The Daily Telegraph

Buzz Aldrin fires broadside over ‘unpatrioti­c’ Moon landing film

- By Nick Allen in Washington

THE astronaut Buzz Aldrin has criticised a Hollywood blockbuste­r about the Moon landing in a controvers­y over the film being “un-american”.

First Man – starring Ryan Gosling as Neil Armstrong – came under fire from conservati­ves for failing to show the iconic moment when the US flag was planted, by Armstrong and Aldrin, on the lunar surface in 1969.

The Daily Telegraph understand­s that Aldrin was not even invited to view the film in advance.

In his first response to the row Aldrin, 88, posted on Twitter a still from footage of himself and Armstrong planting the US flag. He also published a photograph of himself standing next to the flag on the Moon. The picture was taken by Armstrong.

Aldrin accompanie­d the images with captions including “Proud to be an American”, “Freedom” and “One Nation”. He also posted a photograph of himself in a T-shirt depicting an astronaut planting a US flag on Mars.

His apparent criticism of the $70million (£54 million) Hollywood project, which looks set to be a contender in the Oscars, was echoed by another legend of US air and space achievemen­t.

‘The American people paid for that mission, on rockets built by Americans … It wasn’t a UN mission’

Chuck Yeager, 95, the first test pilot to break the sound barrier, said: “That’s not the Neil Armstrong I knew.”

Yeager was responding on Twitter to a suggestion that Armstrong was portrayed as a “liberal progressiv­e, antitrump (in spirit) non-flag waver”.

Gosling, a Canadian, ignited the controvers­y at last week’s Venice Film Festival, suggesting that Armstrong, who died aged 82 in 2012, had not regarded himself as an “American hero” and that his accomplish­ment “transcende­d countries and borders”.

Marco Rubio, the Republican senator, called that “total lunacy” adding: “The American people paid for that mission, on rockets built by Americans, with American technology and carrying American astronauts. It wasn’t a UN mission.”

Ted Cruz, his fellow Republican senator, called the film “consistent with Leftists’ disrespect­ing the flag and denying American exceptiona­lism”.

Pete Hegseth, a Fox News host, called Gosling an “idiot” and said it was “an American achievemen­t bar none”.

However, Rick and Mark Armstrong, sons of the astronaut, denied the film was “anti-american”.

Damien Chazelle, the French-canadian director, said he had not intended to make a political statement, and had wanted to focus on Armstrong’s personal journey rather than images everyone already recognised.

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