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Dans l'ombre de la lune

Original title: In the Shadow of the Moon
  • 2007
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
8.0/10
7.1K
YOUR RATING
Dans l'ombre de la lune (2007)
Theatrical Trailer from Think Film, Inc
Play trailer2:30
5 Videos
28 Photos
History DocumentaryScience & Technology DocumentaryDocumentaryHistory

The crew members of NASA's Apollo missions tell their story in their own words.The crew members of NASA's Apollo missions tell their story in their own words.The crew members of NASA's Apollo missions tell their story in their own words.

  • Director
    • David Sington
  • Stars
    • Buzz Aldrin
    • Alan Bean
    • Eugene Cernan
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.0/10
    7.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • David Sington
    • Stars
      • Buzz Aldrin
      • Alan Bean
      • Eugene Cernan
    • 52User reviews
    • 104Critic reviews
    • 84Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 6 wins & 13 nominations total

    Videos5

    In the Shadow of the Moon
    Trailer 2:30
    In the Shadow of the Moon
    In the Shadow of the Moon
    Clip 1:15
    In the Shadow of the Moon
    In the Shadow of the Moon
    Clip 1:15
    In the Shadow of the Moon
    In The Shadow Of The Moon Scene: Scene 3
    Clip 1:16
    In The Shadow Of The Moon Scene: Scene 3
    In The Shadow Of The Moon Scene: Scene 1
    Clip 1:29
    In The Shadow Of The Moon Scene: Scene 1
    In The Shadow Of The Moon Scene: Scene 2
    Clip 1:13
    In The Shadow Of The Moon Scene: Scene 2

    Photos28

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    Top cast32

    Edit
    Buzz Aldrin
    Buzz Aldrin
    • Self
    Alan Bean
    • Self
    Eugene Cernan
    Eugene Cernan
    • Self
    Mike Collins
    Mike Collins
    • Self
    Charles Duke
    Charles Duke
    • Self
    Jim Lovell
    Jim Lovell
    • Self
    • (as James Lovell)
    Edgar D. Mitchell
    Edgar D. Mitchell
    • Self
    • (as Edgar Mitchell)
    Harrison Schmitt
    Harrison Schmitt
    • Self
    Dave Scott
    Dave Scott
    • Self
    • (as David Scott)
    John Young
    John Young
    • Self
    William Anders
    • Self
    • (archive footage)
    Neil Armstrong
    Neil Armstrong
    • Self
    • (archive footage)
    Stephen Armstrong
    • Self
    • (archive footage)
    Viola Armstrong
    • Self
    • (archive footage)
    Jules Bergman
    Jules Bergman
    • Self
    • (archive footage)
    Frank Borman
    Frank Borman
    • Self
    • (archive footage)
    Roger B. Chaffee
    Roger B. Chaffee
    • Self
    • (archive footage)
    Yuri Gagarin
    Yuri Gagarin
    • Self
    • (archive footage)
    • Director
      • David Sington
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews52

    8.07K
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    Featured reviews

    9pbernhardt

    Reveals the Heart of the Astronauts

    Saw this film at Sundance, the screening reserved for the Grand Jury World Documentary Award Winner. Wow! I have seen many of the preceding documentaries on the history of the American space program, the Apollo program in particular. Where this documentary exceeds all previous efforts was in revealing the humanity of the astronauts. Most other documentaries focus on the politics which motivated and technical hurdles overcome in the American space program. David Sington brilliantly uses only the astronauts voices for narration of facts and more with newly released footage from NASA, as well as a lot of footage we've all seen before. Because of the free rein given to the astronauts in the interviews, you see many sides of each revealed. For instance, Mike Collins (who has heretofore rarely been interviewed) reveals wonderful humor and joy in his accomplishments. You find out more about their worries and fears, how they look back on their work and what they were thinking at the time. They are all revealed as nice guys with whom you would want to spend an afternoon.

    Strangely absent, but it works well in the end, was Armstrong. He gives virtually no interviews. In a way, having everyone else talk about him is maybe better than him talking.

    And, the various conspiracy theories are dealt with in the end credits. This is a great place to do it. In films we sometimes see the end credits used for humorous out-takes, epilogue commentary, and so forth. By dealing with the conspiracy theories in an appended manner during the credits, the film refuses to elevate them to the level of legitimacy that the remainder of the facts and biographical material, yet still dismisses them. The single best dismissal is this: If it was all faked, why did they fake it so many times? Wouldn't once have been enough?

    See this film when it comes to your neighborhood theater, as it has been announced as having a distribution deal. It is worth seeing on the big screen for its amazing visuals.
    10se7en187

    Extremely entertaining with incredible footage

    I saw this at the Traverse City Film Festival and it was quite the thrill.

    Another great documentary about the Apollo program and the astronauts that went to the moon. Some very interesting and inspiring interviews including incredible actual footage of the Apollo 11 mission as it traveled from the Earth to the Moon.

    The film contains interviews from many of the astronauts, Mike Collins (the astronaut from Apollo 11 that didn't walk on the moon) was probably the highlight, he was so funny and entertaining. I was a little disappointed that Neil Armstrong wasn't interviewed, but oh well, it was still very good.

    Captivating, fun, and an excellent score, I'm sure people will enjoy this well made film.
    10timdalton007

    Apollo Comes To Life Again

    The Apollo moon landings of the late 1960's and early 1970's have been the subject of countless documentaries over the nearly forty years since they occurred. Of all of them, only two films have captured the spirit of Apollo and of the men who took the journey. One of them is Al Reinert's 1989 masterpiece For All Mankind. The other is this film: In The Shadow Of The Moon. And this film easily rivals For All Mankind for the position of best Apollo documentary.

    This film takes the idea behind For All Mankind and takes it to the next level. For All Mankind showed us the astronauts as they were then with narration from interviews. In The Shadow Of The Moon, as I wrote, goes the next step further. It shows the astronauts not only as they were, but as they are now. The difference is often times amazing. To go from young fighter pilot to being one of the few men to have left our planet must have been an amazing journey as the film shows and these men prove it. Like For All Mankind, their narration and appearances are the heart and soul of the story being told.

    The body of the story is the footage. Where as For All Mankind brilliantly combined all the footage into one large mission, this film doesn't to a degree. It shows us highlights from the program including Apollo 8 and Apollo 11 and then makes a conscience effort not to confuse missions together. This allows for clarity that many have complained about being missing from For All Mankind. But this clarity also allows for something else as well. It allows for depth in story.

    That depth can be felt. The truly great thing about this film is that these images, which so many of us are use to seeing on a small television screen, are shown on a big screen. Only on a big screen can one see and feel the depth of the journey that was Apollo. The film has the ability to take images seen many times and bring context and emotion to them. In particular, the footage and still images of the Earth as taken by the astronauts is awe-inspiring. In fact, seeing the famous Earth-rise image from Apollo 8 brought me to tears. And for once, I am not ashamed to admit it.

    To be frank, In The Shadow Of The Moon is an amazing piece of work. Not since For All Mankind as a film of any size, shape, or form captured the spirit of Apollo. This is a film about a dream, the men who lived it, and its legacy not only for them but for us as well. I beg you to see this film. Only after that and viewing For All Mankind can one understand not only the legacy of Apollo but our need to explore Space.
    10hairyfeetdb1

    This was on of the best documentaries I've ever seen....

    And I mean it. The footage and stories in this movie were like nothing I've ever seen. Nor have many others because this film includes new footage and stories of the Apollo space missions never seen nor heard. I went to an advance screening at the Sarasota Film Festival and I was extremely impressed as was the rest of the crowd. There was a very long standing ovation at the end of the movie. The film includes at least one member from each of the Apollo missions telling there stories of the process they went through while preparing to land on the moon. It contains the remarkable footage filmed by the crew members of each mission. If you truly want to be left see a movie that will leave you full of excitement and amaze you must see this movie. The host of the film said this film was the reason movies should be made and he was nothing short of the truth.
    9Half_the_Audience

    When We Were Winners

    I don't admit this to too many people, but the single most significant historic event I have ever "witnessed," was watching the first lunar landing as it happened, on television, as a ten year old kid. Okay, maybe there was a thirteen-second delay, but I was right there with those guys-- my heart pounding, skipping a beat every time Uncle Walter (a.k.a. Walter Cronkite, the most trusted man in America) interjected his incomparably eloquent journalistic commentary. But even Cronkite couldn't suppress his awe as mankind's greatest achievement unfolded before our eyes.

    The documentary, "In the Shadow of the Moon," directed by David Sington, and presented by Ron Howard (who partnered with ThinkFilm to help usher the project to completion), is not only a romantic, dramatic, suspense-filled fantasy to behold, it grips you with deep emotion and vests you with our heroes through every sequence of their quest. And it's all real.

    Without a single frame of CGI or simulation, the filmmakers compiled astounding, never-before seen footage with inserts of intimate confessions by some of the remaining Apollo crew members who took part in the nine moon landings. "Shadow" shows just part of how the work of 400,000 scientists and engineers came together to make President Kennedy's dream of putting a man on the moon by the end of the decade, a reality. These are parts worth seeing.

    "The extraterrestrial film footage, shot by the astronauts themselves, has been brought out of storage only a handful of times since the sixties and seventies," Chris Riley, the film's co-producer explains. Considering that there may not be any more footage shot on or from the moon by an actual human, again in our lifetime, this film is very precious indeed.

    "In the Shadow of the Moon" effectively evokes that brief time in late-20th century America when we thought that the government was doing something right. This documentary puts a human face-- and soul-- into those bulky space suits, and let's us know what it was really like to be on those harrowing missions.

    Command module pilot Michael Collins admits to having being excited, but not fearful. At times, mostly worried-- that all the machinery would work as planned. The documentary reveals a few of those times the machines didn't, or almost didn't work. And startlingly, how much "luck" played a part in the operations. "Shadow" nearly gives us a first-person experience of how a body feels, what the physical sensations of being shaken, slammed, and thrust-- first off the ground, then through the atmosphere, finally into the eerie calm and quiet of space. The men talk of how they felt a fool's complacency, if only for a second, after a rocket stage would break away and fall to earth, until anticipation of the next stage's violent expulsion reminded them that it too, would detach as planned, or explode killing them all. It makes the Space Mountain ride at DisneyWorld sound like a massage.

    Although Neil Armstrong, known to be somewhat of a recluse, does not make an appearance, he is certainly there in spirit. His fellow crew members make it known they felt he was the right choice for the first man out. That he was preternaturally calm under pressure, they concur. Recollecting how Armstrong delivered those poignant first words as he descended the steps of the LEM, and how it might have been more tempting for them to simply yell, "Whoopee! I did it!" But Buzz Aldrin asserts that he also holds a record for a lunar first. In one of the many hilarious moments in the film, his feat is captured on video as proof.

    Most of the men who went on the Apollo moon missions tell in this film, of the moment while in space, viewing the galaxy from a perspective very few of us will ever see, they experienced the profound realization of their own insignificance, while comforted with a certainty of infinite connectivity with the very stuff of the universe. Contrast that with the "hero's parades" and instant celebrity into which they were violently thrust upon return to terra firma. Additionally, some of the astronauts confess the guilt they felt, knowing that many of the pilots and friends they had trained and served with, were being "shot at, shot down, and were fighting for their country" in Viet Nam.

    Some might have viewed America's race to the moon was little more than a diversion, cleverly orchestrated by government propagandists, from the colossal turmoil of the times. Others, saw it as a symbol of hope-- that there was something greater beyond our mere earthly squabbles.

    Watching this film reminded me of what America is capable-- how much can be accomplished in the interest of science, ecology, or the most human of natures, curiosity-- not to be underrated. Present and future resources, research, and funding if thoughtfully channeled, just might be able to find alternate sources of energy, cure cancer, and save the planet from ecological disaster.

    President Kennedy foresaw that the way out of the Post-War confusion and the Cold War paranoia, was to coach us back to the top of our game. Just a few years before what would eventually become the debacle of Viet Nam, this was perhaps one of the last times America truly was champion of the world. Getting to the moon made us feel like winners. We were proud. I still am.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Of all the astronauts who appeared in the film, only Buzz Aldrin demanded to be paid.
    • Goofs
      The 1202 alarm was not a programming error in the Apollo Guidance Computer, but rather a hardware design bug, already documented by Apollo 5 engineers. Since the 1202 alarm had occurred only once during testing, NASA decided to go with the radar hardware with known problems instead of using untested newer alternatives with unknown problems.
    • Quotes

      Jim Lovell: We changed our plans on Apollo 8. They changed the mission from an Earth orbital type to a flight to the Moon. And it was a bold move. It had some risky aspects to it. But it was a time when we made bold moves.

    • Connections
      Alternate-language version of Universum: Im Schatten des Mondes (2009)

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 21, 2009 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official site
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • In the Shadow of the Moon
    • Production companies
      • Discovery Films
      • FilmFour
      • Passion Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $2,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,134,358
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $38,281
      • Sep 9, 2007
    • Gross worldwide
      • $2,161,369
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 40m(100 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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