796 22 дні тому +3

    26:15 that’s exactly right. It was meant to be that Ken Mattingly was here and not on the ship. Hes the only person who could have been in the simulator and worked all the scenarios and helped to get them home. 😊

  • @YoureMrLebowski
    @YoureMrLebowski 22 дні тому +4

    24:16 "i've tasted the moon before." -Ryl
    tell us more.

  • @reneerocha1796
    @reneerocha1796 23 дні тому +6

    One of my ALL TIME FAVS!!!! 😊❤ Happy to watch with y’all! 😊

  • @user-kj5iu8bs1p
    @user-kj5iu8bs1p 21 день тому +1

    "We've never lost an American in space, we're not going to on my watch!" Sometimes leaders need to take charge, stop collaborating & set the tone. I love that moment in the movie.

  • @iKvetch558
    @iKvetch558 23 дні тому +12

    Fun fact "consolation prize"...since they did not go into orbit around the Moon on their free return trajectory, Apollo 13 traveled a bit further away from Earth than all of the other flights to the Moon. So to this day, Lovell, Haise, and Swigert hold the record for the farthest distance from Earth people have ever traveled.
    Also., a terrific quote I encountered recently has to do with Apollo 13..."NASA is absolutely not superstitious, but you can bet they will never launch anything numbered "13" ever again." Not sure if that is a real quote...but it does not seem that NASA has sent anything into space with the number 13 on it ever since, though commercial satellite companies have.

    • @NatPat-yj2or
      @NatPat-yj2or 22 дні тому

      We have gone much farther than that... they just don't tell is about the SSP. where 500-700 billion magically disappears into every year. Crazy shit is going on but the general public doesn't need to know because there are too many idiots and freaks running around that would cause so, so, so many problems and it would become a huge mess.

    • @wheelmanstan
      @wheelmanstan 22 дні тому +1

      that's interesting, and buildings don't have a 13th floor either, they usually skip that number and I think even around the world they do it

    • @ganymeade275
      @ganymeade275 22 дні тому +1

      When they first started space shuttle flights they were numbered in order, they changed the system after 9, at least partially to avoid having STS-13. One of the space shuttle test flights did use 13 but that was only in atmosphere

    • @terencemccormick8178
      @terencemccormick8178 22 дні тому +1

      I have seen the relevant clip of Lovell. I believe it's in the DVD extras of the documentary In the Shadow of the Moon. It's true. He said that.

  • @lazyperfectionist1
    @lazyperfectionist1 22 дні тому +1

    44:22 This officer that Tom Hanks is shaking hands with, in this moment, is the real life Jim Lovell.

  • @MrKINSM
    @MrKINSM 22 дні тому +5

    Kevin Bacon definitely does not want to be remembered as the Hollow Man.

  • @blueeyedcowboy8291
    @blueeyedcowboy8291 22 дні тому +2

    THANK YOU so much for finally showing us what you say at the beggining of every reaction. I have always wondered, but never asked. This is a great movie. Virtual hug.

  • @michaelfisher1395
    @michaelfisher1395 21 день тому +1

    The Navy Captain Tom Hanks shakes hands with at the end is the real Jim Lovell.

  • @andreww1225
    @andreww1225 22 дні тому +3

    Yes this actually happened

  • @mikealvarez2322
    @mikealvarez2322 22 дні тому +2

    I vividly remember being glued to a radio or TV during these events. I lived in NC while the rest of my Family lived in Miami. My sister-in-law and her husband lived in Cocoa Beach, 1/2 hour from the Cape. Every time we would visit family I would stop to tour the Cape I was fascinated with space travel.❤😊

  • @brandonflorida1092
    @brandonflorida1092 22 дні тому +2

    When they returned, the Grumman company, which built the lunar module, sent a joke towing bill to North American Rockwell, which built the command module.

  • @lazyperfectionist1
    @lazyperfectionist1 22 дні тому +1

    29:57 "I only figured it for two people."
    "Why?"
    Oh, don't be so defensive, Ryl. This is how the Apollo spacecraft is designed.
    There's the command-service module which, in this case, is referred to as the _Odyssey._ That was designed to do the heavy lifting to transport the astronauts from the Earth to the Moon and back. Swigert is the pilot for _that_ module.
    The _Odyssey_ is designed to connect with the noticeably smaller lunar module, here known as the _Aquarius,_ which was designed to be completely inactive until they reached the Moon. Then the lunar-module pilot (Haise) and the mission commander (Lovell) were expected to float down the tunnel into the _Aquarius,_ seal the tunnel, power up the lunar module, disconnect from the _Odyssey_ and travel to and from the surface of the Moon, just the two of them, leaving the command-service module in orbit around the Moon with Swigert on board.
    Basically, the plan was drawn up with the expectation to be able to continue relying on the scrubbers on board the _Odyssey._ The plan originally called for the scrubbers on the _Aquarius_ to scrub the CO2 waste from an atmosphere breathed by _two_ people, not three. Swigert was not expected to be there. That's the reason.

  • @guymelton1094
    @guymelton1094 22 дні тому +3

    Outstanding Ladies 😊 thanks for sharing with us😊👍✌️🇺🇸

  • @MoMoMyPup10
    @MoMoMyPup10 22 дні тому +1

    Mattingly (Gary Sinise) was never said to have the Measels -- he was _exposed_ to someone that had them, so he was taken off the mission as a precautionary measure. The other two had gotten them already so they were immune

  • @mikebrown7799
    @mikebrown7799 22 дні тому +4

    Hello Jyn & Ryl!😊 Almost everything in the film really happened. The party at the beginning of the film was fictional and used to establish the characters. Yes, Jack was not at fault for stirring the tanks. Ken Mattingly was exposed to German Measles, but he never contracted the illness. He passed away in 2023. Jim Lovell is still alive at 96 years old, and Fred Haise is currently 90 years old. Great reactions to this very well made true story!!!!🎬👏👏👏👏

    • @terencemccormick8178
      @terencemccormick8178 22 дні тому +1

      @mikebrown7799 Armstrong and Aldrin did indeed sit with Blanche Lovell during the re-entry. Not only is this reported in the book, there's a picture of the three of them together in Lovell's study.

    • @mikebrown7799
      @mikebrown7799 22 дні тому

      @@terencemccormick8178 Yes, you are correct. The article I read was in error. However, there were 3 other less known astronauts that also did visit. They were Pete Conrad, Rusty Schweickart, and Dave Scott.😉

  • @BryanWhite77
    @BryanWhite77 22 дні тому +2

    Fred Haise had a urinary tract infection that turned into a kidney infection. He was extremely sick during the mission.

  • @falcychead8198
    @falcychead8198 20 днів тому

    23:20 Apollo 13 to this day holds the record for the furthest distance from the earth of any manned mission. On the far side of the moon, out of radio contact, they were the most alone anyone has ever been.

  • @karidrgn
    @karidrgn 22 дні тому +2

    It's only dark on the other side for this as the landing was scheduled for the moons "morning" as the best time between hot and cold extremes. The moon has day and night just like earth... it just takes 28 earth days.

  • @kbrewski1
    @kbrewski1 22 дні тому +2

    The movie was all true, based on Jim Lovell's book "Lost Moon". They exaggerated some scenes for the movie, like the bickering between Jack S and Fred H, but just minor tweaks. All the dangers and issues they had to overcome were all true. You can't really rehearse for an explosion that knocks out your oxygen supply on the way to the Moon.

  • @reneerocha1796
    @reneerocha1796 22 дні тому +3

    Excellent movie!! Great reaction!! ❤😊

  • @waterbeauty85
    @waterbeauty85 22 дні тому +4

    29:28 This argument scene never happened. It was purely fabricated Hollywood melodrama to grab the audiences emotions. The funny thing is that Tom Hanks' "not going to bounce off the walls for ten minutes and end up right back here with the same problems" speech is almost a verbatim quote of the real Jim Lovell's explanation of why the real astronauts were able to maintain their composure and professionalism despite the enormous danger and stress of the situation.
    It's annoying that the studio put the fake melodrama in there, but I understand why would think that they had to do it. I just saw a UA-camr react to the movie "The Longest Day" which was a pretty accurate account of the D-Day invasion, and she said that she couldn't connect with it because it didn't have the tear jerking emotionalism she was expecting. Some audiences really do need those histrionics to manipulate their feelings.

  • @paulobrien4694
    @paulobrien4694 16 днів тому

    When they talked about only calculating the oxygen for two people: they were in the landing module which was designed for two people to go down to the moon while the third guy stayed in orbit in the main capsule above. When it was time to leave the two men on the moon would launch the landing module back up into space and re connect with the capsule.

  • @SteveLeicht1
    @SteveLeicht1 22 дні тому +1

    This quote is not completely relevant, but goes to show the mentality and fearlessness of test pilots/astronauts. Paraphrased:"When trouble hits, a pilot says to himself I've got 10 seconds to eject...a test pilot says I've got 10 seconds to land this son of a bitch."

  • @AceMoonshot
    @AceMoonshot 22 дні тому +1

    One thing that they got really wrong was the conflict between the three astronauts. There were no raised voices. There was no arguing. They were all intensely focused and professional. Not one man lost his cool in any way.
    iirc Ron Howard even kind of apologized and admitted that it was just for dramatic tension.

  • @lazyperfectionist1
    @lazyperfectionist1 22 дні тому

    10:55 The launch sequence in this movie is _so_ incredibly compelling. When I had this movie on VHS, I remember, I would watch it over and over again. Just the launch sequence.

  • @adampare8088
    @adampare8088 22 дні тому +5

    We never lost an American in space. The Challenger in 1986 blew up and Columbia blew up on re-entry in 2001, but it was in earth orbit. This is as close as you can get to that. I swear, if 1 more screw fell off they were done for.

    • @PorterJustPorter
      @PorterJustPorter 22 дні тому +1

      We lost the Event Horizon and its brave crew in space.

    • @vly9257
      @vly9257 21 день тому

      Both of the shuttle disasters were after Apollo 13, so as of that time... but you are correct, neither of those disasters were in earth atmosphere.

    • @adampare8088
      @adampare8088 21 день тому

      @@vly9257 Well you're right about being after Apollo 13, but you said not in earth atmosphere. Yes they were. There's videos out there if you don't believe me

  • @technofilejr3401
    @technofilejr3401 22 дні тому +1

    As a kid growing up in Central Florida during the 1970’s and early 1980’s, a lot of these people were well known. I could actually stand on the balcony of my junior high school and watch shuttle launches.
    In the 1990’s I took the Space Center tour where you can see how the heat of Shuttle launches burned the surrounding foliage. The power needed to cause that is amazing.
    So it always surprises me that so many reactor lately ask if this really happened or if the moon landing was real.

  • @lazyperfectionist1
    @lazyperfectionist1 22 дні тому +1

    31:13 Usually, people feel an inclination to protect Blanch Lovell (Jim's mother) from bad news, completely losing sight of the fact that hers is the generation that went toe to toe with the Axis. She can probably take bad news better than anyone else in the room.

  • @michaelvincent4280
    @michaelvincent4280 21 день тому

    Always dreamed to catch a launch, but I was in tears as I watched/felt the launch in this film. A friends boy noticed that but hard to explain how much it meant to me, following the space program as a kid myself.

  • @willcool713
    @willcool713 22 дні тому +2

    Yep. Space (I dunno about the Moon, but Space) tastes like a mix of BBQ, diesel, and gunpowder. If you seal a container in hard vacuum beyond the atmosphere, that's how the tank smells once you open it. Astronauts coming back from spacewalks have said the same of airlocks.
    I don't know how it smells or tastes, but the surface regolith on the Moon is eroded by the Sun into a thick layer of dust which has a high static charge. But it isn't weathered smooth, and the static makes it stick to everything. Because it's microscopically jagged, it ruins seals and joints and gets into the suits and all over the interior of the ship. It itches and causes rashes, too. I hear it's like a glitter spill, the way you can never get rid of it, clings everywhere.

    • @paulsander5433
      @paulsander5433 22 дні тому +1

      It also tears up your lung tissues if you breathe it in and you can't get it out.

    • @willcool713
      @willcool713 22 дні тому

      @@paulsander5433 Oh, yeah, I'd bet, worse than black lung.

  • @sparky6086
    @sparky6086 22 дні тому +1

    For Apollo 12, NASA hyped a new color TV camera which broke, when it was inadvertently pointed toward the Sun,vwhile it was being set up on the Moon, which ended up making the TV coverage dissapointing to the TV networks & their audience. That likely helped lead the TV networks to not initially cover Apollo 13.

  • @user-im2ex9zw6j
    @user-im2ex9zw6j 22 дні тому +2

    fun watch guys thank you i enjoyed much virtual hug
    yes true story - and unusually accurate for a movie that isnt a documentary. the martian is another good astronaut movie about keeping the faith and not giving up

  • @jamesaugust7498
    @jamesaugust7498 22 дні тому +2

    It all actually happened. Love the channel.

  • @renewillner5061
    @renewillner5061 22 дні тому +2

    Virtual hug

  • @dr.burtgummerfan439
    @dr.burtgummerfan439 21 день тому

    Many great lines in the movie, but my two favorites come from the strong 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."

  • @GaParanormal
    @GaParanormal 22 дні тому +3

    41:27 lol...I love yall even more cause u just referenced DBZ lol

  • @Nitedawg1
    @Nitedawg1 20 днів тому

    Movie was made almost 30 years ago and yet we still haven’t returned to the moon.

  • @user-sy5vv4ze3h
    @user-sy5vv4ze3h 22 дні тому +2

    I was in high school and saw the first moon landing and the Apollo 13 return on TV. I was less impressed with the moon landing than most people, because I was an ardent science-fiction fan and always expected we would land on the moon. When this movie came out, I avoided it because I didn’t want or need to relive that experience. I finally saw it on TV many years later. It is a phenomenally faithful recreation of the events. BTW, that is the real Armstrong and Aldrin playing themselves in the visit to Lovell’s mother.

    • @llanitedave
      @llanitedave 22 дні тому +1

      "BTW, that is the real Armstrong and Aldrin playing themselves in the visit to Lovell’s mother." No, it isn't. Neil Armstrong was played by an actor named Mark Wheeler. I don't know who played Buzz Aldrin, but neither of the actors bears any physical resemblance to their namesakes.

  • @socalwill9876
    @socalwill9876 22 дні тому +2

    Re Taste of the Moon: The Moon is volcanic rock that was originally a part of Earth, astronauts have on many occasions dug holes on the surface of the Moon only to find Earth-typical orange-colored porous lava rock. So technically if you were to lick any common lava stone, that's what the moon tastes like 🌙🍽

    • @llanitedave
      @llanitedave 22 дні тому

      There's more to it than that. Most of the lunar dust is razor sharp fragments of volcanic glass, and because there's no water or weathering on the Moon, all the particles are covered with electrical charges due to exposure to the solar wind. All the astronauts who landed on the Moon reported that the dust smelled like gunpowder when the returned to the lunar module.

  • @smadaf
    @smadaf 19 днів тому

    This morning, Friday, June 7, 2024, Bill Anders died, at age 90. He and Frank Borman were with Jim Lovell on Apollo 8, the first time human beings flew around the moon. At 4:39:39 p.m., Greenwich Mean Time, on Christmas Eve, 1968, coming around the moon in the Apollo 8 command module, he made, at age 35, the photograph that came to be called "Earthrise". About 11:40 a.m., Pacific Daylight Time, today, the small plane that he was flying alone crashed into the ocean near Roche Harbor, Washington.

  • @buddy3167
    @buddy3167 21 день тому

    11:17 never thought seeing someone buckled into a spaceship was so funny like you do

  • @ThistleAndSea
    @ThistleAndSea 21 день тому

    Yep, pretty much entirely true. One of the great stories of Science. Good one, Ladies! I was born in '60, and I have vivid memories of watching these NASA missions gathered around the television with my friends and family. I remember going outside with my uncle and looking up at the moon during the lunar landing thinking that Neil Armstrong was up there walking around. An incredible feeling. And I remember the shock and despair when the space shuttle Columbia exploded on reentry in 2003. They did a great job capturing the wonder and suspense of it all in this movie, and I enjoyed rewatching and reliving it all with the two of you, Thank you for sharing this one. 🙂

  • @RobinT-treehugger
    @RobinT-treehugger 22 дні тому +1

    Have you seen "Hidden Figures" yet..... you need to see it now that you have seen this movie. Its very important part of the whole story.

  • @andromeda331
    @andromeda331 22 дні тому +1

    Such a great movie.

  • @jeromedeparis
    @jeromedeparis 22 дні тому +1

    In the same genre, I recommend “The Right Stuff” (1983). It's even better.

  • @robertmcdowell3769
    @robertmcdowell3769 22 дні тому

    God has blessed you two with beautiful smiles. 😊

  • @harryrabbit2870
    @harryrabbit2870 22 дні тому +2

    Enjoyed your reaction. One day, somebody on YT will do a reaction to "The Right Stuff" or just anything different instead of the usual 100 movies that everybody reacts to. It's getting harder to care about reactions any more. Anyway, glad you enjoyed this movie. I guess.

  • @wheelmanstan
    @wheelmanstan 22 дні тому +3

    haha, it wasn't the clap, just a urinary tract infection

  • @KarlKraus1
    @KarlKraus1 23 дні тому +2

    Other tom Hanks and ron howard (the director) team-ups I want you to check out are the da Vinci Code and angels & Demons, adaptations of bestselling novels in the 2000s, thrillers having to do with ancient world history that you'll enjoy, a more mature tone than the movie National Treasure you saw last year

  • @jessestanley1690
    @jessestanley1690 18 днів тому

    Knowing it actually happened makes it crazier

  • @inhumanmusic1411
    @inhumanmusic1411 22 дні тому

    A lot of people tend to get confused in this movie when they hear that they're venting oxygen into space thinking that it's their breathing oxygen that's venting. That was not the case. They had plenty of oxygen to breath. The oxygen was coming from a fuel cell that uses hydrogen and oxygen to produce electricity and water for the astronauts.

  • @philippelajeunesse9649
    @philippelajeunesse9649 22 дні тому +2

    Of mice and man, if you havent seen with Gary Sinise....very good movie

  • @BogeyDopeYT
    @BogeyDopeYT 22 дні тому +1

    I’d suggest y’all watch First Man, The Right Stuff, and The Astronaut’s Wives Club if you’re interested in this history.

  • @XENONEOMORPH1979
    @XENONEOMORPH1979 22 дні тому +2

    ron howard the director mother played the mother of of lovett , also i might add that american citizens still have to pay taxes although they are in another country ,if they are staying more than a normal holiday .
    I still have my doubts about armstrong etc got to the moon and landed in 1969 , i do believe they did after , but my senses do not believe they did in 69 that is my belief , take it or leave it .

  • @lazyperfectionist1
    @lazyperfectionist1 22 дні тому

    5:23 "What? The car shut off."
    "Yeah."
    Yeah. That's literary license. Of course, they didn't follow the account _precisely._ They had to fudge a _few_ details for things like foreshadowing.

  • @juliusperseus8612
    @juliusperseus8612 22 дні тому +1

    Great Reaction !

  • @anorthosite
    @anorthosite 21 день тому

    In Reality: 'Jack' Swigart was considered Fully Competent/Confident, by All of the Apollo folks.
    It was only because he passed away, long before the movie was made, that the movie took liberties, and made him out as a "rookie" - along with the (fictional) Arguments/Drama, to make the film appeal to an audience. Other than that dramatization (and the course-correction, which was actually a calm, 11-second engine burn), the movie was true to the facts.

  • @user-ff6wf4rz3z
    @user-ff6wf4rz3z 19 днів тому

    It is true I was about 11 then and remember it well !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @tvdroid22
    @tvdroid22 20 днів тому

    Ken had been exposed to the other fellow who had the measles. Time was an issue. He wouldnt show anything in his blood til the disease was active, which would be during the mission. Thats why they had to pull him. He figured the air for two people because that was the normal crew for the lunar module. Only now it wasnt a normal operation and he forgot to factor in the third man. The only fiction about the mission was the tension within the crew. The rest was real, even the news videos were authentic.

  • @BengtLofqvist
    @BengtLofqvist 22 дні тому

    Very touching and emotionel true story.

  • @hettbeans
    @hettbeans 21 день тому

    Everyone involved in bringing these men home were steely eyed missile men

  • @BandOfHarjaps
    @BandOfHarjaps 21 день тому

    "Huston, we have an escalation"(!)

  • @user-ti4jr6hu6u
    @user-ti4jr6hu6u 6 днів тому

    Great reaction, you two!!! 🎉👏👏👍👍🎉

  • @peaceman1300
    @peaceman1300 20 днів тому

    great reaction ladies!!! Virtual hug!!!!🙏

  • @philmullineaux5405
    @philmullineaux5405 22 дні тому +2

    All the Hanks movies I've seen, plus his TV show, bosom buddies, ( which u should watch a few episodes here!)I still like his first big movie best, Bachelor Party! Also for the earliest of space flight movies, watch The Right Stuff! Remember in Forrest Gump, Dan tells Forrest Gump if ur ever a shrimp boat captain I'll be an astronaut! Then Dan's legs were made of Space Shuttle material! And then they did this movie!😮😮😮. U can go to NASA, and out front is the last known Saturn 5 rocket! Yes its real. I've been to nasa, i was a contractor for certain computer gear. I got to go places and see things behind the scenes at NASA, most will never see! Bill Paxton was in 5 James Cameron movies, and the VERY first person Arnold kills in, Terminator!😮😮😮. He is the ONLY actor ever, to be killed by a Terminator predator and AlienThe operator in the glasses is the director's brother! The preacher is their dad! The silver haired guy on the pickup boat is the real Jim! There was actually many more problems that happened they didnt film because of time, money, and too unbelievable for the public! More irony, the flight director a small part in top gun Maverick, and in the first movie about space, the right stuff! A mid eighties car had more computing power than the entire control room!😮😮😮. Tom also did a great documentary on space missions called, To the Moon and Back! The most amazing part of all the pre shuttle missions is the heat shield. Only a couple inches thick, its 15,000 degrees on one side, room temp on the other! In those days, the chemicals to make it had to be measured mixed and poured into honeycomb receptacles, by hand!😮😮😮Zero gravity is done by putting all the sets and equipment in usually a c5A starlifter plane, flying it extremely high, then flying downward at about a 30-45 degree angle. As it dives, everything and everyone inside"floats" downward, inside the plane! So obviously they did multiple takes and shots, with the cast and crew!! Other great space movies, mostly true science are 2001,2010, the right stuff, the Martian, interstellar, gravity, to the earth and back, arrival, 1st man, Apollo 11, hidden figures, October sky, and a few others. 2001 and 2010 have alien stuff, which I tried to avoid. I wanted more real type or True story movies. Pro tips, they had no hand held calculators yet! A mid 80s car had more computer memory, power, and capabilities, than the entire control room!😮😮😮My dad used to take me to NASA alot when I was a kid. One thing u noticed down in the city there big time...if u were an astronaut or had anything to do with operations or flight control, they all drove Corvettes!

  • @didonna1974
    @didonna1974 21 день тому

    Virtual Hug ❤
    Another awesome reaction from you two lovely ladies.
    See you soon in Rocky 2.

  • @MrJimithee
    @MrJimithee 22 дні тому

    It's funny how you guys recognised Kevin Bacon from Hollow Man (of all things)
    It's like seeing Robert De Niro and saying "Hey...That's the guy from Rocky and Bullwinkle!"

  • @birch5757
    @birch5757 10 днів тому

    I know astronauts are very specific type of person, I've read Neil Armstrong's biography and my grandpa worked on Apollo 11 & 12. That said, being an astronaut's wife has to be pretty difficult, not knowing whether your husband is just going to blow up. Putting myself in their shoes...I wouldn't like the knowledge that my wife could just be gone at her job.

  • @franktrig
    @franktrig 22 дні тому

    Great reaction ladies.

  • @jesse33cdn
    @jesse33cdn 22 дні тому +1

    ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @lazyperfectionist1
    @lazyperfectionist1 22 дні тому

    0:56 Now they kind of did Swigert dirty with Kevin Bacon's portrayal, here. It's true, statistically speaking, astronauts tend to be married. He wasn't. _Legally_ speaking, he was a bachelor. He was _not,_ however, the total lady's man, livin' it up as a bachelor, that the movie makes him out to be.
    Accordingly, no, he did not go to space with an infection, and no, he did not _spread_ that infection. I don't know why they created that narrative around his character.

  • @PsychoMuffinSDM
    @PsychoMuffinSDM 14 днів тому

    If you’re not familiar with the systems it may not have been clear, but losing oxygen is not about running out of breathable air. They had plenty. What it was is the oxygen combines with hydrogen to generate power. It’s like their batteries, which is why power was such an issue. Plus, bonus: the process generates water too!

  • @mattplus09
    @mattplus09 15 днів тому

    24:16 Loved that! Good journey :) Peace!

  • @TD-mg6cd
    @TD-mg6cd 18 днів тому

    Wait a minute, Ryl! You literally CAN'T see him, as Hollow Man!

  • @nukiesduke6868
    @nukiesduke6868 22 дні тому

    41:20 Yes 3 minutes is indeed a long time. A girl confirmed it!

  • @technofilejr3401
    @technofilejr3401 22 дні тому +1

    44:38 We are going back to the moon!! The Artemis program is set to do a lunar orbit next fall. I hope to live to see Americans land on the moon again.

  • @bryancarr8578
    @bryancarr8578 22 дні тому +1

    You need to try Space Cowboys!