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The Right Stuff

  • 1983
  • PG
  • 3h 13m
IMDb RATING
7.8/10
67K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
3,712
271
Ed Harris, Lance Henriksen, Dennis Quaid, Scott Glenn, Sam Shepard, Charles Frank, Scott Paulin, and Fred Ward in The Right Stuff (1983)
Home Video Trailer from Warner Home Video
Play trailer3:31
2 Videos
99+ Photos
EpicHistorical EpicAdventureBiographyDramaHistory

The U.S. space program's development from the breaking of the sound barrier to selection of the Mercury 7 astronauts, from a group of test pilots with a more seat-of-the-pants approach than ... Read allThe U.S. space program's development from the breaking of the sound barrier to selection of the Mercury 7 astronauts, from a group of test pilots with a more seat-of-the-pants approach than the program's more cautious engineers preferred.The U.S. space program's development from the breaking of the sound barrier to selection of the Mercury 7 astronauts, from a group of test pilots with a more seat-of-the-pants approach than the program's more cautious engineers preferred.

  • Director
    • Philip Kaufman
  • Writers
    • Philip Kaufman
    • Tom Wolfe
  • Stars
    • Sam Shepard
    • Scott Glenn
    • Ed Harris
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.8/10
    67K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    3,712
    271
    • Director
      • Philip Kaufman
    • Writers
      • Philip Kaufman
      • Tom Wolfe
    • Stars
      • Sam Shepard
      • Scott Glenn
      • Ed Harris
    • 231User reviews
    • 63Critic reviews
    • 91Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 4 Oscars
      • 12 wins & 16 nominations total

    Videos2

    The Right Stuff
    Trailer 3:31
    The Right Stuff
    "The Right Stuff" History Download
    Clip 4:39
    "The Right Stuff" History Download
    "The Right Stuff" History Download
    Clip 4:39
    "The Right Stuff" History Download

    Photos136

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    Top cast91

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    Sam Shepard
    Sam Shepard
    • Chuck Yeager
    Scott Glenn
    Scott Glenn
    • Alan Shepard
    Ed Harris
    Ed Harris
    • John Glenn
    Dennis Quaid
    Dennis Quaid
    • Gordon Cooper
    Fred Ward
    Fred Ward
    • Gus Grissom
    Barbara Hershey
    Barbara Hershey
    • Glennis Yeager
    Kim Stanley
    Kim Stanley
    • Pancho Barnes
    Veronica Cartwright
    Veronica Cartwright
    • Betty Grissom
    Pamela Reed
    Pamela Reed
    • Trudy Cooper
    Scott Paulin
    Scott Paulin
    • Deke Slayton
    Charles Frank
    Charles Frank
    • Scott Carpenter
    Lance Henriksen
    Lance Henriksen
    • Wally Schirra
    Donald Moffat
    Donald Moffat
    • Lyndon B. Johnson
    Levon Helm
    Levon Helm
    • Jack Ridley…
    Mary Jo Deschanel
    Mary Jo Deschanel
    • Annie Glenn
    Scott Wilson
    Scott Wilson
    • Scott Crossfield
    Kathy Baker
    Kathy Baker
    • Louise Shepard
    Mickey Crocker
    • Marge Slayton
    • Director
      • Philip Kaufman
    • Writers
      • Philip Kaufman
      • Tom Wolfe
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews231

    7.867.2K
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    Featured reviews

    Mike Sh.

    Unintentionally goofy, but very entertaining

    This is, in many ways, a very strange movie. One the one hand it deals with a very serious topic, which it seems to take very seriously. It has the overall look and feel of a drama (or even a melodrama). And yet, there are so many goofy moments in the movie that one wonders whether they were meant to be funny or not.

    There was the odd, stilted dialogue, especially among the fliers and their families, as they discuss (or as the case my be, don't discuss) what it means to have the "right stuff" of the title. There are the customarily nerdy performances of Jeff Goldblum and Harry Shearer in small roles as NASA recruiters. There is the truly over-the-top performance of Donald Moffat as Vice President Lyndon Johnson (who was a pretty over-the-top character in real life, now that I think of it). There are the German rocket scientists, the gaunt black-clad Angel-of-Death-type minister (Royal Dano) who turns up whenever a flyer gets killed, and the throng of reporters who chase after the astronauts and their families, literally barking like a pack of dogs as they pry into the most intimate parts of their lives for the sake of another human interest story.

    Even so, this movie was very entertaining. The story itself is fascinating, and the cast was great. Standouts include Sam Shepard, Scott Glenn, Ed Harris, Fred Ward, Dennis Quaid, Veronica Cartwright, Pamela Reed, Kathy Baker, Barabara Hershey, Mary Jo Deschanel, Lance Henriksen, Levon Helm, and General Chuck Yeager himself in a cameo! It perhaps worth mentioning that most of these actors were relative unknowns when this movie came out in 1983.

    All in all, this is a fun movie.
    8ccthemovieman-1

    Real Heroes, And An Era That Went By All Too Fast

    An interesting insight into the United States' space program, beginning with the exploits of fighter pilot Chuck Yeager (Sam Shephard) and concluding with the dramatic flights of the first astronauts.

    Those astronauts - the Mercury 7 pilots - are a varied group of aviators and they are all pretty interesting guys. John Glenn (Ed Harris) gets favorable treatment in here among the group. Gordon Cooper might be the wildest with the cocky and humorous Dennis Quaid playing him. Overall, it's a good cast including not just the fliers but their wives. I also enjoyed Scott Glenn as Alan Shepard and Barbara Hershey as Yeager's wife.

    Yeager's feats were perhaps the most interesting and they set a fast tone to this 3-hour film as we witness him breaking several sound-barrier records prior to the formation of the astronaut team. Then we are treated to a long-but-interesting segment of how those first astronauts were trained.

    The only unnecessary and ludicrous parts of this film were the ones on Lyndon Johnson, where they made him into a total fool. It was as if the screen writers had a personal vendetta against him, to make him look almost like a cartoon figure. And the bit with the Australian Aborigines smacks too much of Hollywood's love affair with tribal religions. I sincerely doubt some sparks from a fire on earth could be seen miles and miles above in space.

    At any rate, this was an informative look at a period in our history than came-and-went way too fast. Sad to say, most people know very little about those first astronauts, who were true heroes. At least this film gives them their due, as well as to Yeager, who deserved this tribute, too
    9torreydeluca

    the film does praise Yeager (response to mrbisco)

    I have to correct "mrbsico" for not paying attention to the very things he comments on. It's not that he turned down the opportunity to apply to be an astronaut, it's that Chuck Yeager wasn't allowed to apply. When seraching for astronauts Harry Shearer's character praises Yeager as the ace of aces, but goes on to say that he "doesn't fit the profile" of the type of man Washington is looking for because he never went to college. This was a true pre-requisite which the Mercury Program had. Also, the scene at the end where Yeager crashes his NF-104 doesn't bring him down, it glorifies him. Gordo Cooper even comments that he gets on the cover of magazines, gets a free car, free lunches all across America, a free home with all the furnishings and loads of money and "I ain't even been up there yet". He's famous because he's an astronaut alone - not because of anything he's done. Kaufman cuts back and forth between the scene where Cooper is with Yeager's flight in the desert for reason. Yeager's almost alone with no media around, out in the desert attempting a record which won't put him on Life Magazine's cover. He's trying to set a record because that's what he's made of. He has The Right Stuff; which is something Cooper reazlies as we cut back to the reception and Gordo is asked by the reporters who the best pilot he ever saw was. Yeager may have crashed his plane in his last flight of the movie, but he emerges as a fearless man ever up for the challenge. And that he's not doing any of it for fame or fortune (although in real life the real Yeager cashed in with TV ads and a best-selling autobiography after both the book and the movie were released!!). That's what's rare about this movie for Hollywood to have made. Films are almost never about measuring a man's inner desires, but rather his being able to win the fight at the end. Yeager in contrast doesn't win the flight record at the film's end, but he is still the hero. This is because he dares to do what we never would. And even after his plane crashes he walks out of the gulf of fire and smoke with a severely burned face as if he will be back; you can't keep him down. This is why as the rescuer driving the ambulance as he sees Yeager's figure walking out of the fire in the distance asks, "Is that a man?", Jack Ridley replies, "You're damn right it is!". Ridley isn't merely remarking that it's a man over there, he is commenting that in our world Yeager is one of the few true "men". This film is not about the space program. That is merely a pretext to explore the type of men who have what it takes to volunteer for dangerous missions - even in times of peace. It's about men who have The Right Stuff - and of all those men whom we see in the movie it is Yeager who shines about all others.
    9cariart

    Pushing the Envelope of Space!

    'The Right Stuff' is one of the most glorious adventure films ever made, a story of incredible heroism, poignant romance, gripping drama, and broad humor...and amazingly, it has actually happened within our lifetimes!

    This is a tale of test pilots, 'pushing the envelope', proving the sound barrier couldn't constrain mankind's reach for space. Leading the way is plain-speaking Chuck Yeager (portrayed by Sam Shepard with Gary Cooper-like charm), a Beeman's gum-chewing cowboy with a passion for his feisty wife (the beautiful Barbara Hershey), and hot planes. Not even a broken rib could hold him back when an opportunity to fly the X-1 was offered. His record-breaking flight could fill a movie by itself...and this is just the BEGINNING of the story!

    Jumping ahead a few years, Yeager is joined by a new breed of test pilots, whose total love of flight challenges their relationships, and is the true measure of how they define themselves. Among them are 'Gordo' Cooper (Dennis Quaid), a hot dog jet jockey with an unhappy wife (Pamela Reed, giving an exceptional performance); and Gus Grissom (Fred Ward, in his breakthrough role), coarse and direct, and anxious for his shot at the fastest jets.

    The entire world changes when the Russians launch Sputnik, in 1957. As the American space program struggles to 'catch up', the government realizes that American men will have to go into space, and President Eisenhower wants 'educated' test pilots to fill this role. Yeager is out (he never completed college), but Cooper and Grissom, and many others, compete for spots in the New Frontier.

    These pilots, from all services, are weeded down to seven men, dubbed 'Astronauts', and the Mercury Space Program is born! Along with Cooper and Grissom, the story focuses on Navy pilot Alan Shepard (Scott Glenn), laconic and prone to ethnic humor; and Marine John Glenn (perfectly cast Ed Harris), a 'boy scout' of unimpeachable morals, who loyally supports an impaired wife (sensitively portrayed by Mary Jo Deschanel). Working under the glare of the world press, the seven gradually come to respect one another, and embark on an epic adventure, full of triumph and tragedy!

    Meanwhile, Chuck Yeager, snubbed by NASA, continues to test new generations of jets, pushing the 'envelope', until, in a climactic scene, he achieves the threshold of space, himself. The flight is a near disaster, resulting in a horrendous crash, but the image of the burned but undefeated pilot, walking proudly away from the wreckage, is an unforgettable image of courage, and truly defines 'The Right Stuff'!

    This is a REMARKABLE film in every way, and is director Philip Kaufman's masterpiece. Lushly scored by Tom Conti (who won an Oscar for the Tchaikovsky-inspired music), the film soars, both on earth and in space!

    If you believe the Age of Heroes is past, watch 'The Right Stuff', and you might change your mind! This is a film to treasure!
    9claudiaeilcinema

    History Is Made Of This Stuff

    It was wonderful to see again this 1983 gem. Just as I remembered plus those unexpected surprises that time puts in evidence. Kim Stanley for instance. A few minutes on the screen, a peripheral character but I took her with me and here I am, thinking about her. The "starry" role jet pilots played and that new breed: "tha astronauts" getting the all American treatment, becoming overnight celebrities. Ed Harris is extraordinary as John Glenn. He becomes a sort of leader with some TV experience and we never ask why. Ed Harris's performance explains it all without ever actually saying it. Dennis Quaid is irresistible as "Gordo" Cooper. You believe every one of his thoughts, specially the ones he never reveals. In spite of the film's length, I wished the film would not end. I haven't had that wish very often. "The Right Stuff" is the real thing.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      According to NASA, the mysterious "fireflies" observed by John Glenn on his first orbital flight were actually condensed ice crystals from the small hydrogen peroxide rockets used for altitude control illuminated by sunlight. Upon use many of them formed a particulate cloud around the spacecraft and many attached themselves to the skin of the vehicle as well. This was confirmed by astronaut Scott Carpenter on the next Mercury flight when he banged on the craft's side, causing more of the flakes to break free and become visible.
    • Goofs
      During the second funeral sequence, Gordo Cooper is wearing decorations on his service dress uniform denoting service in the Korean War. In reality, Cooper was the only member of the "Original Seven" who was not a combat veteran.
    • Quotes

      [first lines]

      Narrator: There was a demon that lived in the air. They said whoever challenged him would die. Their controls would freeze up, their planes would buffet wildly, and they would disintegrate. The demon lived at Mach 1 on the meter, seven hundred and fifty miles an hour, where the air could no longer move out of the way. He lived behind a barrier through which they said no man could ever pass. They called it the sound barrier.

    • Alternate versions
      ABC edited 5 minutes from this film for its 1986 network television premiere.
    • Connections
      Edited into Waiting for Superman (2010)
    • Soundtracks
      Southwestern Waltz
      Written by Vaughn Horton (uncredited)

      Performed by Bob Wills

      Courtesy of MCA Records, Inc.

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    FAQ24

    • How long is The Right Stuff?Powered by Alexa
    • What is the "demon" the narrator talks about in the opening monologue?
    • Who is the man dressed in black seen throughout the movie?
    • What is up with the nurse with the dark hair having such a pronounced mustache? I had to check to see if this was classified as a comedy.

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 17, 1984 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Russian
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Los elegidos
    • Filming locations
      • Edwards Air Force Base, California, USA
    • Production company
      • The Ladd Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $27,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $21,192,102
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $1,601,167
      • Oct 23, 1983
    • Gross worldwide
      • $21,192,315
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      3 hours 13 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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    Ed Harris, Lance Henriksen, Dennis Quaid, Scott Glenn, Sam Shepard, Charles Frank, Scott Paulin, and Fred Ward in The Right Stuff (1983)
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