On the Threshold of Space (1956) Poster

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6/10
I enjoyed the movie, "On the Threshold of Space", very much.
roncyriter28 March 2005
I was fortunate enough, along with my Air Force, Air Research, Balloon- Launch teammate's to be at Holloman AFB from 1953 to 1957 and took part in the actual making of the movie while they were shooting there for three months, July, August and September, 1955. I was in nine different scenes, working in the background and one "walk across" scene, handling the gondola for launch. Of course, we were not paid, however a Sargent in the outfit did because he had a "speaking line". I was "bigger than life" walking across that Cenimascope and Stereophonic Sound screen at the age of 22. My green '55 Chevy was in the crash scene of the gondola in the desert and I drove it across the sand dunes and mesquite bushes. The gondola was dropped from a crane in that scene and "catsup" was spread on Guy Madison's face and mouth to look like blood! I remember talking baseball and the World Series with Dean Jagger while lying on a mattress in a Quonset hut near the set. He was a "regular Joe". I passed football with Martin Milner, Warren Stevens and John Hodiak on the tarmac near the movie set and launch site...John Hodiak died suddenly one week before the film was finished. Scenes were also shot in Florida. Guy Madison would arrive in his black limousine, late, every morning, with his French wife and poodle. Guy was smoking his cigarette with a cigarette holder dangling in his mouth. Yes, he was very "snooty!" Virginia Leith could not remember her lines and we had to repeat the scenes with her 15 times or so before she would get it right! It was fun helping to make the movie and seeing the finished product at the premier showing on the base in 1956. I made a lot of good friend's including the set electrician while working around the set. He promised me that if I would come to Hollywood after I was discharged, that he could get me a job as Studio Projectionist at Twentieth Century Fox, as I was working part-time at the Frontier theaters in Alamogordo, New Mexico as a projectionist! My life took a different route and I never did take him up on the offer. Could have been a "movie star!" By today's standards it was a humdrum movie and kind of "corny", but it was a chance of a lifetime for me.

Ron K. Brown, Dayton, Ohio retired, now age 71 March 28, 2005
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8/10
Fascinating and cerebral
planktonrules14 March 2010
I assume this film won't appeal to everyone. It's a bit cerebral and a bit slow, but a very important movie historically. The title of the film refers to the experiments that made even the consideration of space travel possible. In other words, the film is NOT about early rockets or the space program, but experiments on the suitability of humans for the harsh demands this or ultra-high speed planes would put on their bodies. Two particular scientific programs run by the air force are featured here--high speed rocket sled trials as well as super high-altitude balloon flights combined with insanely dangerous parachute drops from as high at 100,000 feet! For folks like me who are fascinated by airplanes and space travel, this film is a must-see. And, instead of the typical science fiction film of the day, this is all based on scientific fact--feats that even today seem extraordinary. What I particularly liked, other than the story, is that the film did NOT rely on grainy stock footage--everything looked very real. And, on top of that, the acting and direction were excellent.

While teens and kids might not sit still for this sort of film, try to get them to. It's highly educational and makes you really appreciate these men and their brave deeds.
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7/10
Inspired me
lecrovo-9878415 January 2020
This movie inspired me to enter the United States Air force in 1956. I spent 29 years in the Air Force and retired as a Chief Master Sergeant in 1985. It may not have a blockbuster film, but it did record the early attempts toward space flight. It is a record of the history of the high altitude parachute jumps of Col Joe Kittinger who actually made those jumps.

I met Col Kittinger when I was stationed at Udorn RTAFB, Thailand in 1972. He is my boyhood hero.
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Space Medical experiments taken to new heights!
JSPrine4 September 1999
Guy Madison portrays an Air Force flight surgeon who performs daring experiments in space medicine. He's somewhat of a cross between real-life researchers Col. John Paul Stapp (rider of the famous rocket sled) and Capt. Joseph W. Kittinger, who performed a free-fall parachute jump from a balloon floating at 102,800 feet in 1961...5 years or so after the release of this movie!

The planning and execution of the high-altitude balloon jumps is detailed in this movie.

Admittedly, it's not a film for everyone, and it has its share of cliches, but remember that this was released in 1956. It's an interesting movie, very dated now, but that actually enhances its appeal for those interested in the earliest days of the space program.
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7/10
A good adventure story but science fiction?
dstillman-8938324 April 2019
An air force doctor and air force pilots risk their lives in tests in the upper atmosphere. It is a good story of risky tests leading up to the goal of manned space flights. The pace is good and the acting is fine but it only minimally qualifies as science fiction as advertised. There are no extraterrestrials, no outer space expeditions, time travel or any other science fiction staples. Instead, it centers on methods of jumping from high altitude crafts.
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6/10
Disappointing but still well worth seeing!!
JohnHowardReid22 June 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Copyright 1956 by 20th Century-Fox Film Corp. New York opening at the Globe: 29 March 1956. U.S. release: March 1956. U.K. release: May 1956. Australian release: 7 June 1956. Sydney opening at the Plaza. 8,636 feet. 96 minutes.

SYNOPSIS: A fictional account of experiments carried out by the U.S. Air Force medical branch in exploring human reactions at high speeds and altitudes. Jim Hollenbeck, a young doctor, makes a jump from a jet bomber to test the mechanism of an ejector seat ; later he jumps from a balloon gondola at 60,000 feet, taking over when another officer loses his nerve just before an experiment in the technique of "free fall".

NOTES: Fox's 50th CinemaScope feature. John Hodiak's last film. He died of a heart attack the very day after his scenes were completed. The roles of Madison and Hodiak are patterned after two holders of the Cheney Award for peacetime valor, namely Captain Edward Sperry and Lieutenant-Colonel John P. Stapp. When originally released, the film had a short Foreword spoken by Major-General Dan C. Ogle, surgeon general. Locations at Eglin Air Base in Florida and at Holloman Air Force Base in Alamogordo, in New Mexico. Beach sequence photographed on the Gulf of Mexico at Destin, Florida. In real life, Barbara McLean is Mrs Robert D. Webb.

COMMENT: Disappointing. This looked like a project right up Fox's semi-documentary alley. And yes, here is the real story, told where it actually happened, with many of the real personnel involved hovering around in the background, both on and off the sets.

Unfortunately the real events are somewhat undermined both by more humdrum fiction on the ground and by a somewhat lackluster cast. The late John Hodiak comes off best. The other principals are dull.

Unimaginative direction doesn't help. This is a subject that should have filled the CinemaScope screen to great dramatic effect. Sometimes it does, but just as often Webb's nerveless direction misses the more forceful marks.
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7/10
This Helped Make Project Mercury Possible
quarterwavevertical22 December 2022
While high-performance aircraft were being tested at places like Edwards Air Force Base and Naval Air Station Patunxet River, equally important work was being done at places such as Holloman Air Force Base.

Edwards and Patunxet River tested the flying machine. Holloman tested the men who would fly them. Among the work that was done at Holloman was the effects of high acceleration on the human body with Col. John Stapp one of the investigators. There was also Project Manhigh which took men to the edge of space to study the effects of cosmic rays on the body.

All of this was essential in order to put men into space. Among those who would participate were Maj. David Simons and Capt. Joe Kittinger.

"On the Threshold of Space" tells the latter part of that story and does so quite effectively, being quite matter-of-fact. It shows some of the work being done that would help make high-altitude flight and spaceflight itself not only possible but safe for the crews. This was cutting-edge research conducted even before Sputnik was launched and there were a lot of questions that had to be answered before anybody could be launched into space.

There is a side story in which the main character gets married to one of the civilian assistants, but, fortunately, it doesn't take much away from the plot.

I liked it better than I expected. If you're an aviation and/or space buff, this movie would be definitely worth watching. I came across this one quite accidentally and I'm glad I did.
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9/10
This is a MUST if you have followed the space program from the begining.
mz439214 May 2001
I saw this film in 1959 and again in the 1970's and it reminded me how much research and testing went into the space program before John Glenn made his historic entry into space. This film is a must for younger people to see what went on before they were born and how the space program began. Stand back and look at it today and see just how far we have come in just 42 years.
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About actor Warren Stevens.
williamdonahue99931 December 2006
Having met actor Warren Stevens several years ago, and having corresponded with him as such, I can tell you that he is a truly kind gentleman and a World War II hero, having been a Navy pilot in the Pacific Theatre of Conflict. He is always patient and generous with his time and nothing like the villains that he has portrayed on screen! I and many of his fans believe that he never achieved the recognition he truly deserved in the industry. However, he is still acting, just recently appearing on "E.R." and will hopefully be acting for many years to come! He recently did a voice-over for the 50th Anniversary edition of "Forbidden Planet". Here's to you, "Doc" Ostrow, many voyages into the galaxy...
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