The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Riveting ‘Apollo 11’ takes us back in time

Film features moon mission footage.

- By Kenneth Turan

Truth may or may not be stranger than fiction, but it certainly can be more dramatical­ly compelling. Witness “Apollo 11.”

A documentar­y on the mission that took astronauts Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins to the moon and back half a century ago, “Apollo 11” has no talking heads telling us what it all means or modern re-creations like the unemotiona­l Ryan Goslingsta­rring “First Man.”

Instead, as directed by Todd Douglas Miller, “Apollo 11” relies on footage shot and audio recorded at the time, and the results, from liftoff to landing to the journey back home, are completely riveting.

“Apollo 11” succeeds as well as it does for several reasons, but a key one was the discovery in the National Archives of hours of large-format 65-millimeter color footage covering all aspects of the mission, footage that had never been seen by the public and was subsequent­ly digitized to the highest resolution possible.

Also discovered were 11,000 hours of audio recordings from key personnel on the ground as well as the astronauts way out in space.

But just having great material does not guarantee a superior film, which is where Miller’s skill and experience come in.

As a director, Miller has a superb eye for striking images, for showing us things that have either been forgotten or never paid attention to in the first place.

So, on the ground at Cape Canaveral, Fla., on launch day, July 16, 1969, we are treated to an unnerving shot of a huge vehicle with massive tank treads moving the formidable Saturn V rocket with the Columbia command module at its top to the launch pad.

We also get a rare look inside the suiting-up room, as the astronauts are fussed over like debutantes at a cotillion by teams of white-coated men intent on making sure their space gear fits exactly right, a scene whose combinatio­n of the everyday and the surreal is boggling.

Also filled almost exclusivel­y with men are the control rooms at both launch site Cape Canaveral and the space center in Houston, where row after row of males wearing short-sleeve white shirts and black ties look like the members of some strange monastic order.

“Apollo 11” of course includes the more familiar shots of Armstrong and Aldrin on the moon’s surface, but, shown in real time with the benefit of digital sharpness and without narration aside from the men’s comments, they have unexpected “You Are There” impact.

One of the unexpected but welcome things “Apollo 11” accomplish­es is restoring a sense of how insanely complex the lunar mission was, and how audacious. How did people even have the nerve to dream a dream this big, not to mention the determinat­ion and skill to pull it off without a hitch? That truly seems like a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away.

 ?? CNN FILMS/IMDB/TNS ?? The Apollo 11 rocket in a scene from the documentar­y “Apollo 11.”
CNN FILMS/IMDB/TNS The Apollo 11 rocket in a scene from the documentar­y “Apollo 11.”

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