Reacting to APOLLO 13 (1995) | Movie Reaction

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  • Опубліковано 9 лип 2024
  • Thank you for joining me as I react to Apollo 13 for the first time. I hope you enjoy the video and my reaction!
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    Video Contents
    0:00 Intro
    2:46 Reaction
    31:10 Review/Outro
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    #apollo13 #firsttimewatching #reaction
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    Reacting to APOLLO 13 (1995) | Movie Reaction
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,4 тис.

  • @petercastaneda5338
    @petercastaneda5338 9 місяців тому +375

    This movie is about 95 percent accurate. It’s one of the most historically accurate movies ever made.

    • @bobwait3629
      @bobwait3629 9 місяців тому +53

      Well, except for the choir music in the background during suspenseful moments. NASA had to jettison plans for the Air Force Band vocalists to ride along, as there wasn't room for them in the capsule.

    • @petercastaneda5338
      @petercastaneda5338 9 місяців тому +7

      @@bobwait3629Nah uh! It was all there, Tom Hanks wouldn’t lie to us.

    • @TimBarnett-pl9kd
      @TimBarnett-pl9kd 9 місяців тому +12

      One of first movies to use NASA vomit comit!

    • @padfolio
      @padfolio 9 місяців тому +44

      The biggest inaccuracy was how they made Swaggert look like some amateur. Both Lovell and Haise said they had full confidence in him. Swaggert even helped design some of the instruments they used on the ship.

    • @JoeBLOWFHB
      @JoeBLOWFHB 9 місяців тому +35

      There was no yelling at each other during tense moments. These men were both test and fighter pilots. You don't get those jobs unless you have nerves of steel.
      The History Buffs Channel did a video on this movie. He was very impressed with just about everything except the level of emotion. But he was clear the movie would be boring without it

  • @sparky6086
    @sparky6086 9 місяців тому +179

    "Apollo 13" was about as historically accurate of a successful drama movie as could be produced.
    They're some minor inaccuracies using dramatic license, such as the astrotronauts losing their cool, but otherwise, it's pretty accurate.

    • @paulinegallagher7821
      @paulinegallagher7821 9 місяців тому +11

      Ken Mattingly (who was in MC the whole time, it was Charlie Duke who was called from his bed), stated that it was Glynn Lunney that ran the show that night, and that he displayed amazing leadership. Im not trying to diminish Gene Kranz and i get that for the purpose of the movie he was the more dynamic character, but Lunney was in charge and thats completely rewritten for the movie.

    • @JustWasted3HoursHere
      @JustWasted3HoursHere 9 місяців тому +4

      @@paulinegallagher7821Funny thing is, even without the dramatic license it would have been riveting (as the actual event was back in the day). But, on the whole it was very close to what actually happened.

    • @LarryFleetwood8675
      @LarryFleetwood8675 9 місяців тому +1

      All fiction, alas.

    • @JustWasted3HoursHere
      @JustWasted3HoursHere 9 місяців тому +4

      @@LarryFleetwood8675Moon-hoaxer? Flat Earther?

    • @LarryFleetwood8675
      @LarryFleetwood8675 9 місяців тому

      @@JustWasted3HoursHere Maybe you are, if you're buying into the Moon lies you're being taught by these fraudsters.

  • @pedrolopez8057
    @pedrolopez8057 9 місяців тому +53

    buzz Aldrin actually punched a Moon landing denier for slandering him.

    • @sortie9
      @sortie9 9 місяців тому +16

      What's even better is that Buzz was 72 years old when that happened in 2002 and the dickwad he punched was at least 40 years younger. Gotta love those old time ex fighter pilot astronauts.

    • @Fawkes42
      @Fawkes42 9 місяців тому +6

      That guy had it coming, was being a real asshole about the whole thing

    • @jsmithmultimediatech
      @jsmithmultimediatech 3 місяці тому +2

      @@sortie9 He was actually the first to hold a doctoral degree as well from MIT

    • @jsmithmultimediatech
      @jsmithmultimediatech 3 місяці тому

      @@sortie9I had always thought Buzz was a test pilot not fighter, oh well lol the more you know haha.

    • @jsmithmultimediatech
      @jsmithmultimediatech 3 місяці тому

      Without a pen that I think Buzz had, they wouldn't have got the hatch open

  • @joeconcepts5552
    @joeconcepts5552 9 місяців тому +76

    A few years back I saw a documentary that included Gene Kranz -- the mission control head played by Ed Harris -- being interviewed. Decades later, he still was on the verge of tears remembering this.

    • @alanholck7995
      @alanholck7995 9 місяців тому

      ‘Failure is not an Option’; m.ua-cam.com/video/7f51Jzm7M4w/v-deo.html&pp=ygUibmFzYSBmbGlnaHQgY29udHJvbGxlciBkb2N1bWVudGFyeQ%3D%3D

    • @themidsouthcyclist8880
      @themidsouthcyclist8880 9 місяців тому +3

      I saw this movie when it came out and I still get tears today.... and I was only an infant when Neil and Buzz walked on the moon. In my book Gene Kranz can get emotional about his work and never be in danger of losing his man card.

    • @347Jimmy
      @347Jimmy 2 місяці тому

      He insists that he never said "failure is not an option", and that it was falsely attributed to him. But still used it as the title of his autobiography

  • @rogerhamilton5965
    @rogerhamilton5965 9 місяців тому +376

    I remember watching it in my living room as it happened. And yes it really happened. The conspiracy stuff has been thoroughly debunked

    • @OmegaSoypreme
      @OmegaSoypreme 9 місяців тому +63

      To say the conspiracies have been debunked gives them too much credit if you ask me.

    • @johnnehrich9601
      @johnnehrich9601 9 місяців тому +1

      If there had been even the tiniest inkling it was faked, the USSR would have started round-the-clock coverage claiming we never got there.
      And any amateur with a telescope could follow the space craft going to the moon and returning.
      There were about 400,000 people involved in the space program.
      The astronauts returned with about 50 pounds of moon rocks which were analyzed by labs all over the planet, who could have spotted a fake. (There is a big difference in the chemistry of rocks exposed the conditions on earth and those in the vacuum of space.)

    • @Col_Fragg
      @Col_Fragg 9 місяців тому +4

      Hmmm, so they got to you, too.

    • @aleisterdenven
      @aleisterdenven 9 місяців тому +8

      We Never Went To The Moon.People believe we went to The Moon,because they saw it on A Talking Box.If that Talking Box told You to jump off a cliff;would You?
      If we really did go to The Moon over 50 years ago,we would All be flying across The Stars by now.We would be wearing completely different and futuristic clothes.The World would be a completely different place,but it is not.The World and people themselves are largely the same in terms of social problems,style,psychology,evil,transportation and others.Barely Anything has changed.There are even more problems today.There was no Worldwide Transformational Space-Aged Wave/Event/Incident that completely altered our Human way of life!That Never Happened!

    • @craigplatel813
      @craigplatel813 9 місяців тому +84

      ​@@aleisterdenvenyou're right. Columbus never crossed the Atlantic too. If he had we would be at the stars already. It's all fake about Columbus. As a matter of fact you and I don't exist. We are just the figments of a dream of somebody who lives someplace we don't even know about.

  • @hmr171
    @hmr171 9 місяців тому +97

    Jim Lovell had a cameo at the end. He was the officer that Tom Hanks shakes hands with.

    • @SYLTales
      @SYLTales 9 місяців тому +11

      Obscure Trivia: Lovell has said that Howard nominally wanted him to portray one the visiting Admirals aboard the USS _Iwo Jima_ that day. Lovell insisted he be shown as a Captain, as that's the rank at which he retired.

    • @RoamingAstro
      @RoamingAstro 9 місяців тому +6

      Yes. Lovell played the captain of the aircraft carrier. So, the real Lovell shook hands with the actor portraying Lovell. :-)

    • @mokane86
      @mokane86 9 місяців тому +2

      I had the privilege/honor of meeting Captain Lovell a couple times back when he was running his restaurant in the suburbs North of Chicago.
      He seemed to still live up to being quite an exceptional person and to be a cool guy.

    • @zzzzzzzzzzzk
      @zzzzzzzzzzzk 9 місяців тому +2

      He also had a cameo in "The Man Who Fell To Earth".

    • @odysseusrex5908
      @odysseusrex5908 9 місяців тому

      @@mokane86 He became a restauranteur? I never knew that. What kind of restaurant was it?

  • @BedsitBob
    @BedsitBob 8 місяців тому +8

    The line that always sends a shiver up my spine, is when Jim Lovell says "Gentlemen, it's been a privilege flying with you."
    As he's saying that, he knows they could all be dead in less than 3 minutes.

  • @zmarko
    @zmarko 9 місяців тому +34

    Jim Lovell spoke at my college graduation in 1995, 2 or 3 weeks before this movie came out, so it holds a special place in my heart. It's a great story about perseverance and the will of man overcoming obstacles and impossible odds.

  • @ggmiethe
    @ggmiethe 9 місяців тому +85

    I watched the 1st landing on the moon on TV when I was 6. One night I walked out on the back step of the house and looked up at the moon, and knew that people were on there. That was a consciousness shift in my young mind.

    • @chandlerbryan1793
      @chandlerbryan1793 9 місяців тому +5

      Saw it on TV when I was 6 as well. Everybody who had a TV watched it, it was a world-uniting event.

    • @pauld6967
      @pauld6967 9 місяців тому +2

      I was a bit younger but I remember being at my family's vacation home and watching our little black & white television that we had there.

    • @BondFreek
      @BondFreek 9 місяців тому +3

      Lucky man. I was 1 year old when Apollo 11 landed on the moon.

    • @notmyrealname1730
      @notmyrealname1730 9 місяців тому +4

      I was 5 and remember seeing the landing. Afterward, my dad took me outside and pointed at the moon and told me that was where the astronauts were.
      It somewhat registered with me, though being only 5, the significance of that event didn't mean much because I distinctly remember being upset that my mom told me it was time to take a bath and go to bed.
      When you're 5, you have your own idea of life, eh?

    • @pauld6967
      @pauld6967 9 місяців тому

      @@notmyrealname1730 Indeed. The loss of a toy car through a ventilation grate still bothers me. LOL
      It did, however, teach me to not "drive" my cars around those ever again.

  • @Orieni
    @Orieni 9 місяців тому +124

    I used to be a space museum curator. I’ve given multiple presentations on this mission, and know more about it than any normal human wants. That being said, my favorite story about the moon landings involved an expedition to contact a contemporary Neolithic tribe in the heart of Borneo, who had never had contact with the modern world. The anthropologists reached them in the early 80s, and they had heard from other tribes that men had walked on the moon. That is how big of a deal it was.

    • @t0dd000
      @t0dd000 9 місяців тому +10

      It's still a really big deal.

    • @odysseusrex5908
      @odysseusrex5908 9 місяців тому +4

      That is so cool. That is incredible. Do you remember the name of the tribe, or know where I might find out more about them? Also, which museum did you work for?

    • @Orieni
      @Orieni 9 місяців тому

      @@odysseusrex5908 I am afraid that I do not recall further details, though it might have been in a National Geographic . Infinity Science Center, across the interstate from Stennis Space Center, which is where NASA tests rocket engines.

    • @4yaears
      @4yaears 9 місяців тому

      I don’t call people an idiot lightly, but if you’ve studied this deeply, and still propagate it actually happened then you’re an idiot. It’s utterly transparently a hoax.

    • @chadbennett7873
      @chadbennett7873 9 місяців тому +2

      I was fortunate enough to purchase a "Footprints on the Moon" diorama from a gentleman who worked for NASA, "just down the hall" from Wernher von Braun. It is, of course, a prized possession. Being a huge NASA geek, I watch everything about it, and especially loved the mini-series "From Earth To The Moon" which was produced by Ron Howard, Brian Grazer, Tom Hanks (all associated with this film) and Michael Bostick. I'm sure you've enjoyed it too, but they sort of show stuff like that ... all the preparation that went into these incredible journeys. What a great comment ... thank you for sharing it!

  • @Jessica_Roth
    @Jessica_Roth 5 місяців тому +5

    It's amusing that so many reactors get worried the crew won't survive when the opening credits clearly say this is based on Jim Lovell's book. Tough to write a book if you're dead.
    Not only did they not die, but aside from cancer getting Swigert, they have all lived very full lives. Jim is still with us, at age 95. 2023 was rough for him, though, because Marilyn passed in September and then Ken died on Halloween (age 90) and then his Apollo 8 commander, Frank Borman, died a week later, also 95.
    (Borman is *almost* in this film. When they show the clip from "The Dick Cavett Show", we see Dick introduce Borman as his guest just before the news breaks in [and Ken turns off the TV anyhow])
    But Fred is still with us at age 90 and Charlie Duke (who got the measles, but got over it, and ended up walking on the moon on Apollo 16 while Ken was orbiting as the pilot) is going along at age 88. So yeah, they lived some rather healthy lives. In fact, when John Young (the commander of the back-up crew, who walked on the moon with Charlie) is helping Ken run those tests, I couldn't understand why the actor wore glasses; I would think NASA only took astronauts with 20/20 vision.
    (Unless that's meant to be another character named "John", but you'd think they would have changed it. IRL John Young *was* working with Ken, since he was about the only other person on Earth who knew what Ken knew.)
    Neil and Buzz both walked on the moon, it's just that the commander goes down the ladder first. The crews always had a commander (Jim), a specialist (Fred) and a pilot (Ken/Jack). So Neil beat Buzz down the ladder for Apollo 13 and Jim would have beaten Fred down the ladder if this didn't go wrong and John Young beat Charlie Duke down the ladder on 16, but they all walked on the moon.
    (In fact, Charlie is the youngest person to walk on the moon, being age 36 at that time. And even though we are scheduled to be back on the moon next year [the Artemis 3 mission], all of the candidates for that mission will be older than 36 by then, so Charlie gets to keep his record.)

    • @fireman2375
      @fireman2375 7 днів тому

      @Jessica_Roth
      It is indeed a different John - John Aaron, EECOM (Electrical System engineer) from Mission Control, who is probably just as famous for his role during the launch of Apollo 12, when the rocket was struck by lightning, as for his actions during Apollo 13... See "Set SCE to Aux" - He did wear glasses in reality.
      John Young is actually promiently featured as well, although rarely ever in the focus of the scene - he's the guy who gets Ken from the hotel, and who is asking Ken if he needs a break. If you look earlier, you can see him walk into the sim, when the backup crew is called - aside from Lovell he is the only one who is wearing a patch from a previous mission.

  • @bobblebardsley
    @bobblebardsley 9 місяців тому +12

    Tom Hanks saying "We just lost the moon" has always hit me more than "Houston, we have a problem". That's the moment this movie really becomes a rescue mission, when they know the original mission is no longer possible.

  • @AmatureAstronomer
    @AmatureAstronomer 9 місяців тому +60

    I recall this being much more exciting and frightening to watch on television as it happened.

    • @eTraxx
      @eTraxx 9 місяців тому +4

      I had wondered where I was during this since I could not remember watching it on TV. Looked at the date .. April 11-17 1970. Okie Dokie. I was arriving in Vietnam and .. well ...

    • @OriginalPuro
      @OriginalPuro 9 місяців тому +1

      I both envy and don't envy you that.
      I wish I could have lived to see the Moon landing and all the landings in general, all the launches and all the talk about it.
      It must've been an exciting time in terms of seeing our own specie expand our universal reach.

    • @jamesalexander5623
      @jamesalexander5623 9 місяців тому

      @@eTraxx I was getting ready to graduate .... High School!

    • @donaldjz
      @donaldjz 9 місяців тому

      Yes, me too , because nobody knew what the outcome was

    • @AmatureAstronomer
      @AmatureAstronomer 9 місяців тому +2

      Dawn has a lot of old men watching her videos.

  • @mrwidget42
    @mrwidget42 9 місяців тому +36

    Ultimately, the cause of the mishap was caused by two things. First two years prior, when the SM was being designed there was a whole batch of cryo tanks being built for the program. One of them meant to be an O2 tank was accidentally dropped about 6 inches onto a hard surface. Nothing visual was detected wrong, but a minute crack in a wire insulator inside the tank leading to the stirring fan happened. Second, as part of the integration testing on the launch pad they wanted to test everything on the ground, including the plumbing for the cryo tanks. Problem was a design change for the voltage in the heater element in the tank was not matched with ground support systems, so that the ground cryo test overpowered the heater so much that it was welded into a permanent on state, and the procedure for testing left the heater running uncontrolled for about 8 hours, which further compromised the wiring. Comes the launch things were still running fine at liftoff because the wiring was still covered in LOX which cannot ignite a fire. But 55 hours later when Swigert did the cryo stir the tank had been emptied enough that some of the O2 in the tank had evaporated into gaseous oxygen, which was ignited by a spark on the fused fan wiring. That caused the explosion as at that moment the cryo gas was still at 200+ psi and now burning. That was enough to blow out the whole side of the SM.

    • @Anon54387
      @Anon54387 9 місяців тому

      That's the problem with people trying to cover their behinds.

    • @NuclearFridge1
      @NuclearFridge1 9 місяців тому +1

      I've read Jim Lovell's book "Lost Moon". The problem that led to the disaster was a thing nobody caught onto until way after the event.
      Basically, human error.

    • @mrwidget42
      @mrwidget42 9 місяців тому +8

      Most engineering faults are a result of failure of imagination, and therefore a management failure, not one of workmanship. The ground support systems were a legacy of the Mercury and Gemini missions, and their Air Force flight test regimes. That had a tendency to design around military aviation power busses of 65 volts DC. So was the Saturn rocket. But the Apollo spacecraft, while at first also being 65 volts was later changed as a response to the Apollo 1 fire so that lower voltage potentials were extant inside the spacecraft, ironically as a measure to reduce the risk of electrical faults and fires. But ground support systems were not. Not too enormous a problem for normal operations, but the physical damage in the cryo tank also kept it from draining completely dry during wet ground test. Somebody had a bright idea for a field expedient of leaving the cryo heater on for 8 hours so the LOX would evaporate away completely. The cracked wiring prevented tbe temp sensor from tripping and shutting off the heater. The internal temp in tne tank got up to I believe almost 800 degrees. Hours of that and by golly wire insulation melts and thermocouples fuse. This could not have been detected short of cutting the tank open and making visual inspection, and putting telemetry sensors for all possible contingencies would have added over a ton of mass and the rocket could not be launched. What was later done to prevent this sort of thing from happening again was strict adherence to quality control. A dropped pressure vessel should have raised red flags and the tank scrapped. Other things like field expedient and undocumented procedures were ruthlessly pruned away. Later disasters such as Challenger only happened when the political operatives regained authority to override that principle in the name of expediency and "go fever".

    • @christophtoifl6848
      @christophtoifl6848 9 місяців тому

      Do you know with what the Oxygen did react? I mean pure Oxygen alone cannot burn/explode.

    • @mrwidget42
      @mrwidget42 9 місяців тому +1

      @@christophtoifl6848 And in a vacuum. Lots of problems. If the tank content were contaminated with something flammable, or had a leak only manifesting in the gas phase then other materials, such as abraded insulation or structure made of aluminum or magnesium then an o2 ignition could occur, even in a vacuum.

  • @Travelinmatt1976
    @Travelinmatt1976 9 місяців тому +9

    I just find it strange that there are people that have never heard of Apollo 13 and what happened

  • @rlee0001
    @rlee0001 9 місяців тому +40

    Tom Hanks went on to produce an HBO miniseries in the style of Apollo 13 about the rest of the space race called "From The Earth To The Moon". I think you'd really love it. It covers Mercury, Gemini, Apollo 1, the designing of the lunar module, etc. I'd love to see a reaction to that series too!

    • @AlanCanon2222
      @AlanCanon2222 9 місяців тому +1

      For the episode about Apollo 13, since this movie had already been done, they chose to focus on (a fictionalized version of) the journalists who covered the missions.

    • @Harani66
      @Harani66 8 місяців тому +3

      Yes !
      would love to see Dawn react to this series . It's brilliant

    • @mena94x3
      @mena94x3 8 місяців тому

      I listened to the audiobook - it was great!

  • @sparky6086
    @sparky6086 9 місяців тому +37

    I remember watching with my extended family, Neil Armstrong stepping off the ladder for the first step on the Moon. I was almost 6 years old. Feeling the tension in the room, Grandad (born 1902) exclaimed loudly, "Look out! It's going to get him!". Everyone jumped! Grandad was quite a joker in a Will Rogers kind of way. People might not admit it now, but on everyone's mind was, what if a Moon monster jumps out and devours Neil Armstrong?
    People just didn't know. We weren't even sure, if the Moon was made of cheese or not!
    I also remember being a little annoyed, that the Command Module & Lunar Module weren't named "Charlie Brown" & "Snoopy", as they'd been on Apollo 10.

    • @markieman64
      @markieman64 9 місяців тому +2

      "Snoopy has landed" didn't have the same ring to it. 😂 They sent a Snoopy plush up on Artemis 1. He didn't get to land on the moon either! 😂

    • @dolf370
      @dolf370 9 місяців тому +7

      @@markieman64 But "The Beagle has landed" for sure has a certain ring to it.

    • @dannykent6190
      @dannykent6190 9 місяців тому +4

      ​@@dolf370that is a quality joke right there.

    • @jollyrodgers7272
      @jollyrodgers7272 9 місяців тому +1

      I was 12, and yes - there was some concern that they might sink into the surface - even if only enough so they couldn't get back when the rockets fired.

  • @tessesmom
    @tessesmom 9 місяців тому +20

    Oh dawn I remember watching the moon walk on our old black and white tv with a wire clothes hanger for the antenna lol. My brother had taken me that day to a Boston red sox game and when the announcement came over the loudspeaker that the astronauts had landed the whole stadium erupted with cheers. Then watching the first walk on the moon was probably my most memorable moment. ❤

  • @Shadowace724
    @Shadowace724 9 місяців тому +68

    My father helped design the microcircuits that were used in the Apollo missions, I still have his Apollo team ID. Great reactions Dawn Marie :)

    • @NoChance345
      @NoChance345 9 місяців тому +3

      That's awesome! I worked with a guy who worked for Grumman when they built the lunar lander. I'm pretty sure he worked on the lander but its been so long i cant remember for sure.

    • @Shadowace724
      @Shadowace724 9 місяців тому

      very cool!@@NoChance345

    • @5Ci0N
      @5Ci0N 8 місяців тому

      Proof?

  • @garykuovideos
    @garykuovideos 9 місяців тому +30

    What I find most impressive is listening to the actual transmissions between the astronauts and NASA. Everyone was so calm, collected, and methodical, one would never have guessed anything was wrong, based on the tone of their voices. Truly remarkable and worthy of respect. Thanks for sharing your reaction! Liked and subscribed!

    • @user-mg5mv2tn8q
      @user-mg5mv2tn8q 9 місяців тому +4

      In the book The Right Stuff, Tom Wolfe describes how so many American military pilots of that generation did all they could to emulate the uber-calm and quietly confident vocal mannerisms of Chuck Yeagher, best known to the public as the first person to break the sound barrier, but renowned among his fellow pilots as the guy they all wanted to be when they grew up.

    • @jean-marcvien3988
      @jean-marcvien3988 9 місяців тому

      Technicaly, they were supposed to be heard worldwide. The emotions had no place on the air. But more importantly, those astronauts were chosen mainly for their capacity at keeping a clear mind in any situation, Can you imagine what kind of people you need to sit willingly on a 30 story high bomb that will be lit in 3, 2, 1 ,,,

    • @garykuovideos
      @garykuovideos 9 місяців тому

      @@user-mg5mv2tn8q Very cool! Thank you for sharing that!

  • @joezolo9986
    @joezolo9986 9 місяців тому +41

    Dawn Marie If you haven't seen it yet, "October Sky" is another true space movie. It's about kids building rockets. One went on to work for NASA. It is a must watch.

    • @KrazyKat007
      @KrazyKat007 9 місяців тому +2

      October Sky is a good movie.
      But in reality his father was actually very supportive.
      They made the change for the movie to provide conflict and drama.

    • @russcarvertruthjedi259
      @russcarvertruthjedi259 9 місяців тому

      A great film by such an underrated actress too. I absolutely adore! Laura dern and her father.

    • @pistonburner6448
      @pistonburner6448 9 місяців тому +1

      Well, you just ruined the movie, so...

    • @williewilliams6571
      @williewilliams6571 9 місяців тому

      GREAT movie.

    • @KrazyKat007
      @KrazyKat007 9 місяців тому +1

      @@pistonburner6448 True, he just did didn’t he. 😂 🚀

  • @laurab68707
    @laurab68707 9 місяців тому +98

    Yes, it really happened. Was not a hoax. I was 14 when this happened. It was so exciting watching it on TV. I remember it being so scary and tense when we waited for the splash down. Great movie! By the way, the wedding ring thing really happened, but Marilyn did get it back.

    • @descendantoffools9767
      @descendantoffools9767 9 місяців тому

      We listened to it on our teacher's radio, I remember it was just after our lunch break,

    • @pistonburner6448
      @pistonburner6448 9 місяців тому

      You were so scared that you had a splash down?

    • @user-tf8tn5dn5x
      @user-tf8tn5dn5x 9 місяців тому +1

      Dear Fellow,All The Moon Landings Were a Hoax

    • @rogerd777
      @rogerd777 8 місяців тому

      I was 13 when this happened. I was and am still a big space buff. I watch the SpaceX missions when I can.

  • @Cerridwen7777
    @Cerridwen7777 9 місяців тому +5

    I'm old enough to remember both the Challenger failure (the one you saw, where the craft failed during launch) and obvs the Columbia failure. The whole world seemed to stop and acknowledge how brave astronauts were, then everything went back to normal and we forgot how amazing Humans can be.

  • @Gutslinger
    @Gutslinger 9 місяців тому +5

    2:49 Remember what Lieutenant Dan said when he showed up with his new legs?
    "Titanium alloy.. It's what they use on the space shuttles."

    • @Parallax-3D
      @Parallax-3D 2 місяці тому +1

      “If you’re ever a shrimp boat captain, that’s the day I’m an astronaut.”

    • @Gutslinger
      @Gutslinger 2 місяці тому

      @@Parallax-3D When Jenny is leaving Washington DC on the bus, Forrest does what appears to be the Baphomet "As is above, so is below" occult hand gesture.
      ✌🏼 with both hands.

  • @tomfowler381
    @tomfowler381 9 місяців тому +18

    I was 19 when this happened and had been a follower of the space program as soon as I could walk. These guys were my childhood heroes. If you’d like to know more about the missions that came before this, watch “The Right Stuff”. It’s an amazing story. Sometimes, I realize how incredibly lucky I was to be alive during that time. I remember standing in my front yard with my dad watching the first satellite- Sputnik - pass overhead. Look where we are now. Love your reactions.

    • @denvan3143
      @denvan3143 9 місяців тому +2

      I remember when I was 15, looking up at the moon, knowing that in a few years men would walk on its surface. And I knew that I was in a special generation; we were the last to look at the moon as a place we had never been; for the next generation, it would just be a place men had visited. They could never see the moon the way we did, from both sides of history.

    • @chadbennett7873
      @chadbennett7873 9 місяців тому +2

      Also "From Earth To The Moon" - produced by the Apollo 13 film team - which covers the Apollo program from start to finish. So sad they had to cancel the final flights due to funding, and to date only 12 men have walked on the moon. If not for that O2 tank, it might have been 14.

  • @dabe1971
    @dabe1971 9 місяців тому +16

    To answer your question about what was real - pretty much all of it - including Mrs Lovell losing her wedding ring, but they did manage to get it back for her. The biggest change to add dramatic licence was around the 'tension' between the crew because when you actually listen to the recordings of the crew and Houston there was very little. They had a problem, they worked together to fix it, calmly and coolly. It's a mark of the men these guys were and the ground staff that supported them. I love this film and it's a mark of a great one when you can feel on the edge of your seat - even through repeat viewings - despite knowing how it ends. And I still cry every time at that audio crackle, the look from his son, the cut to the parachutes and then Lovells voice. Fantastic performances all around including James Horner for his music score.

    • @AlanCanon2222
      @AlanCanon2222 9 місяців тому +1

      Imagine being the maintenance engineer of that hotel, tasked with getting Mrs Lovell's wedding ring back to her.... I'd have been reaching for a jackhammer.

    • @chadbennett7873
      @chadbennett7873 9 місяців тому +2

      What is REALLY incredible is most of these command center technicians and specialists were in their twenties, basically just out of school. The computers they were using had a minuscule amount of the power of our smart phones. Kathleen Johnson, heroine of the movie "Hidden Figures" worked on computations for Apollo 11 and many other flights.

    • @AlanCanon2222
      @AlanCanon2222 9 місяців тому +2

      @@chadbennett7873So did Margaret Hamilton, who developed a way to prove that her code could never crash the Apollo Guidance Computer, no matter what was input on its sensors, or its keypad, or the state of its memory. A major milestone in fault-tolerant computing.

    • @chadbennett7873
      @chadbennett7873 9 місяців тому +1

      @@AlanCanon2222 Outstanding addition to the point!! Nice!

  • @jsmithmultimediatech
    @jsmithmultimediatech 3 місяці тому +1

    Fun fact Scott "Scooter" Altman was a Shuttle Pilot (like the equivalent to a 1st officer in a commercial airliner jet or which ever used for public etc, just NASA's terminology for the STS missions) for two NASA STS missions and the Flight Commander (captain in a usual commercial jet or likewise) for two further missions.
    Was the pilot in a Gruemann F12 Tomcat that did some of the piloting for the movie Top Gun, he's the one who "flipped the bird" and gave the MiG pilot the middle finger lol, he was a pilot in the US Navy, was the flight commander for the last Hubble Space Telescope mission.

  • @raycornell5102
    @raycornell5102 5 місяців тому +1

    Niel Armstrong was mission commander of "Apollo 11", and was the first man to set foot on the moon. Buzz Aldren was Lunar module pilot for "Apollo 11" and was the second man on the moon.
    I remember watching all of the Apollo missions while in High School.

  • @STOCKHOLM07
    @STOCKHOLM07 9 місяців тому +12

    Houston, we have a Dawn reaction.

  • @bobmcfadden1111
    @bobmcfadden1111 9 місяців тому +23

    Great movie, especially since I was a “space kid” growing up in the Sixties. I remember watching the reentry coverage in the classroom in high school. Truly a great moment.
    I highly recommend you watch the old HBO miniseries “From the Earth to the Moon.” It tells the story of the U.S. manned space program and the Apollo moon landings through a different perspective in each episode. Well worth watching and a great history lesson for that time.

  • @TBNTX
    @TBNTX 2 місяці тому +1

    I remember the Apollo 13 mission vividly. Everybody was on pins and needles. For everyone's information, the actual Apollo 13 capsule can be found at the Cosmosphere located in Hutchinson Kansas.

  • @erictaylor5462
    @erictaylor5462 9 місяців тому +1

    "Steely eyed missile man" is the ultimate compliment to give a controller.

  • @brycedyck8450
    @brycedyck8450 9 місяців тому +4

    Yes Dawn, it really happened. How do I know? Because it is is easier to just do it than fake it😊

  • @terryv2006
    @terryv2006 9 місяців тому +5

    It was wonderful seeing someone experience this for truly a first time. In North America we all sort of knew the story but enjoyed the movie for telling it. The joy and happiness you showed filled my heart. Thanks.

  • @chrisedwards7095
    @chrisedwards7095 9 місяців тому +2

    When I was nine, my parents let me stay up past my bedtime to watch Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walk on the moon. (Armstrong was first). Apollo XIII happened when I was ten. When I heard Ron Howard was making this movie I knew it was a cool idea. Buzz Aldrin is 93 today.
    Next you should watch "The Right Stuff"

  • @stevetheduck1425
    @stevetheduck1425 9 місяців тому +2

    Yes I remember it.
    Primary school in England, there was a long TV programme which covered the entire landing, moonwalking, etc.
    But it had been recorded as it happened in the middle of the night for us, and we watched it on TV at school much of the next day.
    Lots of talking heads, models and animations showing the parts of the journey and describing the descent (the film was shown after they returned), then as-live TV of the moonwalk, the setting up of the experiments, when they moved the camera further away from the LM, until they got back in, all in one long showing.
    All these 10 year olds sat in the main assembly hall, trying to make sense of high-contrast TV, the part I remember most is the astronauts passing by the camera and 'ghosting' quite a bit, being see-through until they stood still, the setting up of their flag, the times they hopped, loped and ran past to demonstrate how they got around, all that.

  • @skyhawksailor8736
    @skyhawksailor8736 9 місяців тому +3

    I was a child in elementary school during the Apollo missions. During the last eight years of my Navy career I performed Military Funeral Honors for Sailors who had passed. One of the funerals I performed, we arrived an hour before the services to make sure the Flag was folded correctly and placed correctly with the urn. As we entered the chapel there were two easels, one on each side of the table with the urn and flag. Each easel had a two by three foot picture on them, of the Sailor during his career. The one on the left side I do not remember what the picture was. The one on the right the photographer was inside a helicopter looking out the left side door. The picture had the vast Pacific, in the distance was the USS Iwo Jima. Between the photographer and the USS Iwo Jima, was another helicopter with a rescue swimmer in the air, half way between the helicopter, the swimmer jumped out of and the Pacific. A little closer to the photographer was the Apollo 13 Command Capsule. The Rescue Swimmer in the photograph, was the Sailor in the urn on the table. Just one of the many memorable Funerals I had the Honor and Privileged, to be able to perform Military Funeral Honors, for the family of my deceased Shipmate.

    • @RetiredSailor60
      @RetiredSailor60 7 місяців тому +1

      Thanks for your service Shipmate. OS1 USN Retired here

  • @the98themperoroftheholybri33
    @the98themperoroftheholybri33 9 місяців тому +4

    Did you know, one of the physicists for the Apollo missions was so dedicated she continued to do work even while giving birth, that child was the actor Jack Black.
    *Seriously*

    • @shawnmiller4781
      @shawnmiller4781 9 місяців тому +1

      I believe she was actually a mathematician/programmer who was doing guidance system work

    • @the98themperoroftheholybri33
      @the98themperoroftheholybri33 9 місяців тому +2

      @@shawnmiller4781 thanks for the clarification, but it's wild isn't it?

  • @jsmithmultimediatech
    @jsmithmultimediatech 3 місяці тому +1

    Gene Kranz used to get a different waist coat made by his wife for every mission he directed (he's still alive even now), was NASA's 2nd Chief Flight Director.

  • @seanjohnson386
    @seanjohnson386 7 місяців тому +1

    The scene at the end of the film, where the Apollo 13 crew are being greeted by the crew of the aircraft carrier, if you'll notice Tom Hanks (Commander Jim Lovell) shaking hands with what appears to be the captain of the carrier. The man playing the captain is the REAL Jim Lovell. A nice touch.

  • @Kevonutube303
    @Kevonutube303 9 місяців тому +6

    Dawn Marie, you are a real joy. Watched the original Apollo 11 moon landing, and Apollo 13 on TV, as it happened. So glad you enjoyed it and your heartfelt concern for the brave astronauts and their families. Thanks again for sharing.

  • @dafterite
    @dafterite 9 місяців тому +3

    One of the worst consequences of it being so long since manned missions to the moon were abandoned is that we've got two generations since then with people who think the landings were faked. It's pathetic.

  • @TheDweller0690
    @TheDweller0690 9 місяців тому +2

    “Does anyone remember that in real life? “ 😂 Ask anyone in their 60’s. Literally anyone.

  • @beatmet2355
    @beatmet2355 9 місяців тому +1

    What’s mind blowing is the relatively primitive technology that was utilized to run these missions. I think most apps on our smartphones have more bytes of memory than the computers used on the Apollo missions.

  • @louispaulter8733
    @louispaulter8733 9 місяців тому +7

    Dawn, another great “ space movie “ to react to is “ The Right Stuff. “. It tells the story of how the NASA space program grew out of US Military Test Pilot programs. Not very historically accurate as A 13, but really well done fanciful drama of the journey of human flight to go faster and higher AND the “ space race “ between the US & the USSR. Should be a great follow-up to Apollo 13 reaction !!! 😎👍

  • @vermithax
    @vermithax 9 місяців тому +4

    Yes, it really happened. There are always a lot of people who say a lot of things -- that the earth is flat for instance. Doesn't mean they have the slightest idea what they're talking about.

  • @Meganstoy
    @Meganstoy 9 місяців тому +2

    I'm 71 and yes I remember it and yes it was amazing ! The waiting for a signal through the comms blackout was scary as heck. Peace...

  • @MattMichaelVO
    @MattMichaelVO 9 місяців тому +1

    Oh, here's something cool - The real Jim Lovell is the Admiral that Tom Hanks salutes and shakes hands with as they walk onto the Navy ship at the end of the movie.

  • @manofthehour6856
    @manofthehour6856 9 місяців тому +5

    God, I saw this at the theatre, but don't really remember it. One thing that you might not be aware of is Apollo 1 in 1967. There was a fire at the launch pad due to an oxygen leak, and three astronauts were killed...Gus Grissom, Ed White, and Roger Chafee. It was before my time, but somehow it is haunting. That is one of the real scares that were present for any astronauts, their loved ones, colleagues, the country, and the world. This was great to watch, Dawn Marie. And LOL, yes, "None of that stuff" regarding movie requests from Patreon members!!!! Keep it classy, as is a quote from a film you have not yet reviewed. I love your openness to learning things. Makes this the top movie reaction (or as I call them "watchalongs") channel that there is. It is inquisitve, and provides a different perspective. The commentary is ALWAYS exceptional and presented. I get some channels recommended, and the response range is "Oh wow" and "Yeah", and "No". This is the best by far! Thank you, Dawn Marie!!! You're truely deserving of a star!

    • @lawrencejones1517
      @lawrencejones1517 9 місяців тому

      It wasn't an oxygen leak. The initial design of the Apollo spacecraft used an atmosphere consisting of pure oxygen, just like the preceding Mercury and Gemini spacecraft did. The reason for this was so they could reduce the cabin pressure to 5 psi versus the typical 14.7 psi of normal ground pressure so they could reduce the weight of the spacecraft. On the day of the accident they were performing something called a plugs out test, where they were simulating the mission that they would be flying using the actual spacecraft, vice the simulators. FYI, they called it plugs out because for communication between ground and astronauts they would use the radio in the spacecraft, not the plugged in hard line on the pad. To correctly simulate the conditions in the spacecraft in space, they increased the internal pressure to around 17 psi. Now, NASA was constantly coming up with improve the spacecraft, and North American, the company contracted to build the CSM for NASA, was doing their best to keep up with the changes, many of which were a bit ad hoc. There was also mods that the astronauts were making using a new thing called Velcro. They put one side of it on a fixed part of the cabin, the other side on a piece of gear, and you would keep it from drifting around in the cabin. The problem with Velcro was that in the pure oxygen, it was highly flammable in 5 psi. At the 17 psi during the test, even things that wouldn't burn in natural atmosphere that is 79% nitrogen would violently combust! During the many updates, the insulation was abraded off of a wire, it arced sending a spark onto a patch of Velcro that started a massive fire. One of the design features of the spacecraft that was a change from the previous two, was that the internal cabin pressure sealed the hatch. With the expansion of internal pressure from the fire, the astronauts couldn't open the hatch to escape. The crew was killed from smoke inhalation when their breathing system burned through and toxic fumes were from the fire were forced into it. The fire went out when the pressure that built up inside the cabin split the pressure hull.

  • @HelenH-fk2jh
    @HelenH-fk2jh 9 місяців тому +3

    It's based on a book by the real Jim Lovell, I believe (who also plays the ships captain you see greeting them at the end; the real Marilyn Lovell is the older lady you can see in the launch scene also), so pretty accurate. Bit of dramatic license, but broadly as it was. I love that Ed Harris in real life didn't meet Gene Krantz but prepared by meeting the people who worked for him at NASA and finding out from them how he'd react!

  • @imbateman
    @imbateman 8 місяців тому +1

    I’m from Cape Canaveral, (Cape Kennedy at the time the movie is set.) I saw this in the theater on opening night. At the end they pulled up the lights and the theater owner announced that three of the men who worked mission control were in attendance. They stood up and got a huge standing ovation from the entire theater. It was very emotional.
    Also, Russia, India, China, Japan, Israel, and the EU space program have all orbited the moon multiple times with huge telescopes. If the US didn’t land there, everyone would know by now, so let’s squash that conspiracy theory.

  • @Infideles
    @Infideles 8 місяців тому +2

    I was a space fanatic growing up and followed every mission the US launched. I was 15 when Apollo 13 was launched, and I agonized over every report. I truly thought these men would never return to the earth alive. I remember crying when they came through reentry alive and splashed down.

  • @JustWasted3HoursHere
    @JustWasted3HoursHere 9 місяців тому +4

    Ron Howard the director has several people from his family in this movie. His mother plays Jim Lovell's mother in the nursing home, his brother Clint plays Sy in the control room (the guy who recommends shutting down the fuel cells), his father plays the priest at the Lovell's house when things were going bad and his daughter plays one of the kids across the street before the launch. The real Jim Lovell is also in the movie as the Navy Commander who shakes Tom Hanks' hand at 30:54

    • @r47168411
      @r47168411 9 місяців тому +1

      Captain lovell

  • @crispy_338
    @crispy_338 9 місяців тому +80

    A cell phone has more computing power than the entirety of nasa had at the time. Just incredible to think they sent humans to the moon multiple times with ancient hardware.
    Btw the 45hr mark wasn’t just on the other side of earth, it was a mark between the earth and the moon. They didn’t have enough power to even get close to landing

    • @davidthomas5562
      @davidthomas5562 9 місяців тому +4

      100% true , i was thinking that when they showed the shots of the command center and remembering the computing power of the craft. Basically a single pebble of sand compared to an entire beach today.

    • @mrwomby5007
      @mrwomby5007 9 місяців тому +4

      I believe my washing machine has more computing power than the Apollo missions had .

    • @pistonburner6448
      @pistonburner6448 9 місяців тому +2

      Well, you have to realise that Becky's status update and posting of her breakfast on Tiktok is a million times more important than the boring stuff Nasa does, so of course Becky should have many times more computing power...

    • @uncoolmartin460
      @uncoolmartin460 9 місяців тому +7

      The hardware was state of the art for the day, NASA used the majority of the IC's that were in production in the US at the time, Without NASA driving electronics production improvements we would probably be 20 years behind in tech terms today.

    • @thomastimlin1724
      @thomastimlin1724 9 місяців тому +1

      @@uncoolmartin460 So true. To me, comparing yesterday's technology with today is too easy to use as an excuse to basically say "Coulda, Woulda, Shoulda." Since you cannot change the past, it is a total waste of breath.

  • @zhubajie6940
    @zhubajie6940 6 місяців тому +1

    Not only did I see the first steps on the moon on TV, but I saw all Apollo launches from Apollo 10 on from Titusville, Florida, just 12 miles away from the launch pad.

  • @randallshuck2976
    @randallshuck2976 9 місяців тому +1

    I was in technical training school at Lowry AFB, Colorado when Apollo 13 went sour. We all followed it second by second. I had been watching launches and orbitals since the first time in 1961 when the soviets launched Yuri Gagarian(spl) into space for a little over an hour. I really thought we would have been much farther along by now. So sad that we seem to have lost our nerve.

  • @stpetie7686
    @stpetie7686 9 місяців тому +7

    I definitely remember both the original moon landing and the Apollo 13 mission. The latter made for an interesting few days of news. It's gonna be interesting and fun to see Dawns reaction to these real life dramatics.

  • @alanholck7995
    @alanholck7995 9 місяців тому +3

    I remember watching moon landing, parents kept me (7) up for it. Also remember Apollo 13; neighbor got a cocker spaniel puppy while all this was happening- they named him Apollo.

  • @grelch
    @grelch 9 місяців тому +2

    If I’m not mistaken, I believe the real Jim Lovell appeared in the film at the end in the Admiral’s uniform, shaking hands with Tom Hanks after they were recovered.

  • @jameshernandez9180
    @jameshernandez9180 9 місяців тому +2

    I remember being a kid and my parents talking about the astronauts stuck in space trying to come home while we were driving at night looking at the moon. Totally true

  • @oobrocks
    @oobrocks 9 місяців тому +5

    I always cry at the end… tears of joy 😊. Btw: Ed Harris deserved the Oscar for supporting actor ❤. Dear Dawn: I recommend First Man (2018)

  • @MrJonnydanger
    @MrJonnydanger 9 місяців тому +27

    Interesting fact, this movie was made with real zero gravity. Some of it was effects for scenes like them talking to each other and bopping up and down, but them twirling or flying through hallways was the real thing, filmed on a trainer plane going up and down with a set constructed on it, in 30 second bursts.

    • @BubbaCoop
      @BubbaCoop 9 місяців тому +6

      Not "zero gravity" though.
      The plane accelerates towards the earth at the same rate as gravity so they're literally in freefall along with the plane.

    • @CoastalNomad
      @CoastalNomad 9 місяців тому +5

      The "Vomit Comet"......

    • @dre3k78
      @dre3k78 9 місяців тому +3

      @@BubbaCoop Yeah technically there is no such thing as zero gravity. Even in space you are still constantly being pulled by the gravity of the nearest largest mass. You are always in freefall. In this film for instance it was either the moon or the earth's gravity depending on where the astronauts were.

    • @odysseusrex5908
      @odysseusrex5908 9 місяців тому

      There were no hallways but, yeah.

    • @paulonius42
      @paulonius42 9 місяців тому

      That is not an interesting fact because it is not a fact. The freefall that they used is not real zero gravity.

  • @edp5886
    @edp5886 9 місяців тому +1

    Dawn - the phone in your pocket is a much more sophisticated computer than all the computer power on that Apollo mission.

  • @skatedurr
    @skatedurr 9 місяців тому +1

    I love love when she says "best movie ever" 😊

  • @BouillaBased
    @BouillaBased 9 місяців тому +4

    A lovely film about one of the greatest triumphs the American space program has ever seen. They did take a lot of artistic license with how the crew behaved, especially the disagreement and finger-pointing. They really showed a unified front. And honestly, if you listen to the audio for the mission, their highly professional and level tone will bore you to tears.

  • @iKvetch558
    @iKvetch558 9 місяців тому +5

    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.
    Also...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.
    I would definitely suggest you take a look at the details of this film...it is really terrific and accurate to reality in so many ways...but not all. The Astronauts raising their voices was dramatized, Swigert being behind the curve on training never happened, and a few other things in the movie did not really happen...but it is so excellent in so many ways.

  • @parkeydavid
    @parkeydavid 9 місяців тому +1

    The real Jim Lovell was the Navy Captain shaking Tom Hanks hand at the end of the movie.

  • @johnmaynardable
    @johnmaynardable 9 місяців тому

    I have lived most of my life in Orlando, FL which is relatively close to Cape Canaveral where most of these rockets were launched. Whenever the rockets were launched during scholl hours we would all get out of class and watch the rockets fly up into the sky. I was 10 years old when Apollo 11 landed on the moon. My entire family was sitting in our family room and glued to the TV watching Neil Armstrong step down onto the lunar surface. I had a pet canary that I had named Wild Bill Hickock, and Bill was singing up a storm. My mom turned to Bill and yelled "Bill, be quiet!!!" Bill stopped and he never sang again....(Not really. He sang again, but I like to joke that he didn't.) My family loved these launches. I once met Buzz Aldrin, the 2nd man on the moon, and it was one of my most exciting moments.

  • @SYLTales
    @SYLTales 9 місяців тому +9

    _Greetings from the world of yesterday_ ...
    Being 58, I was around for all of the Apollo missions. I was a huge scifi fan, and going to the Moon meant a lot to me.
    I was only 4 when Armstrong set foot on the Moon. Oddly enough, while I know I watched Armstrong live, I have no clear memory of it. My sister was born that same week, so it's all mixed-in with memories of her birth.
    Like many early Gen-X scifi fans, I knew _everything_ about how the missions worked. I knew more about the spacecraft than most adults.
    When the Apollo 13 disaster occurred, I was generally glued to the TV. As a young child, I didn't understand what the phrase, "no possibility of help," really meant. It was only as I got older that I learned just how bad it really was.
    The film does a good job with the key events. It takes a few liberties with time.
    The film's portrayal of Jack Swigert as a rookie pilot who might make a mistake was pure Hollywood. In fact, Swigert had been training with the backup crew from Day One and was still training with them when he had to replace Mattingly.
    Backup crews don't stop training because a launch date is coming up. They train almost until the spacecraft is off the ground. No one had any doubts about Swigert's abilities.
    Many sources have specifically said that the finger-pointing conversation did not and would never occur between any two pilots in that circumstance.
    When you dive into it, the disaster was actually much worse than what Howard was able to portray in the screen time he had. He only hit the highlights. He didn't hit on "little things."
    For example, the crew learning to re-fly the LM takes less than five minutes of screen time. In reality, it was a knuckle-biting _hours_ before they thought they had it figured out. The LM was never designed to push the CM, so the center of mass, fuel-to-weight ratio ... it was all wrong. Controls worked almost opposite from the way they'd trained to use them.
    The umbilical from the CM to the LM wasn't designed to be reversed the way Mattingly wanted, to get more power to re-start the CM. The pilots had to work their way into cramped spaces to manually rewire it with a soldering iron.
    There were a million details like that which had to be glossed-over for time. It was a non-stop crap-fest from the moment the O2 tank blew until they jettisoned the LM.
    All the audio from the mission is available. I suggest that you listen to the audio to compare it to the film. It's very interesting to see how they kind of Hollywooded it up.
    Howard changed a now-famous quote. Here's what happened:
    The initial explosion happened and Swigert radioed down: "Houston, I think we've had a problem, here." That explosion caused the radio antenna to shudder, and Houston got a slightly garbled transmission. They asked Swigert to repeat what he said. Then the main explosion happened, causing Lovell to jump onto the comms. It was then that he radioed down:
    "Houston, we've had a problem."
    Ron Howard changed the line to, "Houston, we have a problem," because "we've had" seems like it happened in the past and was now over.
    It should be mentioned that Lovell didn't ask Swigert what he'd done in the moments following the initial explosion. He stuck his head up because he thought Haise had hit a pressure reset valve -- a prank Haise enjoyed. It made a bang and gave the other two pilots a moment of stress, but was otherwise harmless.
    When Lovell looked at Swigert and saw the perplexed look on his face, he knew it was no reset valve -- and by extension, they were probably in a lot of trouble. That's when the main explosion happened that took out an entire side panel of the Service Module.
    All those nits picked, the film does an extraordinary job at executing the disaster, the people involved, and the world's reaction, in a way that's consistently moving. It's a master class in directing. Ron Howard has said that the Apollo 13 launch is the most cinematic thing he's ever shot.
    Marilyn Lovell has said that Hanks got Jim's mannerisms and speech patterns so perfectly that when she saw his portrayal, she just said, "That's my Jimmy."
    This movie is an 11/10 on so many levels.

    • @denvan3143
      @denvan3143 9 місяців тому +1

      I followed the space program as a kid from Gemini all the way through the space shuttle, put together plastic model kits at everything from the mercury. Capsule, the Gemini and the Apollo, had the big model of the command module, and service module; the latter had a removable panel to show the section. Where is the damage occurred.
      During the Apollo 12 lunar excursion, I rode my bike from my house to my high school buddies place; I couldn’t believe people were just walking around, driving around and doing every day things while two men were walking on the face of the moon. History was going on, and people weren’t paying attention.
      I was disappointing when there wasn’t full coverage of Apollo 13 as it was on his way to the moon. But that changed when the explosion happened; then everybody in the world was focused on those three men between the Earth and the moon. And we knew there was nothing anybody here on earth could do to help them, they were on their own. A lot of prayers were spoken. Some very smart men worked very hard to give those three men what they needed to fix their ship and get back home.

  • @theDVoT
    @theDVoT 9 місяців тому +4

    so awesome that you loved this amazing movie [aerospace engineer here]
    you should consider the space classic "The Right Stuff" from 1983

  • @jsmith1746
    @jsmith1746 Місяць тому

    One of my all-time favorite movies. Although Fred Haise never flew in space again, he was very instrumental in the development of the Space Shuttle. He was the lead test pilot during the Approach and Landing Tests (ALTs) of the Space Shuttle Enterprise, where they released it from the top of the 747 to test is flying and landing qualities. Due to his role, Haise was actually the first person to ever land the Space Shuttle, and he did so three times total during the ALT program. Regarding Swigert, it was actually lucky that he was on the mission. Among the astronaut corps, he was considered the resident expert on the Command Module, and he actually had a lead role in developing emergency procedures for the Command Module. Contrary to the Hollywood created tensions and apprehension about Swigert, everybody had complete confidence in him and his abilities when he was assigned to the mission.

  • @carlosyoung1629
    @carlosyoung1629 8 місяців тому +1

    The sheer emotion of every character in this movie when Aquarius finally makes contact gets me every single time.

  • @HappyHarryHardon
    @HappyHarryHardon 9 місяців тому +3

    “I’m so hungry I could eat the north end of a southbound cow.” My grandpa always said that.

  • @lazyperfectionist1
    @lazyperfectionist1 9 місяців тому +3

    7:38 Ages ago, I had this movie on VHS. The launch sequence got me going _every_ time. It's an _awesome sequence._

  • @user-lj9pb9io8n
    @user-lj9pb9io8n 9 місяців тому

    I'm a 62 yr old man & yes i do remember sitting in front of our tv's watching this.

  • @odysseusrex5908
    @odysseusrex5908 9 місяців тому

    Dawn, I'm a bit older than you, and I remember Apollo 11. I was seven years old. I also remember Apollo 13. I was glued to my television for every Apollo mission. I was present at the Cape for the launch of Apollo 17. I grew up to actually work in Mission Control during the Shuttle era.
    The two men who visited with Lovell's mother during reentry and splashdown were Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, the first and second man to walk on the Moon respectively.
    The spot in space where they were going to get to if something drastic wasn't done was between 60,000 and 120,000 kilometers, and 24 hours, away from Earth. It wasn't a matter of the landing spot. If their batteries had gone dead there, they would have died long before they got back.
    This is very true to life. There were only some minor things changed for dramatic purposes. The suggestion that Lovell and Haise lacked faith in Swigert, or thought he might somehow have been responsible for the accident, is completely false. Also, the trans Earth injection burn, using the Lunar Module engine, wasn't nearly so dramatic. It was very smooth. Pretty much everything else was spot on as it happened.
    If you like space movies, do The Right Stuff. The actor who plays Gene Kranz in this movie plays John Glenn in that one. They used to say he had first call on every stand up nice guy role in Hollywood.

  • @botwitaprice
    @botwitaprice 9 місяців тому +3

    Those who say we never walked on the moon are officially called "idiots". I watched the launch and Armstrongs "walk" on the Moon, I was watching myself, with 2 other Buds. I also followed Apollo 13 mission.

  • @billeverson5821
    @billeverson5821 9 місяців тому +15

    The script was written using the transcripts from the mission, so it is absolutely accurate. There are some minor changes to some of the speaking lines, but the events are 100%accurate

    • @llanitedave
      @llanitedave 9 місяців тому +5

      The biggest difference that strikes me is the portrayal of Gene Kranz as the sole flight director that supervised the entire mission. He was on duty during the initial explosion and supervised the early troubleshooting, but there were actually four shifts of flight directors that rotated throughout the mission, including the emergency response. They were Glynn Lunney, Milton Windler, and Gerald Griffen, in addition to Kranz. Their jobs were just as critical while they were on duty, and its a shame for them to be forgotten. That's true for the other crews of flight controllers as well.

  • @crystalclarity6766
    @crystalclarity6766 9 місяців тому

    The Apollo missions changed everything in manned space flight because we actually went to and landed on another orbiting object in the Solar System. It was like an infant that decided to let go of the safety of the chair and stagger across the room to the outstretched arms of her smiling mother. We went somewhere else, camped out for a few days, and then returned home. No one else in recorded history had ever managed to do that! I was a memorized 11-year old boy who watched it all that hot July in 1969. Amazing!

  • @bobbabai
    @bobbabai 9 місяців тому +10

    The surface of the moon was not so much like sand, but flour. That's why boots left such a sharp impression. When you hear these conspiracy theory claims, you have to do much more than determine in your own mind whether they make sense. This is what experts are for and eventually you're going to have to trust much of what they say. If you don't, you're going to have to study and become one of them and convince the other experts they're wrong.

  • @user-qp1hh3se3o
    @user-qp1hh3se3o 9 місяців тому +4

    Great reaction as always. Great movie choice. You should watch The Right Stuff next as it gives you all the background of the space program.

    • @marthapackard8649
      @marthapackard8649 9 місяців тому +1

      Love that movie. I would argue that it's a prequel.

    • @jackspry9736
      @jackspry9736 8 місяців тому

      And also First Man (2018) which tells the story about leading up to the Apollo 11 mission.

  • @Quarkburger
    @Quarkburger 7 місяців тому +1

    @Dawn Marie, My dad worked on the Skylab missions. I worked as a NASA contractor for 21 years during the Shuttle/Space Station and early Artemis program. I have taken planetary geology courses taught by a NASA geologist where we have seen rock samples from the moon. Of the 12 men who walked on the moon, I have met 5 of them, and worked with one of them.
    I can tell you, yes, absolutely we went to the moon.

    • @waynezimmerman1950
      @waynezimmerman1950 7 місяців тому +1

      Hope you're following the NASA Artemis program with the same excitement as I am; as it will finally establish a permanent human presence on the Moon. I'm very thrilled to still be alive in such heady times(fingers crossed); since listening to the original landing on Armed Forces Radio as a kid, and to finally see new footprints planted alongside Neil Armstrong. 🌕☮👍👍

    • @Quarkburger
      @Quarkburger 7 місяців тому +1

      @@waynezimmerman1950 It's great that the Artemis program is active, and will send astronauts to the moon again. I know that Starship will be the lunar lander, but I think once it's operational, it will quickly become obvious that Starship can replace SLS. I've been looking forward to returning to the moon most of my life and hopefully, finally, we will be able to go to Mars as well.

  • @blakewalker84120
    @blakewalker84120 9 місяців тому +1

    Yes, this stuff made future missions safer.
    For one thing, they made the filters bigger and better and the same shape.
    For another thing, they came up with a better process for stirring O2 tanks that is less likely to explode.
    For another thing, they put redundant power systems in place to help restart the craft if future situations require the power to be shut off.

  • @TheLeprechaunjm
    @TheLeprechaunjm 9 місяців тому +3

    I remember the Apollo 11 landing. Watched it on TV with my family (it was on every one of the two channels that we could get at that time in my area of Canada)... I'm 60 now, I was 5 then. I don't think my late-father cried, but he thought it was pretty amazing (he was born in 1922).

  • @SYLTales
    @SYLTales 9 місяців тому +24

    It had to have all really happened. No sane person would fake the Apollo 13 disaster.

    • @blechtic
      @blechtic 9 місяців тому

      Technically, that is exactly what they did making this movie.

    • @SYLTales
      @SYLTales 9 місяців тому +1

      @@blechtic well, they did have little things like computers and CGI ... 😉

    • @sortie9
      @sortie9 9 місяців тому +2

      @@blechtic Hardly. You apparently think reality begins and ends with Cinema or TV. Just as with Apollo 11 their flight was being watched and tracked from all around the world( ironically Australia was the location of two astronomy dish telescopes used to pick up and rebroadcast the Apollo 11 moon landing itself). This interesting movie is a well crafted drama that represents the well documented events that occurred using cinematic techniques. Nothing more.

    • @blechtic
      @blechtic 9 місяців тому

      @@sortie9 It is literally a fake Apollo 13 disaster.

  • @philc.352
    @philc.352 9 місяців тому

    i HAD A GREAT TIME WATCHING THIS AGAIN WITH YAS. tHX FOR the invite!

  • @torbjornkvist
    @torbjornkvist 9 місяців тому +36

    What this movie misses is the fact that these men, these astronauts, were extremely dedicated and tough men. They had backgrounds as fighter pilots, some with combat experience. They were former test pilots with danger close by. They were engineers, had high IQs, were really overachievers, almost Renaissance men, and they knew how to die.

    • @firstenforemost
      @firstenforemost 9 місяців тому +2

      I don't think the movie misses that at all.

    • @kbrewski1
      @kbrewski1 9 місяців тому +3

      That point was made when Lovell was telling his story about landing the fighter jet on the Carrier in combat. You must have dozed off.

    • @torbjornkvist
      @torbjornkvist 9 місяців тому

      I've seen the movie 100 times. No, I stand by my word. Maybe it's my own background plying in. @@kbrewski1

    • @paulonius42
      @paulonius42 9 місяців тому +1

      The movie doesn't miss any of that at all. Maybe you're thinking of a different movie?

  • @TransoceanicOutreach
    @TransoceanicOutreach 9 місяців тому +4

    16:38 - 'theres a lot of dispute over the footprint' - amongst the mentally defective, perhaps.

    • @cogline
      @cogline 9 місяців тому

      If I didn't see this comment, I would have made it

  • @WJS774
    @WJS774 9 місяців тому

    One of my favourite stories about this film comes from one of the NASA advisers, he said that they built the mission control set so well that he used to leave the room after the days shooting and turn left to walk to a lift that _wasn't there,_ he'd forget that he wasn't actually in Houston!

  • @aatragon
    @aatragon 9 місяців тому

    I was 16 in 1970 when these events happened, and I remember it all clearly, even the detail that Swaggert hadn't done his taxes. I watched all of the space missions that I could, from Mercury, through Gemini and Apollo, up to the Space Shuttle, and most definitely witnessed Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin landing on the Moon and taking those historic steps. Armstrong was given the freedom to say whatever he felt appropriate when he set foot on the Moon. In fact, when the LEM landed, their hail of, "Tranquility Base, here. The Eagle has landed" caught NASA off guard. I was fortunate enough to see two launches (of the Space Shuttle) in person from the press area. Unforgettable. Three miles from the launchpad, yet the sheer power of a liftoff is palpable as a rumble to your core.

  • @rubydragon1034
    @rubydragon1034 9 місяців тому +36

    It's very depressing to see a grown adult, someone who has the right to vote, asking if the moon landing actually happened.
    It's not funny, it's just sad.

    • @flynn-wp3ek
      @flynn-wp3ek 9 місяців тому +13

      Not to mention seriously disrespectful to the astronauts who risked their lives and the entire team of scientists that made the moon landing happen.

    • @rubydragon1034
      @rubydragon1034 9 місяців тому +8

      @@flynn-wp3ek Not just those who risked their lives, but to those who actually did lose their lives like with Challenger. She's just laughing at them.
      I'm unsubbing and leaving, taking my views elsewhere.

    • @bobbabai
      @bobbabai 9 місяців тому +2

      It's amazing how much people, who think they are intelligent, will let just anyone tell them what should be common sense, and that they should toss away what experts say in favor of what they think is their own common sense.
      In order for that to happen, your brain already has to be primed for a certain emotion coming from an important narrative. It's the emotion that convinces you, not facts or the truth. This is why I always tell people, when they see something on social media that appeals to their emotions (happy, sad, angry, comforted, doesn't matter), THAT is when they have to be most suspicious of the content.

    • @RobertJ-vo4bk
      @RobertJ-vo4bk 9 місяців тому +2

      What did you expect? She does this with every film, like everything in life is supposed to be a joke. I'm certain she acts this way to try to cover up her complete lack of intelligence.

    • @marthapackard8649
      @marthapackard8649 9 місяців тому +4

      My understanding was that she was alluding to the conspiracy theory that the moon landing was a fake, not that she actually thought so.

  • @lucas5101
    @lucas5101 9 місяців тому +3

    I never heard a good argument that it was faked and Ive heard a lot.

  • @WiBad83
    @WiBad83 9 місяців тому

    Interesting side notes. As previously mentioned In the brief shot at the end of the movie as Tom Hanks is walking from the helicopter the ship commander that shakes his hand is the real Jim Lovell. Also the actress who plays Jim Lovell's mom is actually Ron Howards mother and the minister sitting next to Marilyn Lovell during reentry is Ron Howards dad and of course the flight controller (Cy) who tells them to shut down the oxygen valves is Ron Howards brother Clint.

  • @wraithby
    @wraithby 9 місяців тому

    My most distinct memory of the Apollo program was in 1967 when Gus Grissom, Chaffee and White died after their capsule exploded on the launch pad. At age 7 that made a big impression.

  • @buddy3167
    @buddy3167 9 місяців тому +3

    17:45 they can't just land any where they have to come in at a certain angle on Earth maybe you should do a little research before you a space movie

  • @Hail_To_The_King
    @Hail_To_The_King 9 місяців тому +5

    Listening to Dawn try to give NASA advice was honestly quite aggravating

  • @robertrouse4503
    @robertrouse4503 9 місяців тому

    I was a sophomore in high school when this happened in 1970. Teachers rolled TVs into the classrooms and we were all riveted.

  • @bryandoehler8962
    @bryandoehler8962 9 місяців тому +2

    I thought most people knew the story of Apollo 13, but I have watched reactions from a couple of people now who didn't. Wonderful to see their reactions as you get to experience the suspense of someone who doesn't know the ending in advance.

  • @kevinmaynard5070
    @kevinmaynard5070 9 місяців тому +3

    Dawn, luv ya dearly but your science teacher should be ashamed. Lol

  • @eTraxx
    @eTraxx 9 місяців тому +4

    "Can of worms .." .. please .. stay away from idiots .. seriously