232 reviews
'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!
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!
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.
- claudiaeilcinema
- Oct 4, 2009
- Permalink
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.
- torreydeluca
- Mar 29, 2003
- Permalink
This picture was selected as Best Picture of its year by 2 of the best movie reviewers in recent memory, Siskel & Ebert. They both chose this film because "it showed how things get done in America."
This is one of my favorite films. If you remember the space race (and not fantasize you do like some other reviewers on this page) and the Mercury astronauts were your heroes too, then watching this movie is like going home again.
As for the younger crowd? Watching this true story will be a lot of fun, and there are a lot of laughs. But more importantly, it will give you a look into a time when your country actually tried to do important things: not b/c they were easy, as President Kennedy said, but b/c they were hard. A concept so sadly lacking these days.
Watch everyone, and enjoy. It's quite a ride, and it all really happened.
This is one of my favorite films. If you remember the space race (and not fantasize you do like some other reviewers on this page) and the Mercury astronauts were your heroes too, then watching this movie is like going home again.
As for the younger crowd? Watching this true story will be a lot of fun, and there are a lot of laughs. But more importantly, it will give you a look into a time when your country actually tried to do important things: not b/c they were easy, as President Kennedy said, but b/c they were hard. A concept so sadly lacking these days.
Watch everyone, and enjoy. It's quite a ride, and it all really happened.
The Right Stuff is terrific: exciting, complex, funny, crammed with memorable scenes, unforgettable lines, and wonderful actors (many of whom went on to become big stars).
A classic shot shows a test pilot on horseback coming over a ridge stopping to look at a new rocket-plane, steadying his nervous horse as it edges past the flames coming out the back. The test pilot is the twentieth century's cowboy: tough, laconic, independent, fearless.
The Right Stuff tells two parallel stories: the (often fatal) exploits of the early test pilots and Mercury astronauts, with intersecting storylines. The movie never takes itself too seriously. Witness general crawling on the floor to plug in the projector, the sounds of the locusts when the press surrounds the astronauts (Yeager called them locusts initially), the Halleluiah Chorus during the press conference, the enema scene, Sheppard needing to take a leak in the suit, Johnson trying to deal with a housewife. Yet underneath all the fun that is poked at the astronauts we see respect for real men doing a scary, important job.
This film has all the excitement of Top Gun, but is longer, better, just as high-tech exciting, and much funnier. (A washroom scene rivals Meg Ryan's famous restaurant scene...the audience laughed so hard we all missed Cooper's next line!).
And some wonderful lines: Cooper's response to "Who's the best pilot you ever saw?", "O.K. You can be Gus", "The Military owes me", "Read'em and weep", "Hey Ridley, you got any Beemans?", "I go to church too.", "Everything is A-OK", "Our Germans are better than their Germans", "What are you two pudknockers going to have?", and, said with regret and frustration "test pilots!"
To those who have seen it, here's a challenge that will enable you to appreciate the excellent writing, the workmanship and planning that went into the script. View the movie again and see how many times the screenwriter and director took the trouble to set up a later event or comment with an earlier reference. Here are three examples: Cooper dropping a tiny toy space capsule into Grissum's drink (foreshadowing), Copper reading Life magazine before the publisher enters the movie (to make sure we viewers know that Life magazine exits), Yeager bumping his elbow on a limb of a cactus tree as he walks into Pancho's at the beginning of the movie (I never noticed this the first few times I watched the movie, but surely this tiny action was deliberate.) I count a dozen more examples. Send me ones you find.
If you haven't seen The Right Stuff, I strongly recommend you rent the DVD. -RS
A classic shot shows a test pilot on horseback coming over a ridge stopping to look at a new rocket-plane, steadying his nervous horse as it edges past the flames coming out the back. The test pilot is the twentieth century's cowboy: tough, laconic, independent, fearless.
The Right Stuff tells two parallel stories: the (often fatal) exploits of the early test pilots and Mercury astronauts, with intersecting storylines. The movie never takes itself too seriously. Witness general crawling on the floor to plug in the projector, the sounds of the locusts when the press surrounds the astronauts (Yeager called them locusts initially), the Halleluiah Chorus during the press conference, the enema scene, Sheppard needing to take a leak in the suit, Johnson trying to deal with a housewife. Yet underneath all the fun that is poked at the astronauts we see respect for real men doing a scary, important job.
This film has all the excitement of Top Gun, but is longer, better, just as high-tech exciting, and much funnier. (A washroom scene rivals Meg Ryan's famous restaurant scene...the audience laughed so hard we all missed Cooper's next line!).
And some wonderful lines: Cooper's response to "Who's the best pilot you ever saw?", "O.K. You can be Gus", "The Military owes me", "Read'em and weep", "Hey Ridley, you got any Beemans?", "I go to church too.", "Everything is A-OK", "Our Germans are better than their Germans", "What are you two pudknockers going to have?", and, said with regret and frustration "test pilots!"
To those who have seen it, here's a challenge that will enable you to appreciate the excellent writing, the workmanship and planning that went into the script. View the movie again and see how many times the screenwriter and director took the trouble to set up a later event or comment with an earlier reference. Here are three examples: Cooper dropping a tiny toy space capsule into Grissum's drink (foreshadowing), Copper reading Life magazine before the publisher enters the movie (to make sure we viewers know that Life magazine exits), Yeager bumping his elbow on a limb of a cactus tree as he walks into Pancho's at the beginning of the movie (I never noticed this the first few times I watched the movie, but surely this tiny action was deliberate.) I count a dozen more examples. Send me ones you find.
If you haven't seen The Right Stuff, I strongly recommend you rent the DVD. -RS
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
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
- ccthemovieman-1
- May 26, 2006
- Permalink
The Right Stuff takes place during the Cold War when America was trying its hardest in technological advancements to beat the Russians. The movie first starts out with Chuck Yeager(Sam Shepard) attempting to break the sound barrier. The movie continues with other story lines as professional pilots desperately try to get into the NASA space program, become the first Americans into space, and try to break some kind of record that will beat what the Russians had. The other real life people that this movie follows are Alan Shepard(Scott Glenn), Gordon Cooper(Dennis Quaid), John Glenn(Ed Harris), Gus Grissom(Fred Ward), and of course, their families.
The running time is very long at 3 hours plus, but it goes by very quickly. The first couple of hours go by as if they were 25 minutes, and the last hour is thrilling, as well as inspiring. There are several plot elements that really make this movie phenomenal. There is plenty of excitement as you see what the skilled pilots try to accomplish, there is plenty of humor, the cast is nearly perfect, and the score adds plenty of effect to the film. The result is a phenomenal, nearly perfect film, being one of the best films of the 1980's.
The plot is very interesting, as you see the lives of the pilots, the status of the American Government desperately trying to overcome the Russians with advanced technology, and the difficulties in trying to accomplish these difficulties. This is well worth your time, and it is a great movie.
The running time is very long at 3 hours plus, but it goes by very quickly. The first couple of hours go by as if they were 25 minutes, and the last hour is thrilling, as well as inspiring. There are several plot elements that really make this movie phenomenal. There is plenty of excitement as you see what the skilled pilots try to accomplish, there is plenty of humor, the cast is nearly perfect, and the score adds plenty of effect to the film. The result is a phenomenal, nearly perfect film, being one of the best films of the 1980's.
The plot is very interesting, as you see the lives of the pilots, the status of the American Government desperately trying to overcome the Russians with advanced technology, and the difficulties in trying to accomplish these difficulties. This is well worth your time, and it is a great movie.
- FrankBooth_DeLarge
- Feb 14, 2005
- Permalink
This is one of my favorite movies. It starts with test pilot Chuck Yeager(Sam Shepard)and some of his accomplishments; and then right on through the trials and tribulations of picking the original seven Mercury astronauts and the final Mercury mission.
Great NASA footage integrated into this meaty Philip Kaufman epic. A better than average ensemble cast. The best performances coming from Ed Harris as John Glenn; Scott Glenn as Alan Shepard; Dennis Quaid as 'Gordo' Cooper and Fred Ward as 'Gus' Grissom. Barbara Hershey was eye catching as Glennis Yeager and Donald Moffat was down right funny as the egotistical Vice President Lyndon Johnson.
How truthful the characters are portrayed may be of question. But the sometimes odd personalities brings humor to what could be a very long and boring systematic movie. THE RIGHT STUFF is interesting, patriotic and empowering. Classified: Do Not Miss!
Great NASA footage integrated into this meaty Philip Kaufman epic. A better than average ensemble cast. The best performances coming from Ed Harris as John Glenn; Scott Glenn as Alan Shepard; Dennis Quaid as 'Gordo' Cooper and Fred Ward as 'Gus' Grissom. Barbara Hershey was eye catching as Glennis Yeager and Donald Moffat was down right funny as the egotistical Vice President Lyndon Johnson.
How truthful the characters are portrayed may be of question. But the sometimes odd personalities brings humor to what could be a very long and boring systematic movie. THE RIGHT STUFF is interesting, patriotic and empowering. Classified: Do Not Miss!
- michaelRokeefe
- Dec 10, 2000
- Permalink
`The Right Stuff' is the story of the original Mercury 7 astronauts and their journey through the fledgling NASA program and eventually into space. It is well-written and well-acted, featuring a veritable `Who's Who' of then slightly unknown actors such as Ed Harris, Dennis Quaid, Sam Shepard, Scott Glenn and Lance Henriksen. While it had an over three hour running time, and I actually had to get up to turn over the DVD because of its length, the pacing was such that I never once considered that any particular scene should have been shortened. One thing I particularly enjoyed about the film was the introduction of Chuck Yeager (Shepard) and his contribution to history by breaking the sound barrier, and then the periodic simultaneous comparison of the accomplishments of the astronauts and the Air Force and civilian test pilots, as well as exhibiting their eventual mutual respect.
If I had to point out any kind of glaring fault, it would have to be that they focused on some astronauts more than others obviously concentrating heavily on the bigger names, and glossing over the `lesser-known' ones. An example would be Walter Schirra (Henriksen) his name is mentioned a couple of times, and he probably had a tenth of the screen time of the others. Plainly, with an already three hour running time not everyone could have equal time, so this is certainly a mild criticism. `The Right Stuff' isn't profound or exceptional, but it is certainly a good and interesting film.
--Shelly
If I had to point out any kind of glaring fault, it would have to be that they focused on some astronauts more than others obviously concentrating heavily on the bigger names, and glossing over the `lesser-known' ones. An example would be Walter Schirra (Henriksen) his name is mentioned a couple of times, and he probably had a tenth of the screen time of the others. Plainly, with an already three hour running time not everyone could have equal time, so this is certainly a mild criticism. `The Right Stuff' isn't profound or exceptional, but it is certainly a good and interesting film.
--Shelly
I am not a huge fan of space movies but from time to time I enjoy them when I have the occasion (such as ARMAGEDDON, APOLLO 13 and MOONFALL). However, THE RIGHT STUFF has some sort of cult status and I knew I had to see it. And it was even better than I expected.
In 1947, in the Army Air base Edwards in California there are some secret tests about planes able to fly at supersonic speed, but after various test pilots die in the attempt of breaking the sound barrier, Chuck Yeager (Sam Shephard) offers to pilot a BELL X-1, the first X plane to be tested by the air Force. Yeager succedds, and becomes the first pilot to break the sound barrier and soon more pilots arrive because they want to improve their flight capacities. Years later (in 1961) Yurij Gagarin becomes the first man that orbitates in space and soon John Kennedy creates a challenge not only political but also technological. Seven men are chosen and their lives are pressed by harsh experiments and the news that claims them as national heroes and the new frontier of America. They are Alan Shepard (Scott Glenn), Gus Grissom (the late Fred Ward), John Glenn (Ed Harris), Scott Carpenter (Charles Frank), Wally Schirra (Lance Henriksen), Gordon Cooper (Dennis Quaid) and Donald Slayton (Scott Paulin). The spirit of collaboration will help them keep their position as pilots and men and not only that of laboratory animals. Nearly all their missions succedd and they'll prove to have the right stuff.
With a running time of 3 hours and 12 minutes it looks staggering, but this overall wasn't a problem. With many entertaining performances (not only the 7 astronauts but also Jeff Goldblum and Harry Shearer as two NASA recruiters), great soundtrack and a focused direction, what could have gone wrong? One of those movies that truly deserves its praise and reputation and one of those movies where the length is not a problem.
In 1947, in the Army Air base Edwards in California there are some secret tests about planes able to fly at supersonic speed, but after various test pilots die in the attempt of breaking the sound barrier, Chuck Yeager (Sam Shephard) offers to pilot a BELL X-1, the first X plane to be tested by the air Force. Yeager succedds, and becomes the first pilot to break the sound barrier and soon more pilots arrive because they want to improve their flight capacities. Years later (in 1961) Yurij Gagarin becomes the first man that orbitates in space and soon John Kennedy creates a challenge not only political but also technological. Seven men are chosen and their lives are pressed by harsh experiments and the news that claims them as national heroes and the new frontier of America. They are Alan Shepard (Scott Glenn), Gus Grissom (the late Fred Ward), John Glenn (Ed Harris), Scott Carpenter (Charles Frank), Wally Schirra (Lance Henriksen), Gordon Cooper (Dennis Quaid) and Donald Slayton (Scott Paulin). The spirit of collaboration will help them keep their position as pilots and men and not only that of laboratory animals. Nearly all their missions succedd and they'll prove to have the right stuff.
With a running time of 3 hours and 12 minutes it looks staggering, but this overall wasn't a problem. With many entertaining performances (not only the 7 astronauts but also Jeff Goldblum and Harry Shearer as two NASA recruiters), great soundtrack and a focused direction, what could have gone wrong? One of those movies that truly deserves its praise and reputation and one of those movies where the length is not a problem.
- bellino-angelo2014
- May 24, 2022
- Permalink
- rmax304823
- May 11, 2004
- Permalink
The right stuff is my favorite movie of all time. Splendidly acted by a great cast Dennis Quaid , Sam Shepard et al, this movie brilliantly tells the story of the USA astronaut program. Director Phil Kaufman deserves much praise! Riveting movie and what a finale! Tremendous.
The film is set during the Russians launching an satellite into orbit. I remember being in the Cub Scouts and we all waited outside the Congregational church the meetings were held to see if we could see "Sputnik". President Eisenhower mandated the test pilots be used for the first American in Space. This movie follows the course of Alan Shepsrd as the first American in space and John Glenn the first to go into Orbit.
The final scenes are tremendous and if one doesn't get goosebumps watching Dennis Quaid immortal performance of Gordon Cooper you arr not alive.
This was a Ladd Company film trying to follow the path of the Mirisch Corporation but failed in its attempt to be a boutique film studio.
The film is set during the Russians launching an satellite into orbit. I remember being in the Cub Scouts and we all waited outside the Congregational church the meetings were held to see if we could see "Sputnik". President Eisenhower mandated the test pilots be used for the first American in Space. This movie follows the course of Alan Shepsrd as the first American in space and John Glenn the first to go into Orbit.
The final scenes are tremendous and if one doesn't get goosebumps watching Dennis Quaid immortal performance of Gordon Cooper you arr not alive.
This was a Ladd Company film trying to follow the path of the Mirisch Corporation but failed in its attempt to be a boutique film studio.
- adventure-21903
- Dec 31, 2018
- Permalink
The really interesting thing about The Right Stuff is the sequence where Chuck Yeager takes his Starfighter (very telling) to the edge of the space.
Compare this sequence to 2001's Dave Bowman taking his spacecraft to the edge of . . . whatever. The filming styles in the two sequences, the tumbling, spinning sensation and freakish views, are remarkably similar and I think the TRS production is making that exact point.
Yeager, unlike Bowman, never makes it into space--witness space and stars just within his grasp, then slipping away--but in the end, he's portrayed as an indomitable and winning man. The Starfighter sequence in The Right Stuff mimics 2001's Stargate to describe what REAL flight is all about: human struggle.
Compare this sequence to 2001's Dave Bowman taking his spacecraft to the edge of . . . whatever. The filming styles in the two sequences, the tumbling, spinning sensation and freakish views, are remarkably similar and I think the TRS production is making that exact point.
Yeager, unlike Bowman, never makes it into space--witness space and stars just within his grasp, then slipping away--but in the end, he's portrayed as an indomitable and winning man. The Starfighter sequence in The Right Stuff mimics 2001's Stargate to describe what REAL flight is all about: human struggle.
When this came out, I loved it. Even though I knew some of the special effects were cheesy and inaccurate. However, I thought it brought to attention something that I love - - the history of the US based program.
Over the years, however, I have come to understand that this film does a great disservice to an American hero. The book and the film both portray Gus Grissom as a panicky, incompetent astronaut. He was the exact opposite. NASA knew this, and that is why he was assigned the second American space flight, the first flight of the two man Gemini spacecraft, and was training to command the first Apollo mission when he was tragically killed in the fire along with Ed White and Roger Chaffee.
It's very unfortunate that the author and filmmakers opted to inject drama that just wasn't there, and that damages the reputation of a great American.
Over the years, however, I have come to understand that this film does a great disservice to an American hero. The book and the film both portray Gus Grissom as a panicky, incompetent astronaut. He was the exact opposite. NASA knew this, and that is why he was assigned the second American space flight, the first flight of the two man Gemini spacecraft, and was training to command the first Apollo mission when he was tragically killed in the fire along with Ed White and Roger Chaffee.
It's very unfortunate that the author and filmmakers opted to inject drama that just wasn't there, and that damages the reputation of a great American.
- jaigurudavid
- Jan 21, 2019
- Permalink
Outstanding film from 1983 that was honored with four Academy Awards and is often called the second-best film of the 1980s behind only Scorsese's "Raging Bull". The movie is a 190-plus minute extravaganza which honors the U.S. Mercury 7 Astronauts. The all-star cast includes Sam Shepard (as Chuck Yeager in an Oscar-nominated role of a lifetime), Ed Harris (John Glenn), Scott Glenn (Alan Shepard), Fred Ward (Gus Grissom), Lance Henriksen (Walter Schirra), Dennis Quaid (Gordon Cooper), and Donald Moffat (Lyndon Baines Johnson). The film is solid in so many respects. It is meticulous and tries to go for drama and humor and succeeds in everything it wants to do. Veronica Cartwright, Barbara Hershey, Pamela Reed, Kathy Baker, and Mary Jo Deschanel are also along for the ride as several of the wives who attempt to keep their heads about them while they fear that their husbands are losing theirs. "The Right Stuff" is a historical lesson told in a way that is so clever and convincing that few will find fault with anything when it comes to the story-telling. Writer-director Philip Kaufman easily does the best work of his career with this masterpiece. Look for Cincinnati Bengal Hall-of-Famer Anthony Munoz in a cameo appearance. Arguably the best film of the 1980s and should have been the Best Picture Oscar winner over "Terms of Endearment" in 1983. 5 stars out of 5.
The Right Stuff is a bold and ambitious movie, based upon Tom Wolfe's novel of the same name. It's storyline depicts a very important part of history, namely, the cold war between the U.S. and Russia. We were competing with Russia for decades over which country could hold the title of biggest superpower. The Americans versus the Commies. The threat of nuclear war between the two countries was always tangible.
The Right Stuff is a most entertaining and informative history lesson. A chronicle of the Mercury 7 program which propelled the first Americans into space. Pilot Chuck Yeager (Sam Shepard) basically started it all as the man who first risked his life towards this journey by breaking the sound barrier with his "Glamorous Glennis" X-1. Russia upped the ante with Sputnik soon after.
The early Yeager flight sequence where he surpasses the speed of sound is nothing short of breathtaking. Caleb Deshanel's cinematography and sfx accompanying this and other airborne dramatizations depicted here are unparalleled to anything I've seen in a movie before or since. They will have you on the edge of your seat.
The first act of The Right Stuff is mostly Yeager's story. But in addition to learning about this American legend, this portion of the film allows the viewer to get into the psyche of the test pilot. Each time you go on up in a hurtling piece of machinery to try topping the record you set previously could be your last. Risky and Dangerous, but for these guys it's a way of life, and they wouldn't have it any other way.
Yeager's groundbreaking flights set the blueprint for America's journey into space. From here we see test pilots from all over competing with each other to become the first in history to go where no man has gone before. These scenes are insightful, funny, and allow the viewer to be introduced to the personalities behind the men who would make up the Mercury 7 program.
From here, the viewer gets exposed to the behind-the-scenes politics during this pivotal point in history, showing the relationships these men have with their concerned wives as well as satirizing the prying, sometimes inconsiderate news media once the astronauts are introduced to the press. The human element and satire depicted in these scenes are still truthful and relevant by today's standards.
These pilots are competitive and naturally find differences with one another. But they eventually learn to look past their egos, realizing they're all in this together. They eventually come to terms with the fact they are now America's spokespersons, and learn to respect and admire one another along their journey.
The cast is outstanding. Scott Glenn, Dennis Quaid, Ed Harris, and Fred Ward all give top-notch performances as Alan Shepherd, Gordo Cooper, John Glenn, and Gus Grissom. Acclaimed musician turned actor Levon Helm delivers one of the best lines in Movie History. Tom Conti's winning and inspirational score ties this historical epic together, which deservedly won an Academy Award for best original score.
The running time is slightly over 3 hours, but is never boring and seems most appropriate in retrospect to tell this epic story.
The fact that Terms of Endearment won best picture over The Right Stuff at the 1983 Oscars is a travesty. The Right Stuff is a timeless classic which will always retain it's power and glory, and serves as a historical time capsule to teach future generations of moviegoers what heroism and bravery are all about.
The Right Stuff is a most entertaining and informative history lesson. A chronicle of the Mercury 7 program which propelled the first Americans into space. Pilot Chuck Yeager (Sam Shepard) basically started it all as the man who first risked his life towards this journey by breaking the sound barrier with his "Glamorous Glennis" X-1. Russia upped the ante with Sputnik soon after.
The early Yeager flight sequence where he surpasses the speed of sound is nothing short of breathtaking. Caleb Deshanel's cinematography and sfx accompanying this and other airborne dramatizations depicted here are unparalleled to anything I've seen in a movie before or since. They will have you on the edge of your seat.
The first act of The Right Stuff is mostly Yeager's story. But in addition to learning about this American legend, this portion of the film allows the viewer to get into the psyche of the test pilot. Each time you go on up in a hurtling piece of machinery to try topping the record you set previously could be your last. Risky and Dangerous, but for these guys it's a way of life, and they wouldn't have it any other way.
Yeager's groundbreaking flights set the blueprint for America's journey into space. From here we see test pilots from all over competing with each other to become the first in history to go where no man has gone before. These scenes are insightful, funny, and allow the viewer to be introduced to the personalities behind the men who would make up the Mercury 7 program.
From here, the viewer gets exposed to the behind-the-scenes politics during this pivotal point in history, showing the relationships these men have with their concerned wives as well as satirizing the prying, sometimes inconsiderate news media once the astronauts are introduced to the press. The human element and satire depicted in these scenes are still truthful and relevant by today's standards.
These pilots are competitive and naturally find differences with one another. But they eventually learn to look past their egos, realizing they're all in this together. They eventually come to terms with the fact they are now America's spokespersons, and learn to respect and admire one another along their journey.
The cast is outstanding. Scott Glenn, Dennis Quaid, Ed Harris, and Fred Ward all give top-notch performances as Alan Shepherd, Gordo Cooper, John Glenn, and Gus Grissom. Acclaimed musician turned actor Levon Helm delivers one of the best lines in Movie History. Tom Conti's winning and inspirational score ties this historical epic together, which deservedly won an Academy Award for best original score.
The running time is slightly over 3 hours, but is never boring and seems most appropriate in retrospect to tell this epic story.
The fact that Terms of Endearment won best picture over The Right Stuff at the 1983 Oscars is a travesty. The Right Stuff is a timeless classic which will always retain it's power and glory, and serves as a historical time capsule to teach future generations of moviegoers what heroism and bravery are all about.
Many are quick to announce a particular film as important but are reluctant to consider why they stand by such a film. For me, even though there are other films that people would adamantly admit are much better I can not think of a better one in the past 25 years than THE RIGHT STUFF. Now, let me give you three reasons why (much of what I will say has already been said by Roger Ebert but I cannot word it any better).
1.) Very few movies do a better job referring to the topic of heroism and courage (two important American topics). In the beginning of the movie we see a cowboy riding through the desert as he stumbles across the X-1 plane(the first plane to break the sound barrier). By the end of the movie the seven Mercury astronauts are cheered for what they have done. Those two images say everything about the movie because they show that what we perceive as heroism has changed. The original American heroes (cowboys) were loners. The heroes of today are team players who act as public-relations people where the one or two spokesmen are the ones credited for their efforts. The fact that this movie does a great job demonstrating that our ideals have changed (no necessarily for the better or worse) is testament to how such a great American film this is.
2.) The movie manages to do a lot without going off track. It manages to be a comedy, an action-adventure film, a social and political commentary, a docu-drama, and a satire. The fact that this movie is able to do so much while, at the same time, pull it off is an incredible feat.
3.) The movie also showcases a lot of talent; Sam Shepard, Ed Harris, Fred Ward, Dennis Quaid, Barbara Hershey, Pamela Reed, J.P. Ryan, Kim Stanley, Veronica Cartwright all give some of their best performances to date. Even some of the best films of all time have two or three standout performances. THE RIGHT STUFF has several times that number.
I think that by my three reasons I have justified why THE RIGHT STUFF is the best American film of the past 25 years.
1.) Very few movies do a better job referring to the topic of heroism and courage (two important American topics). In the beginning of the movie we see a cowboy riding through the desert as he stumbles across the X-1 plane(the first plane to break the sound barrier). By the end of the movie the seven Mercury astronauts are cheered for what they have done. Those two images say everything about the movie because they show that what we perceive as heroism has changed. The original American heroes (cowboys) were loners. The heroes of today are team players who act as public-relations people where the one or two spokesmen are the ones credited for their efforts. The fact that this movie does a great job demonstrating that our ideals have changed (no necessarily for the better or worse) is testament to how such a great American film this is.
2.) The movie manages to do a lot without going off track. It manages to be a comedy, an action-adventure film, a social and political commentary, a docu-drama, and a satire. The fact that this movie is able to do so much while, at the same time, pull it off is an incredible feat.
3.) The movie also showcases a lot of talent; Sam Shepard, Ed Harris, Fred Ward, Dennis Quaid, Barbara Hershey, Pamela Reed, J.P. Ryan, Kim Stanley, Veronica Cartwright all give some of their best performances to date. Even some of the best films of all time have two or three standout performances. THE RIGHT STUFF has several times that number.
I think that by my three reasons I have justified why THE RIGHT STUFF is the best American film of the past 25 years.
- Preston-10
- Aug 3, 2000
- Permalink
Awesome. One of those movies that I can see time and again, yet each time I enjoy it as much as the first time I saw it. Fantastic cast, great music, brilliant script. Just the right combination of drama and humour - the sequence during which Al Shepard (played wonderfully by Scott Glenn) wants to relieve himself sitting atop Freedom 7, whilst the film cuts to images of the fire hose, the pouring coffee, the water cooler etc. is one of my all time favourites.
My only real criticism of the movie is the treatment of Grissom and the explosive hatch incident - the movie leaves it looking like it was Grissom's fault - but it has by now been well documented that it was indeed a malfunction.
My only real criticism of the movie is the treatment of Grissom and the explosive hatch incident - the movie leaves it looking like it was Grissom's fault - but it has by now been well documented that it was indeed a malfunction.
I really loved The Right Stuff. The story line seemed true to form and I felt like I was getting a glimpse into the 'real' world of life for astronauts and test pilots back in the 50s and 60s. When watching Apollo 13, which also stars Ed Harris, there was a real continuity in the movie that made the two movies complement each other nicely.
The Right Stuff also was a great vehicle for actors like Ed Harris, Fred Ward, Scott Glen,Sam Shepard and Dennis Quaid who have all gone on to do amazing work. The casting for this movie was superb. The main actors and supporting cast told a very interesting story with truth and poignancy that made it believable all the way through. I would and still do highly recommend this movie to anyone.
The Right Stuff also was a great vehicle for actors like Ed Harris, Fred Ward, Scott Glen,Sam Shepard and Dennis Quaid who have all gone on to do amazing work. The casting for this movie was superb. The main actors and supporting cast told a very interesting story with truth and poignancy that made it believable all the way through. I would and still do highly recommend this movie to anyone.
- yeojennifer
- Mar 19, 2004
- Permalink
Philip Kaufman approaches this project like a visionary, bringing numerous angles, aspects and tones to his film. As a result, The Right Stuff is a richly layered movie about the classic space race between USA and the Soviet Union in the middle of the 20th century. Kaufman grounds his subject in the history of aviation, centred around the records of legendary pilot Chuck Yeager - and the people following in his footsteps. For an introduction, this section is extremely detailed, and by the time NASA enters the picture with their space programme, Kaufman's quirky humour becomes more pronounced. The mixture of comedy and apparent serious human drama makes The Right Stuff - which clocks in at 3 hours - an offbeat film. It constantly draws interest, but also becomes somewhat detached at times. One can't help but feel that the film could have benefited from more economical editing, which would have reduced the focus on certain subplots. With that said, The Right Stuff becomes increasingly tighter and more magnetic towards the end, when Kaufman applies some delicate touches. The ensemble cast is largely fine, with Dennis Quaid's devilishly boyish smile a main attraction.
- fredrikgunerius
- Jan 6, 2025
- Permalink
At last I've found a movie that'd been on my to-watch list for years that turned out to be pretty good when I actually watched it.
At first I balked at the length, being that it's over three hours long. But I knew early on I was in for the long haul. The movie is consistently entertaining and engaging. Also it has a number of fantastic actors in it, like Ed Harris, Sam Shepherd, Barbara Hershey, Fred Ward, Dennis Quaid, and small roles from Jeff Goldblum and Harry Shearer among others.
The aeronautic footage also still looks impressive. I thought it might be showing its age now, but I found it more interesting than that in the recent Top Gun movie, which I thought was very overrated.
The movie also gives powerful roles to its women characters, without it ever feeling preachy. We see what the test pilots go through and the risks they take, and we also see what this does to their wives.
It sucks that this movie tanked at the box office. It totally deserved to do well.
At first I balked at the length, being that it's over three hours long. But I knew early on I was in for the long haul. The movie is consistently entertaining and engaging. Also it has a number of fantastic actors in it, like Ed Harris, Sam Shepherd, Barbara Hershey, Fred Ward, Dennis Quaid, and small roles from Jeff Goldblum and Harry Shearer among others.
The aeronautic footage also still looks impressive. I thought it might be showing its age now, but I found it more interesting than that in the recent Top Gun movie, which I thought was very overrated.
The movie also gives powerful roles to its women characters, without it ever feeling preachy. We see what the test pilots go through and the risks they take, and we also see what this does to their wives.
It sucks that this movie tanked at the box office. It totally deserved to do well.
Take a series of events that by themselves stir the imagination and the soul, romanticize and embellish them in a novel by a pop-culture author, then take that novel and give it the Hollywood treatment, and you end up with something that's long on legend, short on truth, but who cares? It features historic people and airplanes, excellent cinematography, a gang of stellar actors and even acceptable model and special effects work.
Unlike Tom Wolf's novel, the movie ignores the Navy's Pax River and gives all the glory to Edwards AFB and the Zoomies. The CAF's "FIFI," the last flying B-29, has a major role as the X-1's "mothership," as well as a privately-owned F-104 Starfighter out of Mojave as the plane that almost killed Chuck Yeager. The real General Yeager has a bit role as a crusty old prospector doing bartender duty at the watering hole the Edwards pilots hang out in. The scene where Harry Shearer and Jeff Goldblum, playing two NASA flunkies, are bad-mouthing Yeager because he has no college degree, all while the real Yeager, playing the bartender, is standing in back of them listening in, is precious.
While the plot and action centers on Yeager and the original seven Mercury astronauts, two actresses are worth watching: Veronica Cartwright does her usual great job as Betty Grissom ("I want to have lunch with Jackie!!") and the ever-versatile and talented Pamela Reed as Gordon Cooper's long-suffering wife, Trudy, who has some of the best lines in the movie (referring to the macho Edwards test pilots, "But they sure are handy assholes.").
A bit of tragic trivia: Jane Dornacker, the talented actress, comedienne and musician who "uglied up" to play Nurse Murch in the hilarious "sperm count scene", later a traffic reporter in New York City for WNBC radio, was killed when her helicopter lost its tail rotor, narrowly missed a pier and crashed into the Hudson River. At the time of the crash she was live on the air, and her screams "Hit the water! Hit the water" were heard by literally thousands of stunned New York commuters.
Unlike Tom Wolf's novel, the movie ignores the Navy's Pax River and gives all the glory to Edwards AFB and the Zoomies. The CAF's "FIFI," the last flying B-29, has a major role as the X-1's "mothership," as well as a privately-owned F-104 Starfighter out of Mojave as the plane that almost killed Chuck Yeager. The real General Yeager has a bit role as a crusty old prospector doing bartender duty at the watering hole the Edwards pilots hang out in. The scene where Harry Shearer and Jeff Goldblum, playing two NASA flunkies, are bad-mouthing Yeager because he has no college degree, all while the real Yeager, playing the bartender, is standing in back of them listening in, is precious.
While the plot and action centers on Yeager and the original seven Mercury astronauts, two actresses are worth watching: Veronica Cartwright does her usual great job as Betty Grissom ("I want to have lunch with Jackie!!") and the ever-versatile and talented Pamela Reed as Gordon Cooper's long-suffering wife, Trudy, who has some of the best lines in the movie (referring to the macho Edwards test pilots, "But they sure are handy assholes.").
A bit of tragic trivia: Jane Dornacker, the talented actress, comedienne and musician who "uglied up" to play Nurse Murch in the hilarious "sperm count scene", later a traffic reporter in New York City for WNBC radio, was killed when her helicopter lost its tail rotor, narrowly missed a pier and crashed into the Hudson River. At the time of the crash she was live on the air, and her screams "Hit the water! Hit the water" were heard by literally thousands of stunned New York commuters.
- richreed-1
- Jun 30, 2009
- Permalink
"The Right Stuff" is the first movie made about the American Astronauts training and the U. S space program. It's also about the U. S. test pilots after World War II who led the way for space exploration and the pilots who would man American spacecraft. Modern audiences may not know the name Chuck Yeager, but he was a legend to Americans in the mdi-20th century. I can recall a Saturday of my boyhood when everyone was excited about the news of a new record by Chuck Yeager. I was working at my dad's steak house and lounge on Dec 12, 1953, when the news came over the TV that Yeager had set a new record speed of Mach 2.4 at 75,000 feet. Many young boys in those days dreamed of taking off in their own supersonic plane one day.
This movie is based on Tom Wolfe's 1979 book of the same title. It focused a lot on the character and type of men it took to challenge the skies and space travel. The book and film do this very well. Without the men willing to risk their lives, all of the science and engineering for aircraft and space flight would go nowhere. This film opens with the test pilots, leads up to the U. S. space program, and then portrays NASA and its astronaut program.
The film shows the amazing preparation there is for astronauts. Who could imagine so many different physical tests and health exams? And the numerous tests of skill, and difficult and challenging types of physical training? The film has some faults, but it got great reviews from film critics. Yet, with all of this, it was a box office flop, with a mere $21 million in worldwide ticket sales against a budget of $27 million.
Did fate and coincidence have a bearing on the low box office for "The Right Stuff?" It had a limited release in North America on Oct. 21, 1983, and then a general release in 1984 in the U. S. and worldwide. But in May of 1983, the third super blockbuster Star Wars film, "Return of the Jedi," hit theaters. With a box office of $482 million ($1,5 billion in 2024), "Jedi" nearly tripled the sales of the number two film for 1983. People sure loved space movies. The huge box offices for the Star Wars trilogy that began in 1977 proved that. But could it be that fascination with futuristic space travel and adventure diminished public interest in anything of the past? Were films about flight and space in real recent history no longer of interest to the public?
Surely there was action and tension in the early section of "Right Stuff," with the test flights. But then, people knew the results of the actual first orbit flights, so maybe that wasn't interesting enough to grab audiences. The two James Bond movies released in 1983 had the usual mix of adventure, excitement and action - and they both fared very well - in the top 15 box office films for the year.
Well, for whatever reason this film didn't fare well with audiences then. But today it is considered a very good historical film. It's the best one about the astronaut program, and the only one with the contributions of the Air Force test pilots. Sam Shepard is superb in the role of Chuck Yeager. The rest of the cast who play the astronauts and family members are all very good. Some well-known actors head the list -- Ed Harris as John Glenn, Scott Glen as Alan Shepard, Fred Ward as Gus Grissom, Barbara Hershey as Glennis Yeager, and more.
But for three clear flaws in the screenplay, this film would rate 10 stars. Why Hollywood took license for these is beyond me. The first was the portrayal of Gus Grissom as panicky on his splashdown in the ocean. Well before the film was finished, a plethora of engineers and experts had concluded that a mechanical failure was responsible for the hatch that opened. Astronaut Wally Schirra said the portrayal of Grissom as bungling and cowardly was not the truth. The astronauts didn't like the portrayal of the NASA engineers. In an interview, Schirra said, "They insulted the lovely people who talked us through the program - the NASA engineers. They made them like bumbling Germans." The third flaw is the fictional depiction of some of the astronauts at a night spot in Cocoa Beach, Florida. It was apparently a pick up place for women. Where did the filmmakers get that? Why would they put in the film? Alan Shepard said that neither the book author, Tom Wolfe, nor the film director and writer, Philip Kaufman "talked to any of the original seven guys, at any time..."
I've had two memorable occasions in which I learned quite a lot about the American space program. One was a special group tour of the Kennedy Space Center at Cape Canaveral. One stop was at the huge rocket assembly building, which stands 525 feet high. We rode an elevator over 50 stories up and could look down on the rocket being assembled at the time. My second memorable occasion was a luncheon in Washington D. C. at which Wernher von Baun spoke about his work on the rocket program for NASA.
Vonn Baun was a young scientist who had worked on Germany's rocket program before and during WW II. After the war, he was among several hundred engineers and scientists who were secretly brought to the United States. He first worked on ballistic missiles and rockets for the first Ameican space satellites. In 1960 his group became part of NASA, and von Braun was director of the Marshall Space Flight Center. He was the chief architect of Saturn V rocket that launched the Apollo spacecraft to the moon.
This movie is based on Tom Wolfe's 1979 book of the same title. It focused a lot on the character and type of men it took to challenge the skies and space travel. The book and film do this very well. Without the men willing to risk their lives, all of the science and engineering for aircraft and space flight would go nowhere. This film opens with the test pilots, leads up to the U. S. space program, and then portrays NASA and its astronaut program.
The film shows the amazing preparation there is for astronauts. Who could imagine so many different physical tests and health exams? And the numerous tests of skill, and difficult and challenging types of physical training? The film has some faults, but it got great reviews from film critics. Yet, with all of this, it was a box office flop, with a mere $21 million in worldwide ticket sales against a budget of $27 million.
Did fate and coincidence have a bearing on the low box office for "The Right Stuff?" It had a limited release in North America on Oct. 21, 1983, and then a general release in 1984 in the U. S. and worldwide. But in May of 1983, the third super blockbuster Star Wars film, "Return of the Jedi," hit theaters. With a box office of $482 million ($1,5 billion in 2024), "Jedi" nearly tripled the sales of the number two film for 1983. People sure loved space movies. The huge box offices for the Star Wars trilogy that began in 1977 proved that. But could it be that fascination with futuristic space travel and adventure diminished public interest in anything of the past? Were films about flight and space in real recent history no longer of interest to the public?
Surely there was action and tension in the early section of "Right Stuff," with the test flights. But then, people knew the results of the actual first orbit flights, so maybe that wasn't interesting enough to grab audiences. The two James Bond movies released in 1983 had the usual mix of adventure, excitement and action - and they both fared very well - in the top 15 box office films for the year.
Well, for whatever reason this film didn't fare well with audiences then. But today it is considered a very good historical film. It's the best one about the astronaut program, and the only one with the contributions of the Air Force test pilots. Sam Shepard is superb in the role of Chuck Yeager. The rest of the cast who play the astronauts and family members are all very good. Some well-known actors head the list -- Ed Harris as John Glenn, Scott Glen as Alan Shepard, Fred Ward as Gus Grissom, Barbara Hershey as Glennis Yeager, and more.
But for three clear flaws in the screenplay, this film would rate 10 stars. Why Hollywood took license for these is beyond me. The first was the portrayal of Gus Grissom as panicky on his splashdown in the ocean. Well before the film was finished, a plethora of engineers and experts had concluded that a mechanical failure was responsible for the hatch that opened. Astronaut Wally Schirra said the portrayal of Grissom as bungling and cowardly was not the truth. The astronauts didn't like the portrayal of the NASA engineers. In an interview, Schirra said, "They insulted the lovely people who talked us through the program - the NASA engineers. They made them like bumbling Germans." The third flaw is the fictional depiction of some of the astronauts at a night spot in Cocoa Beach, Florida. It was apparently a pick up place for women. Where did the filmmakers get that? Why would they put in the film? Alan Shepard said that neither the book author, Tom Wolfe, nor the film director and writer, Philip Kaufman "talked to any of the original seven guys, at any time..."
I've had two memorable occasions in which I learned quite a lot about the American space program. One was a special group tour of the Kennedy Space Center at Cape Canaveral. One stop was at the huge rocket assembly building, which stands 525 feet high. We rode an elevator over 50 stories up and could look down on the rocket being assembled at the time. My second memorable occasion was a luncheon in Washington D. C. at which Wernher von Baun spoke about his work on the rocket program for NASA.
Vonn Baun was a young scientist who had worked on Germany's rocket program before and during WW II. After the war, he was among several hundred engineers and scientists who were secretly brought to the United States. He first worked on ballistic missiles and rockets for the first Ameican space satellites. In 1960 his group became part of NASA, and von Braun was director of the Marshall Space Flight Center. He was the chief architect of Saturn V rocket that launched the Apollo spacecraft to the moon.
- ShootingShark
- Sep 19, 2009
- Permalink
Purports to be the story of the original 7 Mercury astronauts and events leading up to that program. Unfortunately all these highly skilled, and intelligent, if overly confident and rough hewn people with the "right stuff" are portrayed as nothing but coagulated silly quirks and anecdotes. It didn't have to be a documentary, but it's about 90% fluff to 10% history. If you want to watch people with this much of the "wrong stuff", the flight scenes in "Top Gun" are more exciting.
The Pilots are all puffy inflatable stereotypes with no evidence of skill or brains beyond our being told it's true. The wives' story is a sappy soap opera of the most simplistic order. Interesting folks like Pancho Barnes are invisible. All government and NASA employees are bumbling idiots. It all just plain feels dumb and phony. Stuff as enormously complex and technical as faster than sound flight, and space travel could have provided a hefty dose of much needed interest for the non-brain-dead, but there's NO SCIENCE OR HISTORY ALLOWED HERE!
Great cast. Some good scenes and performances. Dashes of amusing dialog.
No explanations. Barely a skin-deep look into the characters. History dumbed down to anecdotes. If the people involved in the reality were as 2 dimensional and brainless as portrayed, we'd still be trying to break the sound barrier today. It just felt like an overlong comment about the space race being a publicity stunt with massive egoed pilots acting as public front men.
A lot of reviews I've read refer a lot to the book, which I haven't read, and my 2 decade-apart viewings of this film don't incline me to read. My own research into some of the people and events portrayed made it highly evident that very little historical accuracy comes into this production. This entire 3 hour monstrosity equates to perhaps 20 minutes of the vastly superior "Apollo 13".
Disappointing when I was young. Even more disappointing viewing it now.
The Pilots are all puffy inflatable stereotypes with no evidence of skill or brains beyond our being told it's true. The wives' story is a sappy soap opera of the most simplistic order. Interesting folks like Pancho Barnes are invisible. All government and NASA employees are bumbling idiots. It all just plain feels dumb and phony. Stuff as enormously complex and technical as faster than sound flight, and space travel could have provided a hefty dose of much needed interest for the non-brain-dead, but there's NO SCIENCE OR HISTORY ALLOWED HERE!
Great cast. Some good scenes and performances. Dashes of amusing dialog.
No explanations. Barely a skin-deep look into the characters. History dumbed down to anecdotes. If the people involved in the reality were as 2 dimensional and brainless as portrayed, we'd still be trying to break the sound barrier today. It just felt like an overlong comment about the space race being a publicity stunt with massive egoed pilots acting as public front men.
A lot of reviews I've read refer a lot to the book, which I haven't read, and my 2 decade-apart viewings of this film don't incline me to read. My own research into some of the people and events portrayed made it highly evident that very little historical accuracy comes into this production. This entire 3 hour monstrosity equates to perhaps 20 minutes of the vastly superior "Apollo 13".
Disappointing when I was young. Even more disappointing viewing it now.