@Dr. Loomis How do you know there are penguins in Antarctica? Have you been there? How do you know Ron DeSantis is the governor of Florida? Have you been to the governor's mansion and personally SEEN him there? See, you could do that all day.
@Dr. Loomis Ill tell you why, in a "nutshell." There's no air in space. Sound uses air molecules to travel. The moon has no atmosphere, therefore sound can't travel and be heard. Is that ok? Or are you going to criticize me now?
If only the rest of Hollywood's sound engineers could follow in First Man's footsteps and stop filling the vacuum of space with roars, rumbles and general cacophony.
I can't even begin to imagine what Armstrong felt at that moment. However long our species lasts, be it a hundred or a hundred thousand years, he's always going to be remembered as the first man to walk on another body in space. It wasn't just a moment in history, HE was the moment in history.
You poor bastards . Buzz was the only one strong enough to speak the truth . In time all shall be revealed . Look at the press interview directly after the " return " from the moon . Those were sad and depressed men who had been threatened to stay silent . It's that simple
I've been everywhere, man I've been everywhere, man Crossed the desert's bare, man I've breathed the mountain air, man Of travel I've a'had my share, man I've been everywhere
Just a shame he messed up his lines. He was supposed to say "That's one small step for a man; one giant leap for mankind.", which would have made far more sense than what he actually said.
@JoeDotPHP The aspect ratio switch is at 0:03. Unfortunately after seeing that bit so many times it's noticable for me. If it was about half a second earlier it would be entirely seamless.
Fun fact, according to Armstrong himself, he actually said “One small step for *A* man, one Giant Leap for mankind.” It was most likely cut out due to the audio being muffled.
@@gabrieldelacruz3863 these are words that will be heard even in a thousand years by humans, who will want to know where everything started. So he messed up big time but thats how humans are, so its poetic
@@gabrieldelacruz3863 I'd say it much more then a once in a generation quote, I'd say the only quote that comes close is caesars the die have been cast quote. And even then I'd say this is even bigger.
I remember I was 12 years old when I saw that in direct to the TV (black and white), during the night in France, with my granny. My granny would never have thought of seeing a man walking on the moon. She was born in 1892 and TV did not exist, nor did rockets. Emotion made me shed tears remembering this moment
It's amazing they were able to send a video transmission all the way from the moon and have that signal sent out to every television receiver in real time. Almost hard to believe
I just saw the film yesterday on HBO and I was legit surprised there was no dedication to him before the credits rolled at the end. No paragraph snippet of his life, nothing. It seemed odd.
@@OfLegendBorn maybe because he'd been dead for several years at the time of the movies release. Bohemian Rhapsody didn't say have to say that it was in memory of Freddie Mercury, it was implied simply by having a film about Queen.
If you listen to Neil‘s recording and then Ryan’s recording, you can hear the slight difference in their voices. But Ryan Gosling did an exceptional job, getting the inflections and timing exactly right.
What I never understand is WHY they want to believe that mankind's single greatest achievement never happened. What do they get out of making the world a less remarkable place, where people have never done something so amazing?
Respect to the director for not putting any music until the time was right. He doesn't treat the audience like kids. There's a trust that the audience is mature enough to understand the significance of the moment without being bombarded with sound to let them know. He's just like, "Here."
Going to mars is nothing like going to the moon. You need 2 years of supplies, food, sufficient radiation shielding, fuel, protection from martian dust storms, which could tear apart spacesuits and fry mechanical equipment, plus solar storms which could fry electrical equipment. Musk is struggling to even get people into space let alone mars. And no these issues are not easily solvable by a small team of engineers. Going to the moon alone took an entire country to pull it's resources together and required crazy high budget spending. Mars is whole different beast altogether. If musk is taking us to mars don't expect it to be any time soon.
When he landed andtook the first step on the moon my grandma said that it was like everything that was going on the world just stopped.there was no communist,no black or white, no vietnamese, no jewish, no hate it was like everyone was human again. To marvel at this accomplishment we had made as humans
I loved how silent this scene was, and how completely silent my theater was during this scene. It was so respectful, and felt like I was in space with them. The visual effects in this movie are incredible. I love how hardly any special effects are used and it is all practical effects. This moment is wonderful.
Saw this in imax last year. Absolutely stunning! The aspect radio actually gets bigger as the camera moves through the doors. And my god seeing the moons surface in such detail is amazing
It's so unimaginable to think of what must have been the experience like to have taken the first step onto something so ancient, where nothing has been before, yet has been seen by everything on Earth for millions of years. I'm so amazed I get to live in a timeline where I can replay that moment though.
Maybe not full-on sobbing, but yeah. It got a tear out of me as well. There’s something awesome about realizing that we finally put out feet on our own Moon.
When the door opens, the camera goes outside and it goes dead quiet i got chills. They perfectly captured that moment and it was absolutely awe inspiring.
I love how this captures the gravity of him being about to walk on the moon. All the hesitation when he's speaking, the way he's harnessed in and he keeps remarking on how deep into the ground the lander has sunk because they didn't know if the ground would carry them, all of it. It's not just confidently stepping out and saying a favourite historical line, it's a human doing something no human has done before.
I like the idea that no sound is heard at empty space, and the makers of the movie just literally applied it to make it feel like as if you were really in space!
Outstanding scene to watch in the cinema, when you’re looking up at a huge screen and suddenly the “whoosh” of air disappears into the vacuum and you’re left with the sprawling surface. Magnificent.
RIP the two astronauts who made the incredible journey to the moon on Apollo 11 Neil Armstrong (August 5, 1930 - August 25, 2012), aged 82 And Michael Collins (October 31, 1930 - April 28, 2021), aged 90 You both will always remembered as legends.
at the moment the camera pointed to the surface i thought I lost connection to the video, headphones broke or something because of the total silence of space XD
0:14 That silent glance at each other right after peering out the doorway is such a human emotion like "alright, this is it." This is obviously a dramatization, but I'd think Armstrong and Aldrin did the same.
So incredible that thousands of years of humankind looked up at that silvery disc in the sky, and we actually got there. When humans really put there minds to it, they can do so much more
Well, with today's social politics it will probably be something more like "One small step for non-binary gender-fluid hominids" but yeah, we get your meaning.
Thanks to radiation now the american flag in the moon has been completly whited out. Now any alien that passes by will think the french won the Space Race.
1:39 at the end of the transmission, you can hear the radio clicks from the end of the original 'One... giant leap for mankind' message. The audio editors must've mixed it in, but left (either intentionally or not) the very end of Neil saying '...ind' *clickclickrustleclick It's in there if you listen carefully
Right after he said, "That's one small step for" there was static, and this is when he said, "a", "man, one giant leap for mankind." The "a" was not fully heard, but it was there. There was a gap between "for" and "man", they could have at least had the static there. It was not one smooth statement, as depicted in the movie. I thought they would at least have done that right. The statement without the "a" is redundant, and Armstrong was very careful with his words. At the time, the media would always play the entire remark, static and all. But over the years, they got rid of the static and got rid of the gap.
when i saw this scene on cinema, they use the original audio (i live in Italy) and the absence of music with the use of the original footage was astonishing to see
I mean- Tbh?? It would’ve been easier to go to the moon to get the footage than to accurately recreate all the effects of being on the moon in a studio. At least back then.
It just hit me, and it's mind bending and sort of terrifying in a good way to think that we, a species of ape managed to actually leave our planet and step foot on another through our own power and ingenuity. We're an animal like no other.
In this life there are moments that truly one person in the world will ever have, Neil Armstrong is without a doubt the luckiest man in the world, you cannot help but feel so excited for him, to want to go out & make history yourself, I am not gonna lie, being the first man on the moon must be quite a huge honor to hold, no one will ever be as lucky as Neil....that's until we get someone on Mars haha
I cannot imagine the awe that would have filled me watching this live. While I think we live in the best of times, I would have loved to have seen this live
You got to love the cinematography in this movie. Neil’s very first step on the moon is the only thing entering the light, while everything else, including him, is in shadow. Showing humanity’s first steps into a brighter future as well as Neil moving forward from the shadows of his past; moving on from the loss of his friends and his daughter.
I was watching at the Cape on July 16th when it took off. A woman in front of me said "God Bless America" as we watched it rise into the clear, blue sky.
This scene really just nails the whole vacuum of space. Absolute silence.
Dr. Loomis Yes.
@Dr. Loomis have you ever had grammer?
@Dr. Loomis How do you know that there is communism in North Korea? Have you been there?
@Dr. Loomis How do you know there are penguins in Antarctica? Have you been there? How do you know Ron DeSantis is the governor of Florida? Have you been to the governor's mansion and personally SEEN him there?
See, you could do that all day.
@Dr. Loomis Ill tell you why, in a "nutshell." There's no air in space. Sound uses air molecules to travel. The moon has no atmosphere, therefore sound can't travel and be heard. Is that ok? Or are you going to criticize me now?
I love that they didn’t overdramatize this scene. No music, no slow motion shots, just dead silent reality.
If only the rest of Hollywood's sound engineers could follow in First Man's footsteps and stop filling the vacuum of space with roars, rumbles and general cacophony.
This scene is great. Thats what Neil heard, no music, no sounds, just space...
Ikr! It's absolutely beautiful. "Magnificant desolation"
It was good! Too bad nobody has ever been to the moon though.
@@thewildcardASMR I hope you’re kidding
“First” - Neil Armstrong
"Second"-Buzz Aldrin
They came in peace
Oh man
-M.Collins
*tony stark is already there on a lawn chair
【Neil 💪Strong】
👏👌Wah❕Kya Nam tha Bhai.👍👍👍
👤मैं भी उनके ही जैसा कुछ सबसे अलग करूँगा।मंगल ग्रह पर सबसे पहला कदम मैं रखूँगा।🎯✌✌✌✌✌🎯
Can you imagine how amazing it must feel to walk where noone has ever walked before
Or being Neil Armstrong. He was an incredible character and the fact he's gone makes this movie what it is.
Awesome
@Dr. Loomis shame on you
@Dr. Loomis and you are a deranged psychopath.
@Dr. Loomis then you must be blind!
That moment between 0:04 and 0:05, when all sound is silenced, is absolutely stunning.
was amazing on imax. i saw 4 times on lincoln squares imax. it was gorgeous
it was so amazing to experience this in theaters
@@giantqtipz6577 Agreed :)
@@joself3602 Definitely - one of the most beautiful films I've ever seen
@@giantqtipz6577 It was a definite jaw dropper.
I can't even begin to imagine what Armstrong felt at that moment. However long our species lasts, be it a hundred or a hundred thousand years, he's always going to be remembered as the first man to walk on another body in space. It wasn't just a moment in history, HE was the moment in history.
And he wore that burden gracefully until he died. Buzz, on the other hand, has disgraced himself.
No living human will ever be able to experience being the reason of the greatest achievement in all of humanity
@@Falconlibrary How has buzz disgraced himself? I'm not american and don't follow retired astronauts
The first living earthling to land on another celestial body.
You poor bastards . Buzz was the only one strong enough to speak the truth . In time all shall be revealed . Look at the press interview directly after the " return " from the moon . Those were sad and depressed men who had been threatened to stay silent . It's that simple
Fun Fact: Yes, this really happened
prac2 It happened on earth
/sarcasm
Hahahahahahahahahahahahahahah yeh OK keep popping the pills
@@simonjones575 shut up boomer get a profile pic
@@xandergonzo4853 why is it the law on youtube or just your opinion
@@simonjones575 B O T H
2:59: Neil Armstrong: "That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind."
🇺🇸Happy 50th Anniversary Apollo 11🚀🌕
I've been everywhere, man
I've been everywhere, man
Crossed the desert's bare, man
I've breathed the mountain air, man
Of travel I've a'had my share, man
I've been everywhere
Just a shame he messed up his lines. He was supposed to say "That's one small step for a man; one giant leap for mankind.", which would have made far more sense than what he actually said.
.
Totoro he didn’t mess it up his mic got cut static
@@oh-totoro Listen carefully, he does say 'a man', but rushed.
That shift to IMAX was incredible.
not as incredible as Catching Fire's IMAX shift
Was this whole seen IMAX or at a certain point was it switched to IMAX film?
@JoeDotPHP The aspect ratio switch is at 0:03. Unfortunately after seeing that bit so many times it's noticable for me. If it was about half a second earlier it would be entirely seamless.
@@estevansilva1591 which scene?
This movie was amazing in IMAX
Fun fact, according to Armstrong himself, he actually said “One small step for *A* man, one Giant Leap for mankind.” It was most likely cut out due to the audio being muffled.
Gabriel De La Cruz he actually said ‘a’ too quickly that the audio didn’t pick up what he said.
Nlocek IBAG oh damn he must have been pissed. A once and a generation moment and he slipped on his words
@@gabrieldelacruz3863 these are words that will be heard even in a thousand years by humans, who will want to know where everything started. So he messed up big time but thats how humans are, so its poetic
lios y’all are making me regret leaving that comment with how much you’re correcting me😂
@@gabrieldelacruz3863 I'd say it much more then a once in a generation quote, I'd say the only quote that comes close is caesars the die have been cast quote. And even then I'd say this is even bigger.
I remember I was 12 years old when I saw that in direct to the TV (black and white), during the night in France, with my granny.
My granny would never have thought of seeing a man walking on the moon.
She was born in 1892 and TV did not exist, nor did rockets.
Emotion made me shed tears remembering this moment
Were is granny now
God. I can't imagine. I suppose in my generation it's going to be landing on Mars, but that just won't have the same magic to it, I imagine.
I never even thought of that.
People like your grandma went from horse drawn carriages to walking on the moon.
It's amazing they were able to send a video transmission all the way from the moon and have that signal sent out to every television receiver in real time. Almost hard to believe
@@smasherroar8119 dead (lmao)
In Loving Memory Of
Neil Armstrong (1930-2012)
I just saw the film yesterday on HBO and I was legit surprised there was no dedication to him before the credits rolled at the end. No paragraph snippet of his life, nothing. It seemed odd.
@@OfLegendBorn maybe because he'd been dead for several years at the time of the movies release. Bohemian Rhapsody didn't say have to say that it was in memory of Freddie Mercury, it was implied simply by having a film about Queen.
In six years later after his death. Hollywood made First Man
@@ronburgundy244 John Deacon is still alive. If a memorial for him was placed at the end of Bohemian Rhapsody, it would be very confusing indeed.
@@zacharywilson9596 huh, I don't know why but I thought he died recently.
Love how accurate this scene was, they even used the actual voice lines (as it seems like) of Neil irl
No, that's Ryan Gosling as Neil. I think he was trying to reenact Neil's delivery.
If you listen to Neil‘s recording and then Ryan’s recording, you can hear the slight difference in their voices. But Ryan Gosling did an exceptional job, getting the inflections and timing exactly right.
One of the highest moment of mankind
Hard to get higher than the moon... Although what I wouldn't give to see this same moment on Mars.
THE highest
No. 1 for sure. This was technically difficult, but it was really a triumph of consciousness and will.
Bilal Khalid actually no. I suggest watching “Adam Ruin’s Everything” video about the moon landing.
Bilal Khalid no. We have undoubtable proof that they actually went, so shut up
I feel sorry of for people who believe we never landed on the moon.
Don't feel sorry for underdeveloped dumbasses.
@Terry Winter Just because we are able to make a movie about the Moon landing doesnt mean that we were able to fake it 50 years ago.
What I never understand is WHY they want to believe that mankind's single greatest achievement never happened. What do they get out of making the world a less remarkable place, where people have never done something so amazing?
@Terry Winter And that evidence is... What, exactly?
@Terry Winter That's the very best evidence you can come up with? There is no "proof" on that website, just speculation.
Respect to the director for not putting any music until the time was right. He doesn't treat the audience like kids. There's a trust that the audience is mature enough to understand the significance of the moment without being bombarded with sound to let them know. He's just like, "Here."
Amen.
This is what i expect the first mars landing to look like, 4k quality cameras... I'm looking at you Elon!
Going to mars is nothing like going to the moon. You need 2 years of supplies, food, sufficient radiation shielding, fuel, protection from martian dust storms, which could tear apart spacesuits and fry mechanical equipment, plus solar storms which could fry electrical equipment. Musk is struggling to even get people into space let alone mars. And no these issues are not easily solvable by a small team of engineers. Going to the moon alone took an entire country to pull it's resources together and required crazy high budget spending. Mars is whole different beast altogether. If musk is taking us to mars don't expect it to be any time soon.
@@TheSonic1685 But if he eventually does it would be cool to record it in 4k :l
They’ll already be 20 minutes on mars getting things going by the time we see the landing
@@TheSonic1685 They are expecting first humans on mars by 2024 give or take a couple years depending on development
boi elon's gonna have tesla's for mars rovers. (like the lunar rover, or buggy.)
When he landed andtook the first step on the moon my grandma said that it was like everything that was going on the world just stopped.there was no communist,no black or white, no vietnamese, no jewish, no hate it was like everyone was human again. To marvel at this accomplishment we had made as humans
That’s insane knowing this was during the peak of the Vietnam war and protests in America.
Lyingwarrior so she is saying Vietnamese ,Jews,black people,white people are no humans ?
I know what she probably meant but still
The news, grumble grumble lol
hmm sounds like a white person to me
@Ed i think you missed my point!
I loved how silent this scene was, and how completely silent my theater was during this scene. It was so respectful, and felt like I was in space with them. The visual effects in this movie are incredible. I love how hardly any special effects are used and it is all practical effects. This moment is wonderful.
Saw this in imax last year. Absolutely stunning! The aspect radio actually gets bigger as the camera moves through the doors. And my god seeing the moons surface in such detail is amazing
That’s amazing! I wished that I had the chance to catch the movie in IMAX, but was too busy lol
As incredible a feat these astronauts accomplished, what the designers and engineers did to pull this off ... mind-blowing. This was 50 years ago!
Amazing what they were able to pull of with the tech they had back then.
50 years later, people cant even have a good camera quality.
@@safe-keeper1042 Whats more amazing is that 50 years later, we cant do it again.
@@BigMisterApple …We’re doing it right now.
@@timothyjoson6584 Money💵💲💸
2:45 "I'm gonna step off the LEM now." I get chills every time I hear that line, both in the real thing and the movie.
I think its just "LM"
@@lilmcnoggy1439 lunar excursion module
@@slow01xj for short tho
@@lilmcnoggy1439 the short is LEM
2:47
Imagine this but with Mars.
Soon.
Wosedav Josedav yes we need to go to mars
*Elon Musk entered the chat*
In HD on UA-cam.
and with a woman totally epic
I love how there was so much build-up to his first step and then it’s just a silent, unimpressive little touch.
It's poetic
Their demeanour is bizarre, no "oh my......
It's so unimaginable to think of what must have been the experience like to have taken the first step onto something so ancient, where nothing has been before, yet has been seen by everything on Earth for millions of years. I'm so amazed I get to live in a timeline where I can replay that moment though.
Imagine Neil going out and just seeing an empty bottle of vodka on the surface
The russians got there first!!
Yeah that's quite what happens in "For All Mankind"
Or Laughing gas canisters
Or a dragon skull
Vikings, I tell you.
.... how would the Russians have drunk vodka on the surface of the moon.... through space suites? I feel a 'in Soviet Russia______' joke coming on XD
Damien Chazelle has such an eye for gorgeous moments like this that show so much depth--the silence and simplicity really add to it.
Am I the only one who cried at 3:18? I don't know why I'm crying so much haha. Just seeing a first step in the moon is so emotional to me
Its because America is in big trouble ... we have fallen so far ......
Maybe not full-on sobbing, but yeah. It got a tear out of me as well.
There’s something awesome about realizing that we finally put out feet on our own Moon.
2:59 over 50 years ago. Really astonishing
Yessssss
This is the smoothest aspect ratio change I've ever seen
That shot of the moon at 3:48 is extremely unsettling in my opinion. Nothing but a black horizon that goes on for miles.
When the door opens, the camera goes outside and it goes dead quiet i got chills. They perfectly captured that moment and it was absolutely awe inspiring.
I love how this captures the gravity of him being about to walk on the moon. All the hesitation when he's speaking, the way he's harnessed in and he keeps remarking on how deep into the ground the lander has sunk because they didn't know if the ground would carry them, all of it. It's not just confidently stepping out and saying a favourite historical line, it's a human doing something no human has done before.
One small step for Man. One giant leap for Ryan Gosling and his career.
This movie tanked at the box office.
*a
One small step for my willy one giant leap for cactus Jack
I like the idea that no sound is heard at empty space, and the makers of the movie just literally applied it to make it feel like as if you were really in space!
That silence is terrifying.
Outstanding scene to watch in the cinema, when you’re looking up at a huge screen and suddenly the “whoosh” of air disappears into the vacuum and you’re left with the sprawling surface. Magnificent.
RIP the two astronauts who made the incredible journey to the moon on Apollo 11
Neil Armstrong (August 5, 1930 - August 25, 2012), aged 82
And
Michael Collins (October 31, 1930 - April 28, 2021), aged 90
You both will always remembered as legends.
at the moment the camera pointed to the surface i thought I lost connection to the video, headphones broke or something because of the total silence of space XD
lmao
Space is a vacuum, no molecule to molecule interaction
When ever we land on Mars they need to say this: One small step for man.. Another giant leap for mankind
I wish they'd rickroll ground control and the UA-cam stream
0:14 That silent glance at each other right after peering out the doorway is such a human emotion like "alright, this is it." This is obviously a dramatization, but I'd think Armstrong and Aldrin did the same.
This is an amazingly directed scene! The silence is the best aspect of this scene! Just dialogue.
So incredible that thousands of years of humankind looked up at that silvery disc in the sky, and we actually got there. When humans really put there minds to it, they can do so much more
I got another speech when they get to mars:
Another small step for man, another giant leap for mankind.
How about "Wow! That took a long time!"
Well, with today's social politics it will probably be something more like "One small step for non-binary gender-fluid hominids" but yeah, we get your meaning.
Too lazy to make a normal name How about this one “Today is the step for not just mankind but a step towards the future for all mankind to aspire.”
Prometheus Venom how about hello mom by spacex
battlefield fan Lame
The silence in this scene is just perfect. Only the radio coms and Neil's breathing.
The actors were incredible, especially for Neil. He did such an amazing job at pronouncing everything exactly how it was in real life
Ryan gosling
“Hi, I’m Neil Armstrong, and this is Jackass”
Red Ram 😂😂
*Gets* *hit* *by* *Meteor*
*durr rurr rurr*
*kicks over American flag*
Lmao 🤣
One of the greatest moments in human history.
The opening hatch scene absolutely floored me in the cinema. Literally took my breath away
2:58 the realism of this shot, love it
Remeber, if you ever feel dumb, that there are people that still believe this never happened.
@@jake.s7065 they don't wanna feel bad about never accomplishing anything in their lives
Major props to the cameraman who traveled all the way to the Moon to get these shots.
0:14 That stare of "Well,there it is"
2:01 Something seemingly so small like this earned this movie the Academy Award for Visual Effects.
Thanks to radiation now the american flag in the moon has been completly whited out.
Now any alien that passes by will think the french won the Space Race.
The Apollo 11 flag got knocked over anyway from the blast when the lander took off.
There is one flag on lander leg so🤷♂️
The *"OLD"* Fance
Mr. Money or you know, a white flag also symbolises peace. Maybe aliens Will think we are peaceful
@@aryan7767 or maybe in their world it means war.
I love once the air is gone so is the sound. Realistic😄
The air was gone before the hatch opened as they had vented the LEM prior, there should have been no sound in the LEM
Eddie Bravo's shaking his head right now
Look into it man.
I remember when I watched this movie in theater, and it went silent; everything in the theater was quiet, nothing.
I watched the actual event on live TV !
that makes you older then 50 years old
@Matej V. Films Kid did you know that people can be older than you?
Matej V. Films millions of people saw the moon landing live you know it’s not hard to believe at all
@Matej V. Many people did see it...and many people are above 50 yo
@@ajpaulalaw4246 than*
To boldly go where no man has gone before...
This may just be one of the best films ever made
To step foot on another planet - still is and always will be one of mankind’s greatest achievements
It would be cool to walk on something you see when you look up at night
Lol wouldn't just be cool, it would be mind-blowingly amazing.
I will just walk on my roof then
Finally, a space that sound like space. . with No sound.
something only few get, and even less perfect.
2:59 This is the moment where Neil Armstrong went down in history.
1:39 at the end of the transmission, you can hear the radio clicks from the end of the original 'One... giant leap for mankind' message.
The audio editors must've mixed it in, but left (either intentionally or not) the very end of Neil saying '...ind' *clickclickrustleclick
It's in there if you listen carefully
Man talk about one heck of a good listener cuz I can't hear anything
“One small step for man one giant leap for mankind”
Such iconic words
Cant believe that people thought THE greatest human achievement was fake. I don’t understand their logic, they don’t have any proof of it being fake
One of the best and most subtle aspect ratio changes ever
first thing i noticed was how when the camera left the lander, the audio cut out.... one of the few space movies that nails this correctly
probably the most powerful event and quote in history
If only the moon landing was real. Still a cool scene.
@@thewildcardASMR Are You Stupid
@@Bruun1971 No, they call him moose. Moose don’t know crap anyways because they’re just big deer.
Imagine if Neil looked at Buzz and Michael before exiting like "I'm about to blow everyone's minds"
Anyone else find the silence really unsettling?
This is the greatest achievement in the history of our species
Right after he said, "That's one small step for" there was static, and this is when he said, "a", "man, one giant leap for mankind." The "a" was not fully heard, but it was there. There was a gap between "for" and "man", they could have at least had the static there. It was not one smooth statement, as depicted in the movie. I thought they would at least have done that right. The statement without the "a" is redundant, and Armstrong was very careful with his words. At the time, the media would always play the entire remark, static and all. But over the years, they got rid of the static and got rid of the gap.
There was no gap, he actually forgot to say it
The moment that change human history!
Wow Ryan Gosling has been to the moon as well. He's done everything.
when i saw this scene on cinema, they use the original audio (i live in Italy) and the absence of music with the use of the original footage was astonishing to see
Cool movie!... I saw Buzz Aldrin speak for an hour here in NZ in 2010 about his experience ON the Moon.. thanks from down under 👍🇳🇿
The first words for the first artemis mission should be " heck yeah boys we're in 4k 60fps now"
Gosling's performance was so cold throughout the movie that when he recreated Neil's real words, it felt out of place.
He was a terrible choice to play Neil Armstrong. Not even close.
If Stanley Kubrick (which is a Perfectionist) really is the one who directed the Apollo Landings, they are probably shooting on the Moon itself.
Nolan must have directed that sequence...
Hanz Zimmer must have a really good score then
Eagle 18101 Justin Hurwitz is better than Hans Zimmer and Damien Chazelle is better than Kubrick
I mean-
Tbh??
It would’ve been easier to go to the moon to get the footage than to accurately recreate all the effects of being on the moon in a studio.
At least back then.
nothing like a mongol talking about moon landing....
You haven’t heard silent until you heard the vacuum of space, can you imagine?
It just hit me, and it's mind bending and sort of terrifying in a good way to think that we, a species of ape managed to actually leave our planet and step foot on another through our own power and ingenuity. We're an animal like no other.
That sound-escaping-door-opening clip is one of the best I’ve seen in a movie theater.
RIP MICHAEL COLLINS
In this life there are moments that truly one person in the world will ever have, Neil Armstrong is without a doubt the luckiest man in the world, you cannot help but feel so excited for him, to want to go out & make history yourself, I am not gonna lie, being the first man on the moon must be quite a huge honor to hold, no one will ever be as lucky as Neil....that's until we get someone on Mars haha
I cannot imagine the awe that would have filled me watching this live. While I think we live in the best of times, I would have loved to have seen this live
Soon you will see it again
When he steps off. Chilling. Less than 70 years from the invention of powered flight to standing on another world.
You could hear a pin drop in the theater.. it actually felt like everyone was there in the moment.
You got to love the cinematography in this movie. Neil’s very first step on the moon is the only thing entering the light, while everything else, including him, is in shadow.
Showing humanity’s first steps into a brighter future as well as Neil moving forward from the shadows of his past; moving on from the loss of his friends and his daughter.
and just now NASA landed the perseverance rover on mars, one giant leap to colonizing mars
The dude who was the first to say "first" in the comments must have been like:
They nailed the radio sounds
I was watching at the Cape on July 16th when it took off. A woman in front of me said "God Bless America" as we watched it rise into the clear, blue sky.
When I watched this scene in cinemas, and it was absolutely silent, someone had cracked a loud fart, and everyone laughed their asses off
2:51 ****** MUSIC***** Also sprach Zarathustra
to this day, the video of Buzz Aldrin punching that conspiracy theory spouting piece of garbage in the face is one of the greatest things of all time
One step for Man one giant leap for Man kind! NASA yells "WE DID IT!"
That's one small step for man one......one giant leap for mankind