Desesperada por llevar a un hombre a la Luna antes que Rusia, la NASA prepara apresuradamente a un aspirante a astronauta para una misión que lo dejaría solo en un refugio lunar durante un a... Leer todoDesesperada por llevar a un hombre a la Luna antes que Rusia, la NASA prepara apresuradamente a un aspirante a astronauta para una misión que lo dejaría solo en un refugio lunar durante un año.Desesperada por llevar a un hombre a la Luna antes que Rusia, la NASA prepara apresuradamente a un aspirante a astronauta para una misión que lo dejaría solo en un refugio lunar durante un año.
- Stevie Stegler
- (as Bobby Riha Jr.)
- Manager
- (sin créditos)
- Technician
- (sin créditos)
- Coopersmith
- (sin créditos)
- Reporter
- (sin créditos)
- Nogrady
- (sin créditos)
- Party Guest
- (sin créditos)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
After an eternity of training, squabbling, and other padding, Stegler finally blasts off, only to find himself in a dangerous situation.
Mr. Caan is believable in his role, as is Mr. Duvall, whose character -somewhat- prefigures his role in THE GREAT SANTINI. The animus that his character shows toward Stegler feels like a genuinely bruised ego.
Not a bad science fiction film that may seem sort of hokey to modern audiences who have no idea how exciting this superpower rivalry actually was...
BTW, I read Hank Searl's book "The Pilgrim Project" while I was in eighth grade and loved it.
Gets a little soapy at times, some of the politics and science seem a little cheated, and key incidents are convenient and co-incidental. Production values, especially the special effects, are pretty weak. And Caan's astronaut is a little too open with his fears to be believed as a man of his position at that moment in history.
On the other hand it's impressive that in 1969 someone made a space movie focusing on complex emotions and human behavior, not technology. The climax is a bit 'Hollywood', although at least a little more bittersweet than usual, if predictable (and a cheat). The small roles are well cast and played. Not really recognizably an Altman film, but certainly shows talent and is worth seeing.
So "Countdown" isn't terribly interesting formally and feels like it could have been directed by anybody, but that's not to say it isn't an interesting movie. Released a year before man actually landed on the moon, it provides a remarkably accurate guess at what such a feat would look like, and the film is played with conviction by a strong cast of actors led by James Caan, Robert Duvall and Michael Murphy. Duvall and Murphy would appear again in "MASH," and Murphy would go on to become an Altman regular. Barbara Baxley, known to Altman devotees as Haven Hamilton's wife in "Nashville," fulfills wifely duties in this film as well, though women may as well not even exist for all the attention the screenplay affords them.
As a studio film, "Countdown" isn't half bad. As an Altman film, it's one of his weakest. But nevertheless, it's well worth seeking out, especially for fans of the iconoclastic director.
Grade: B-
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaN.A.S.A. co-operated fully with the film, lending the producers its facilities, including Cape Canaveral as a location.
- ErroresThe story takes place in Florida but there are hills and low mountains in the background of many exterior scenes (except for the ones actually showing launch pad at the NASA Space Center at Cape Canaveral). The highest elevation in Florida is only 345 feet and it is only 10 feet above sea level at Cape Canaveral.
- Citas
Lee Stegler: It was a little rough at first, but, after you get used to it, I'm really happy with it - the capsule - real secure.
Mickey Stegler: I can tell.
Lee Stegler: I guess you're not too happy, huh?
Mickey Stegler: If you're happy, I'm happy. Just don't get too happy.
- ConexionesFeatured in Altman on His Own Terms (2000)