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15 out of 16 people found the following review useful:
Apollo 11 Retold, 21 July 2009
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Author:
Matthew Kresal from United States
With the fortieth anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing upon us it
is no surprise that there would be a dramatization of that historic
flight to accompany the anniversary. That film would be Moonshot, which
is at least the third dramatization of the Apollo 11 Moon landing (the
first two being the 1996 TV movie Apol1o 11 and the episode from the
1998 miniseries From The Earth To The Moon entitled "Mare
Tranquilitatis"). While it covers much of the same ground Moonshot
proves to be just as interesting and watchable as either of those
efforts even with some drawbacks.
The acting of the film is fine stuff. The three astronauts were
especially well cast with Daniel Lapaine as Neil Armstrong, James
Marsters as Buzz Aldrin and Andrew Lincoln as Michael Collins. Lapaine
in particular excels in the role of Armstrong and wonderfully captures
the man who would go down in the history books as the first man on the
Moon. They are supported by a fairly good supporting cast especially
from the actresses playing their wives. Moonshot has some rather nice
performances that are convincing without being potentially cliché or
overly serious.
The film is also blessed with a nice script by writer Tony Basgallop.
Despite dealing with a familiar story, Basgallop manages to bring in
some new details into the story which shed a new light on events (such
as the UFO sighting by the crew on the way to the Moon). Basgallop's
script takes the viewer through the back story without taking too long
or being underwhelming in building up the journey's of these three men
before the flight itself. Basgallop also handles dialog well for the
most part thought here are a few moments where the film delves a little
too heavily into clichés such as argument between Armstrong and Aldrin
after a simulator test goes wrong (a better handled version can be seen
in From The Earth To The Moon's "Mare Tranquilitatis"). The script,
despite some occasional dialog issues, is a nice one and serves as a
nice basis for the film.
Where the film has the biggest drawbacks is in its production values.
Depsite some well designed spacecraft interiors which could rival those
used in Ron Howard's feature film Apollo 13 let alone the
aforementioned previous film tellings of Apollo 11, the earthbound sets
reflect the film's rather low budget. The sets of the NASA offices are
bare and look as those that are thrown together rather quickly with
little thoughts for personal touches that should be there such as
pictures on the walls for example. In particular there is a set for one
of the press conferences that is simply the astronauts sitting in front
of a bare wall with an American flag hung behind them. The result is a
dull looking set to be honest. There's also the astronauts suits which
lack patches and sorted items that should be on the suits which hint at
getting things right in broad strokes but not inn finer details. The
film's single biggest drawback is an over reliance on archival
materials. Once the Saturn V launches, everything not taking place
relating to the astronauts is archival footage. all the mission control
sequences are told from archival footage so there's not real characters
from mission control as a consequence. Even during the landing and
moonwalk the reliance on archival material continues to the point where
the actors even end up lip-syncing to some of the original audio
material. All that seems a shame especially in light of the film's
rather nicely CGI work. Sadly these faults can be rather distracting at
times from the fine acting and nice script which is a shame.
Despite the drawbacks of a low budget and an over reliance on archival
material, Moonshot still makes for some interesting viewing. With some
fine performances especially from the actors playing the three
astronauts and a nice script by Tony Basgallop, the familiar story of
Apollo 11 gets a nice retelling here. While it may be lacking in style
in terms of production values (espeically in comparison with "Mare
Tranquilitatis") it certainly isn't lacking in substance and that's
what counts.
10 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
The human side of the moon, 21 July 2009
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Author:
pawebster from England
Everyone knows the basic story, and when there is an anniversary there
is a glut of documentaries. This dramatized version is different, in
that it focuses mainly on the human relationships. It makes Buzz Aldrin
into an ambitious and slightly abrasive character who would quarrel
with Neil Armstrong, if only the the latter were not so easy-going (not
to say bland). Well, that's how it's played here. I don't know how true
it is.
It's entertaining and well acted. Daniel Lapaine has a good (moon) shot
at Neil Armstrong - not an easy thing to do.
I'd only really criticize the structure of the film. It is packed with
flashbacks, so much so that it's quite confusing at times.
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