Yorkshire Post - YP Magazine

FILM PICK OF THE WEEK

- A Million Miles Away Amazon Prime, review by Yvette Huddleston

BASED on extraordin­ary true events, this biographic­al drama tells the story of Nasa’s first Mexican astronaut, José Hernández.

The film opens in the late 1960s as young José (Juan Pablo Monterrubi­o) and his migrant farmworker family travel back and forth between their home and California where they do seasonal work. This is the necessary pattern of their lives but for José and his siblings it is a disruption to their schooling.

José is a bright, intelligen­t and curious child who is clearly very gifted at maths. He is fascinated by the stars and watches the Apollo 11 moon landings with great interest. One of his teachers recognises his talent, supporting his studying and even trying to persuade his parents to change their lifestyle.

Flash forward several years and José (now played by Michael Peña) has graduated from university, much to his parents’ pride, and is working as a research engineer yet still helping out his family in the California­n fields which is where he first spots Adela (Rose Salazar).

She too is from a Mexican family and assists her father with the agricultur­al work alongside her job as a sales manager at a second-hand car dealership. They begin a tentative courtship and when Adela asks José what his dream is – he tells her he wants to be an astronaut.

She laughs, until she realises he is serious.

Adela is bright, funny and capable, and also has a dream – to open her own restaurant serving authentic Mexican food. But that goes on the back burner as they start and raise their family of five children.

In the meantime, Luis is making slow but steady progress in his career. It is not easy – barriers are put in his way and he constantly has to deal with racist attitudes. On his first day at the Livermore Laboratory, he is mistaken by the receptioni­st for the janitor and given the cold-shoulder by most of his colleagues until he makes a breakthrou­gh discovery in their research and they begin to take him seriously.

All the while he is making applicatio­ns to Nasa’s astronaut training programme and every year he is rejected – 11 times in all. Until finally he is taken on and eventually becomes an engineer on the Internatio­nal Space Station.

It is an inspiring, uplifting story which in a clear-eyed, unsentimen­tal way, has a lot to say about staying true to yourself and following your dreams.

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