Ottawa Citizen

THE PATH NOT TAKEN

For All Mankind imagines a different race to space and better outcome

- JILL SERJEANT

LOS ANGELES Imagine a world where Neil Armstrong was not the first man on the moon and the Soviet Union won the space race instead.

That’s the premise of For All Mankind, one of the first original series from the new Apple TV+ service. It sets the stage for an alternate history with sweeping ripple effects on everything from women’s rights and the environmen­t to the Vietnam War.

“The competitio­n with the Soviet Union moves out into space, the United States gets out of Vietnam early to commit more resources to the space program,” said executive producer Ronald D. Moore, who also created the series. “Society shifts, and along the way, politics and history shift to take the U.S. and the world on a more positive and optimistic path,” he said.

For All Mankind envisages a world where women, including black women, become astronauts and engines of social change decades before they did in real life, the Soviet Union never invades Afghanista­n, and billions more dollars are poured into technology.

“Research into solar technology and battery technology starts to move clean energy forward decades before it was a real thing in the United States. The fossil fuel industry starts to collapse so climate change is less of a pressing issue,” Moore said.

Moore is known for his work on sci-fi series including Battlestar Galactica and Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, but said For All Mankind could not be more different.

“There are no aliens coming down, we aren’t going to have a time vortex and all that kind of stuff ... This show has a very optimistic outlook,” he said.

The 10-episode drama series is as ambitious as it is global, with a diverse cast and also a strong immigratio­n storyline featuring a Mexican girl and her father. They cross the U.S. border and both become part of NASA.

“We become a valuable part of society as immigrants instead of just being a nuisance or taking someone else’s jobs. In this show, we are trying to give an optimistic message in terms of immigrants not being treated as second-class citizens,” said Arturo del Puerto, who plays the Mexican dad Octavio Rosales.

Apple and the producers declined to give production costs but Moore called it a high-budget show and said Apple had been “generous with its resources.”

Meticulous attention was paid to re-creating NASA’s Mission Control room in the late 1960s from the original architect’s plans, while a team of space historians and former astronauts and administra­tors acted as consultant­s to the writers, actors and set builders.

“This is a science fiction idea, an alternate history,” Moore said, “but other than that everything else in the show is played in a very real key.”

Reuters

Society shifts, and along the way, politics and history shift to take the U.S. and the world on a more positive and optimistic path.

RONALD D. MOORE

 ?? APPLE TV+ ?? Actor Joel Kinnaman stars in the new series For All Mankind, which sees the course of humanity altered following the space race.
APPLE TV+ Actor Joel Kinnaman stars in the new series For All Mankind, which sees the course of humanity altered following the space race.
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