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Apollo 13 (1995) - A New Mission Scene (5/11) | Movieclips 

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Apollo 13 - A New Mission: Kranz (Ed Harris) and his team toss out the flight plan to focus on the astronauts’ safe return.
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FILM DESCRIPTION:
This Hollywood drama is based on the events of the Apollo 13 lunar mission, astronauts Jim Lovell (Tom Hanks), Fred Haise (Bill Paxton) and Jack Swigert (Kevin Bacon) find everything going according to plan after leaving Earth's orbit. However, when an oxygen tank explodes, the scheduled moon landing is called off. Subsequent tensions within the crew and numerous technical problems threaten both the astronauts' survival and their safe return to Earth.
CREDITS:
TM & © Universal (1995)
Cast: Ed Harris, Loren Dean
Director: Ron Howard
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2 авг 2017

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Комментарии : 772   
@julius6889
@julius6889 6 лет назад
I love how the overhead projector breaks when Gene was about to write on it, push it away, and uses old methods. Perfect usage of the old saying "Going back to the drawing board"
@davidchristians100
@davidchristians100 6 лет назад
The Magical Gamer there's a better solution to loving it. Aly.
@JeepersCreepers2013
@JeepersCreepers2013 6 лет назад
That was Ron Howard in the background saying "gotta get a bulb around here.."
@toAdmiller
@toAdmiller 5 лет назад
@@JeepersCreepers2013 Thanks for pointing that out. I did hear that line, but had not listened to the voice, definitely Howard's...
@scottl.1568
@scottl.1568 5 лет назад
It's also much better from a cinematic perspective to do it on a chalkboard
@toAdmiller
@toAdmiller 5 лет назад
@@scottl.1568 Just one of things that makes Ron Howard so good, "How can we take something boring/mundane and have it make an additional impact?" He's good...
@awsumguy-bh9pz
@awsumguy-bh9pz 3 года назад
all of my brain cells gathering to figure out how to build our 15th rescue mission to pick up 47 kerbals stuck on eeloo for 95 years now.
@loficampingguy9664
@loficampingguy9664 3 года назад
Me, realizing that I've messed up my Duna-Kerbin transfer stage but then realizing I way overbuilt the lander with enough dV to get an aerocapture. "I don't care what it was designed to do, I care about what it CAN do!"
@wonniewarrior
@wonniewarrior 3 года назад
Me - trying to figuire out how to achieve orbit after the 100th attempt actually worked and got off the ground.
@trojanhorsechannel
@trojanhorsechannel 3 года назад
Me, exploding my ships on the launch platform for the 1000th time. I good space
@pieceofschmidtgamer
@pieceofschmidtgamer 2 года назад
I think at that point it's permanent base...
@charlesxavier5218
@charlesxavier5218 2 года назад
Me trying to figure out how to stop my rocket from wobbling in sandbox mode
@TokyoTransit
@TokyoTransit 6 лет назад
good example of project manager: no shouting, no hysteria, calm, deep, and decisive
@sgtpepper1138
@sgtpepper1138 6 лет назад
Kranz is the real deal, from everything I've ever seen, that's exactly him. If you have Netflix, check out Mission Control, some great interviews on there with the guys on the ground.
@jaronbreen7954
@jaronbreen7954 6 лет назад
The real Gene Krantz did just that. Ed & the script managers (writer, director, producer, etc.) let it escalate a bit - typical Hollywood. Oh and "Blow up & die" was NOT helpful even in the remote sense.
@09rja
@09rja 6 лет назад
And actually has a technical understanding similar to the people he is leading. That's getting rare.
@bnadit1949
@bnadit1949 6 лет назад
Not a manager, a leader.
@johnnyroberts3761
@johnnyroberts3761 6 лет назад
Jaron Breen It isn’t, but it is the end result if these gentlemen don’t solve this problem.
@jennifersman7990
@jennifersman7990 5 лет назад
Ed Harris was robbed of an Oscar for this film. His reaction at the end when he slumps into a chair and comes close to crying is fantastic acting
@slappymcgillicuddy7532
@slappymcgillicuddy7532 5 лет назад
he was the voice of reason and calm during the entire situation
@merrilouneigenfind104
@merrilouneigenfind104 3 года назад
Those were the days
@curtisburga943
@curtisburga943 Год назад
That was a tough choice that year, between him and Kevin Spacey (The Usual Suspects), Tim Roth (Rob Roy), James Cromwell (Babe) and Brad Pitt (12 Monkeys). Each one was fantastic in their roles.
@joemckim1183
@joemckim1183 Год назад
@@curtisburga943 I agree, its rather lazy to say someone was "robbed" of something without explaining that the person who won was an inferior performance to his. There's a lot of great performances every year and there's a lot of great performances who don't even get nominated, you only get 5 nominees a year and only 1 actual winner every year.
@windwalker5765
@windwalker5765 5 месяцев назад
He developed that performance from watching an interview with the actual Gene Kranz, who actually did cry talking about that moment, almost 40 years later.
@cugamer8862
@cugamer8862 6 лет назад
"I don't care what anything was designed to do. I care about what it can do." Can't think of a better way to sum up what engineering is.
@gcHK47
@gcHK47 5 лет назад
I got one: “Scientists think about the future; Engineers build the future”.
@tygrkhat4087
@tygrkhat4087 4 года назад
I play a Star Trek roleplaying game, and I'm the ship's engineer. The way I play the character is taken from this movie and real life event. Lovell said that what happened to them was something that they never thought was possible, so they never trained for it. My engineer thinks of what could impossibly happen and drills his crew accordingly.
@QuadroNVS
@QuadroNVS 4 года назад
I have been looking for this quote for quite sometime. I feel at rest now.
@nixonhoover2
@nixonhoover2 4 года назад
@@tygrkhat4087 what nerd.
@OriginalMokthol
@OriginalMokthol 3 года назад
Not just engineering, but design in general. You see this in games all the time. A card is designed with something in mind, or a system is designed to incentivize a certain action out of people. What is sometimes forgotten is how good people are at figuring out what the system/items/card CAN do along side what it's intended to do.
@alh61266
@alh61266 5 лет назад
Best quote ever........ I don't care what anything was designed to do I care about what it can do.
@logandarklighter
@logandarklighter 5 лет назад
Absolutely. Just because you didn't DESIGN it to do that job doesn't mean it CAN'T do that job!
@jennifersman7990
@jennifersman7990 5 лет назад
YES! I put that up there with “Houston...we have a problem...” and “We haven’t lost a man in space and we’re sure not gonna lose one on my watch!” as the best quotes from this film
@smeech8000a
@smeech8000a 5 лет назад
Also love how, after the LEM successfully executes the burn, Grumman guy is like "Yeah, how 'bout that LEM!!" and Gene deadpans "Well I guess you'll get to keep your job." Classic!
@ravileejones7381
@ravileejones7381 5 лет назад
Sorry.. as an engineer, it strikes me as a really stupid quote. We design things that CAN do what they are SUPPOSED TO. It doesn't work the other way around, at least not very well.
@alh61266
@alh61266 5 лет назад
@@smeech8000a you bet
@Thekennel177
@Thekennel177 5 лет назад
Kind of funny when you listen to actual recordings from the astronauts. There’s about as much drama as a dripping faucet. Those dudes were cool under pressure and tough as they come.
@wikiuser92
@wikiuser92 5 лет назад
Kinda understandable, considering the astronauts were originally military pilots.
@jshepard152
@jshepard152 5 лет назад
@@wikiuser92 Not just military pilots. Test pilots.
@wikiuser92
@wikiuser92 5 лет назад
@@jshepard152 I admit, testing new and potentially unsafe equipment is much more tasking and nerve-racking. All these astronauts had already gotten used to risks like this.
@joshuasantana685
@joshuasantana685 5 лет назад
It sounds more like an inconvenience then a radio drama when you hear the transmission between Mission Control and Apollo
@absolutez3r019
@absolutez3r019 4 года назад
@@joshuasantana685 They were probably panicking like you wouldn't believe, but all their combined training kept it from surfacing. They know that once panic sets it will very quickly escalate to mad hysteria, they'll be at each others throats, then they'll die and drift aimlessly in space never to be seen again
@Markus_Andrew
@Markus_Andrew 4 года назад
Apparently Gene Krantz never said "failure is not an option", but he has since said that he wishes he had. Ed Harris actually improvised the line on the spot, and Krantz liked it so much he used it as the title for his memoirs. Shows just how much into Krantz's personality Harris managed to tap.
@solomonreal1977
@solomonreal1977 3 года назад
Krantz here: Markus got everything wrong. Do not listen to them.
@Markus_Andrew
@Markus_Andrew 3 года назад
@@solomonreal1977 Um - what?
@The77SpaceMan
@The77SpaceMan 2 года назад
Actually it was one of the screenwriters, Bill Broyles who came up with that line. They met one of the Apollo 13 flight controllers in preparation of the movie and he said that when a problem arose, they laid out all the options, and failure was never one of them. Broyles took this line and had it worked into Harris' script.
@jwiese100
@jwiese100 Год назад
Like how people associate the phrase "a sucker born every minute" with PT Barnum even though he didn't actually say it
@dschlicks
@dschlicks 4 года назад
When you already know the outcome of a movie but it's still this compelling and emotionally-engaging, that's called great film making.
@tomzadvydas1758
@tomzadvydas1758 6 месяцев назад
It’s a great movie
@sacredstarlight9446
@sacredstarlight9446 4 года назад
Ed Harris is so moving whenever he makes his passion filled speeches, heck if he were a manager at Walmart he could make a morning pep talk seem inspirational
@Dragonrose36
@Dragonrose36 3 года назад
The neatest thing is he was in both Apollo 13 AND The Right Stuff.
@SinisterMud
@SinisterMud 3 года назад
One of the best actors ever
@artvandalay13
@artvandalay13 2 года назад
He probably uses a marketing and sales technique called AIDA. Attention. Interest. Decision. Action.
@1985slipstream
@1985slipstream 2 года назад
I'd want him as my commanding officer if i were going to hold the us government to ransom on a disused old jail...
@princessozmaofoz5242
@princessozmaofoz5242 Год назад
@@1985slipstream lol I get it
@iwanegerstrom4564
@iwanegerstrom4564 6 лет назад
I must have seen this Movie like 15 times and yet I never get bored of it
@Cheka__
@Cheka__ 6 лет назад
Iwan Egerström . I completely agree.
@joemckim1183
@joemckim1183 5 лет назад
Apollo 13 and From the Earth to the Moon, I could watch countless times and still be entertained by them every single time.
@esayed
@esayed 5 лет назад
me too .
@petervandervoort6863
@petervandervoort6863 5 лет назад
Of course not it is a masterpiece
@markjackson7650
@markjackson7650 4 года назад
It's one of the film's even though I've seen it countless times I still get all worried and wonder if they're going to get home safely
@benknapp8047
@benknapp8047 6 лет назад
Average age of the engineers: 27 Using paper, pencil, chalk, blackboard, and sliderules.
@matthewhaverkamp8657
@matthewhaverkamp8657 6 лет назад
Gene was the oldest of the flight directors, 37
@jennifersman7990
@jennifersman7990 5 лет назад
Not to mention a wristwatch and a window when piloting a space craft
@ericre1919
@ericre1919 5 лет назад
I went to see this movie when it came out with my father who had been one of those Grumman LM workers. During the scene with them using slide rules he looked at me and said "that's how we did it" he was in his early 20s when he worked at Grumman and worked on the LM that flew on Apollo 13
@Bartonovich52
@Bartonovich52 5 лет назад
Except for the legions of IBM computers they had. The last aerospace products designed purely by hand were made in WWII.
@ericre1919
@ericre1919 5 лет назад
Bartonovich52 my dad worked in SCAT (Spacecraft Assembly and Testing) at Grumman working on LM5, 7 and 10. And yes computers were definitely used to land a man on the moon but he has photos taken at Grumman and the only thing on the desks were ashtrays and slide rules.
@alexgomorykeisler3800
@alexgomorykeisler3800 6 лет назад
0:13 I want you all to forget the flight plan. From this point we are improvising a new mission. Fixing that projector.
@HRHooChicken
@HRHooChicken 5 лет назад
You can't run a projector on 12 amps John!
@leonkernan
@leonkernan 5 лет назад
I want it cold and dark, don't give me anything they don't have up there.
@Yerflua
@Yerflua 5 лет назад
"Whoa, whoa, whoa, guys! Power is everything! They don't have power, they don't get a projector screen! We gotta turn everything off, the lava lamp, the toaster, everything!"
@AustrianA340
@AustrianA340 4 года назад
"The guys upstairs have handed us this and we need to get through. We need to figure out a way to get the project up and running again, using nothing but that"
@Yerflua
@Yerflua 4 года назад
"Okay, Odyssey, we have an ... unusual procedure for you here, we want you to unscrew the lightbulb..."
@jteamusic4123
@jteamusic4123 2 года назад
“I don’t care what it was designed to do, I care about what it can do” the words of some who truly knows how to effortlessly forge ahead under pressure.
@ryans413
@ryans413 3 года назад
What I love is it captures the actual confusion on how they are going to do this. Everyone’s got plans and ideas but everyone also has valid points.
@howlbigbadwolf
@howlbigbadwolf 6 лет назад
" I'm not going to sugarcoat this for ya"
@jaronbreen7954
@jaronbreen7954 6 лет назад
it was just not even remotely relevant.
@ArmyJames
@ArmyJames 5 лет назад
I highly doubt anybody at NASA ever said anything close to that in real life. That was Hollywood.
@fattymcbutterpants9700
@fattymcbutterpants9700 4 года назад
@@ArmyJames Dude, I'm not going to sugar coat this for you
@joshitheyoshi2533
@joshitheyoshi2533 4 года назад
There's so many life lessons in this movie that I didn't appreciate until I was much older.
@paperclip9558
@paperclip9558 6 лет назад
the acting is great, even for the extras
@HansCent
@HansCent 6 лет назад
Damit, now I want to watch the whole movie
@EhWotWhy
@EhWotWhy 5 лет назад
Damn good film.
@OpenSource478
@OpenSource478 5 лет назад
Same
@keidricwilson4237
@keidricwilson4237 5 лет назад
Its on netflix now
@DanyloProkopiv
@DanyloProkopiv 4 года назад
on my plan for tonight )
@texasrockshillcountry6574
@texasrockshillcountry6574 3 года назад
What took you so long? Great movie, hope you enjoy it!
@andryu_0764
@andryu_0764 2 года назад
"I don't care about what it was designed to do, I care about what it CAN do." Can we just take a moment to appreciate Ed Harris and all the great performances in this movie. This will stand the test of time as an all time great, in my opinion.
@andohish27
@andohish27 Год назад
Love watching this scene. Gene Kranz is calm, composed, and also not only using his expertise but hearing them out to get everyone's professional opinion and expertise in order to build a solution to solve a huge problem, while also keeping them calm so they don't lose THEIR heads. Little things like this are a great example of a great leader.
@andrewpheasey3477
@andrewpheasey3477 5 лет назад
"i don't care what anything was designed to do!.. i care what IT CAN DO"! love that part.
@slappymcgillicuddy7532
@slappymcgillicuddy7532 5 лет назад
Ed Harris is amazing in everything he is in
@BatMan-fj8dy
@BatMan-fj8dy 4 года назад
This clip is why I’m an aerospace engineering student rn
@BatMan-fj8dy
@BatMan-fj8dy 4 года назад
Rithvik Gujjula UofM
@BatMan-fj8dy
@BatMan-fj8dy 4 года назад
AI Young i disagree. There’s a flood of new jobs and internships, at least currently with privatization and mergers
@charzanboo9940
@charzanboo9940 4 года назад
@@aiyoung9482 Spitting out truths!!! Only government can afford the expense of deep space missions like it has always been. Businesses ate risk adverse and need a return on investment for their shareholders. Better to get a mechanical engineer degree (a lot of the courses are the same as aerospace), then try to get a job at SpaceX, Blue Origin, Boeing, Airbus etc. Better yet, a software degree gives you even more flexibility, and a fallback of a Silicon Valley job if you don't make it.
@pearlmax
@pearlmax 3 года назад
So tell me this aerospace boy. How do you account for the alleged gravitational pull of multiple bodies when you shoot your rocket into space? Or are you only concerned about what computer software spits out on a monitor?
@odst1703
@odst1703 7 лет назад
Pure Engineering right there
@Bartonovich52
@Bartonovich52 5 лет назад
I dunno. They killed three astronauts in Apollo 1. They almost killed these three from a known defect. They would go on to kill another 14 people in accidents that could have easily been avoided.
@JuliusCaesar888
@JuliusCaesar888 10 месяцев назад
Apollo 13 was one of the best movies ever made. EVER. This scene is amazing, the projector and blackboard are total metaphors for the entire fiasco. Fancy piece of tech busts, time to get back to basics.
@slagellajs
@slagellajs 4 года назад
I would highly recommend the book “Apollo”. I just finished it on audible. It goes very in depth into the engineering process of the program. It also describes how the guys in mission control worked. They had to figure out lots of things on the fly. I learned a lot that only made it all that much more impressive.
@gcHK47
@gcHK47 4 года назад
I’d highly recommend Gene Kranz’s autobiography “Failure is not an Option”. Very informative and an interesting read.
@slagellajs
@slagellajs 4 года назад
gcHK47 yeah I’m planning on getting to that one!
@Amipunkiponk
@Amipunkiponk 3 года назад
@slagellajs who's the author of that book ?
@combatengineer8575
@combatengineer8575 4 года назад
Thats what is called "Crisis Management".
@brianmessemer2973
@brianmessemer2973 4 года назад
Yeah. We could use some of that right about now. 🤦‍♂️
@FINALLYOUTAFTER7
@FINALLYOUTAFTER7 4 года назад
That movie was a great example on how no battle plan survives contact with the enemy.
@JustSomeCanadianGuy
@JustSomeCanadianGuy 6 лет назад
One thing I love about this movie is how everyone in every room is probably the best at what they do on the planet. 😁
@ArmyJames
@ArmyJames 5 лет назад
Especially yelling, and being overly-dramatic.
@dannygjk
@dannygjk 4 года назад
@@ArmyJames Never happened in real life that was Hollywood horseshit. Even the astronauts didn't freak out as depicted in the movie - more horseshit.
@Geographus666
@Geographus666 4 года назад
@@dannygjk True, the had to act it up for the movie. In reality they knew how dangerous it was but they were professionals who knew what they were doing. The audience are not professionals, they have to be told how dangerous it is and how nail-biting some situations were due to how the astronauts and ground-crew talk and act, even though that's not how it really happened. I mean just listen to the actual recording of the "Houston we've had a problem here"-situation. If you didn't knew what was going on you would never guess that their ship essentially blew up behind them.
@fifabublz17
@fifabublz17 4 года назад
Great way of looking at it, you’re so right
@harveyd3175
@harveyd3175 Год назад
I like how at the beginning, he just let's them argue and rabble and rant...He listened to everyone.
@conors4430
@conors4430 2 года назад
Ed harris best performance
@AstroCreep95
@AstroCreep95 2 месяца назад
I'm always impressed with how flawless he drew on that board. I can never do that.
@ronin120
@ronin120 4 года назад
Ed Harris is an awesome actor.
@pjimmbojimmbo1990
@pjimmbojimmbo1990 2 года назад
There is a lot of Artistic License in this scene, the real Gene Krantz was a for more soft spoken individual than how Ed Harris portrayed him. In addition the decision whether to go around the moon, or do a direct abort, was done in the Control Room, with mostly by Lunney and his team, Krantz was there too, but Lunney was in control. Krantz then took his team out of the rotation. This movie unfairly denies Lunney and the other Flight Controllers and there teams, the credit they too deserve for getting Apollo 13 home. The PC-2 burn wasn't decided or proposed by Krantz either, but by the guys in the trenches
@bbb462cid
@bbb462cid 3 года назад
This movie, Jaws, Patton, The Quiet Man...I watch these movies whenever I see them on. Doesn't matter where I pick it up.
@twistedpixel2558
@twistedpixel2558 2 года назад
I don't care what anything was designed to do, I care about what it can do. That, in my mind, is the true definition of a hacker.
@CFLsurfr
@CFLsurfr 4 года назад
My grandfather wasn't there for the meetings with engineers at JSC. He was an engineer at KSC at the time, shocked and trying desperately to get those men home with everyone else. RIP Eugene "Buzz" Swoyer
@MaynardGKrebs-gv4vy
@MaynardGKrebs-gv4vy 4 года назад
That is too cool. Many thanks to him for his monumental effort. Saving 3 lives is no small feat.
@petesime
@petesime 3 года назад
Substituting a blackboard for a failed piece of tech - the overhead projector - is kind of a metaphor for the film. Solving problems as they arise. I do hope that was intentional rather than the briefest of comic incidents.
@Pilot231
@Pilot231 2 года назад
Honestly, it's situations like what happened on Apollo 13 and even on Gemini 8 that makes me want to rely on human pilots rather than just computers like these recent (commercial?) space flights.
@willoughbykrenzteinburg
@willoughbykrenzteinburg 2 года назад
Well - to be fair, if this were to happen on an unmanned mission, the urgency to solve the problem wouldn't exist because there would not be lives at stake. However, it would still require people working together to save the mission.
@andrewsstation6436
@andrewsstation6436 4 года назад
I love the quote "I don't care about what anything was designed to do. I care about what it can do." Another great example of this is how the stairwells in the twin towers were not designed for mass-evacuation (which was never anticipated), but they ultimately allowed the vast majority of thousands of workers below the impact zones to escape the towers.
@Year2047
@Year2047 3 года назад
I’m reading Kranz’s memoir Failure is Not an Option right now. I’m going to have to watch this again when I am done.
@princessozmaofoz5242
@princessozmaofoz5242 Год назад
Was the book good? I might wanna buy it too.
@rogerhwerner6997
@rogerhwerner6997 3 года назад
Ed Harris was terrific in this film.
@Urbanstrangler
@Urbanstrangler 3 года назад
I remember watching this while in the Military. We were working equipment that required us to consult with Northrop Grumman all the time. This scene made a bunch of us laugh when he asked for what Grumman though.
@jonathannerz1696
@jonathannerz1696 8 месяцев назад
The thing that always stood out to me most in this scene was how Gene was able to retake control of the room when everyone was bickering without ever raising his voice. Now that is a man who commands respect.
@gives_bad_advice
@gives_bad_advice Месяц назад
There was no bickering. That was just for the movie.
@HealyUnit
@HealyUnit 5 месяцев назад
I love how Ed Harris's Gene Kranz loses his temper for just a _second_ or two when he says "Well, unfortunately we're not landing on the moon, are we?", and then immediately goes back into planning, leading mode once he realizes he's slipped. Brilliant acting.
@lars1296
@lars1296 3 года назад
Trying to get astronauts back home and the overhead projector doesn’t work lol. Subtle but good
@jturner7771
@jturner7771 5 лет назад
0:23 and 0:38 the Earth changes shape
@coolguy02536
@coolguy02536 4 года назад
The Moon too. They seem to be redrawn in every shot.
@jchors2947
@jchors2947 4 года назад
Way too much time on your hands!
@ashokiimc
@ashokiimc 4 года назад
jturner7771 nice
@BrowncoatInABox
@BrowncoatInABox 4 года назад
i really wish you didnt say that. now i cant unsee it
@tojiroh
@tojiroh 4 года назад
0:29 actually
@girl1213
@girl1213 4 года назад
In real life, nobody went off on each other like they do at the 0:58 mark BUT that was the anxiety running through their heads. If there's one thing NASA did so well in the beginning it was NOT hiring overly emotional people. Everyone was forcing themselves to stay calm, think and not let their emotions go out of control, especially during the planning stages. But that doesn't really work in a movie. Still the drama does show the audience just how deep the NASA guys were investing themselves in the survival of their astronauts: no sugarcoating, just the hard uncomfortable facts and possibilities.
@viarnay
@viarnay 3 года назад
the chalkboard becomes another actor in this fantastic scene :- )
@brycepatties
@brycepatties 11 месяцев назад
Many great lines in this movie. An underrated one is "I don't care about what anything is designed to do, I care about what it can do."
@user-dq1kr6zc2t
@user-dq1kr6zc2t 2 года назад
See I love this movie because it deals with a real world problem and requires the collaboration and creativity to solve it. The classic "Put your thinking caps on". Literally.
@siler7
@siler7 2 года назад
No, not literally. Figuratively.
@bshoulder
@bshoulder 8 месяцев назад
Ed Harris' performance as Gene Kranz is the backbone of this story, and his masterful acting should have earned him an Oscar... calm, collected, determined, and open to suggestions from his team of experts and was not too proud to look down on anyone's ideas. If only the world has more leaders like Kranz...
@joliecide
@joliecide Месяц назад
Ed Harris was basically channeling his John Glenn in Right Stuff. Restrained fury. Excellent acting exercise.
@johntucker23
@johntucker23 3 года назад
Everything, literally everything that was designed to do a job can do several other jobs, even if it was designed to do a very specific thing. Great quote :)
@bbenjoe
@bbenjoe 4 года назад
Effective teamwork at it's best.
@siler7
@siler7 2 года назад
at it is best
@leanaf
@leanaf 10 месяцев назад
Notice how the voice that can be heard about the lander design, while Gene (Ed. Harris) is thinking, was added in post-production to fill the silence gap and make the scene a little more explanatory.
@johnwilliamson2207
@johnwilliamson2207 3 года назад
I find it absurd that at no point during my school years in History class was there a lesson, not even a chapter in any of our books, that three Americans were almost stranded in space indefinitely. I had to hear about this incident when this film came out.
@willoughbykrenzteinburg
@willoughbykrenzteinburg 3 года назад
I don't know why something like this would be in a history textbook. I understand what you mean, but I also don't think it belongs in history. It's a weird pop culture thing.
@eliaspeter7689
@eliaspeter7689 3 года назад
I mean it's more like histoty of space travel than world history. We barely learn about the moon landing, and that's all we get from space, not even the space station or space shuttles are mentioned in history lessons.
@crippledphoenix
@crippledphoenix 3 года назад
Ed Harris in this film... was a god.
@jackspry9736
@jackspry9736 2 года назад
Ed Harris crushes the role as Gene Kranz.
@unknownz1238
@unknownz1238 4 года назад
I like this “I don’t care what about what it was designed to I care about what it can do”
@wftjet
@wftjet 6 лет назад
The Grumman guy shows up a couple more times in the movie notably to excitedly say "How about that LEM?! How about it!!"
@AH-be6bu
@AH-be6bu 5 лет назад
“I guess you get to keep your job”
@3dbadboy1
@3dbadboy1 5 лет назад
Ya Damn right
@Emper0rH0rde
@Emper0rH0rde 5 лет назад
The people from Grumman weren't happy with the way the movie portrayed them, though. Grumman had an "anything we can do to help" attitude from the start.
@zerobyte802
@zerobyte802 5 лет назад
My favorite episode of From The Earth To The Moon was the one about Grumman engineering the LEM. That's a more accurate portrayal of how Grumman was.
@jsciarri
@jsciarri 5 лет назад
@@AH-be6bu "You betcha"
@violet-kittychick
@violet-kittychick 4 года назад
One of the best movies of all time :)
@kpec3
@kpec3 3 года назад
Ed is such a great actor! If he's in it, reason enough to see it...
@magnuscroify
@magnuscroify 3 года назад
This movie is easily on my Mt. Rushmore for best scripts ever. Yes, ever.
@siler7
@siler7 2 года назад
Definitely better than any movie made in the 1700s.
@Doctor699
@Doctor699 3 года назад
It's not said in the movie, but to make a direct abort they would have had to ditch the Lunar module in deep space. That way the spacecraft would have lost enough mass to turn around and return to Earth. However Gene Kranz wanted to in no way throw away the Lunar module, which he now thought of as a lifeboat. As it would turn out at the end when they actually got a look at the damage to the Service Module, Gene Kranz ultimately made the mostright call.
@siler7
@siler7 2 года назад
When you think about how quickly they were going away from Earth and consider how much thrust it would take to stop and then reverse their trajectory, you realize why it wasn't a good idea. If you get part way through the process and lose power, you might lose the ability to sling around the moon, and then it's all over.
@leafyutube
@leafyutube 3 года назад
Every time I watch this, the astronauts return safely.
@andresmorales7718
@andresmorales7718 5 месяцев назад
He is the most delighted with the journey that had blessings.
@shaneturner500
@shaneturner500 11 месяцев назад
“They blow up and they DIE!” “LOOK, IM NOT GONNA SUGARCOAT THIS FOR YOU!” New Yorkers don’t play
@theshrew8853
@theshrew8853 4 года назад
"They blow up and they DIE"
@ReveredDead
@ReveredDead 2 месяца назад
This was the first clip my professor showed us in our Engineering class on day one. Literally showcased what crisis management and effective leadership looks like.
@stevencoardvenice
@stevencoardvenice 2 месяца назад
I'm a humanites major. This movie showed me what engineering is all about
@gives_bad_advice
@gives_bad_advice Месяц назад
literally
@wherethewildthingsarenot
@wherethewildthingsarenot 3 года назад
Lesson: calmness trumps all other approaches to leadership
@R.O.O.T.
@R.O.O.T. 3 года назад
I don't care about what anything was DESIGNED to do, I care about what it CAN do.
@bcn1gh7h4wk
@bcn1gh7h4wk 6 лет назад
just as good old Miyagi used to say "Look eye! Always look eye!", "Look at the math! Always look at the math!"
@beerten202
@beerten202 11 месяцев назад
Thats an leader you want in the most desperate situation he points out - what are the goals - what do we know - what do we have - what are our options And for him specifically he has to make the call and decide and if it fails hell be responsible
@asleandere8852
@asleandere8852 2 года назад
young project managers watch this clip and learn the lessons from Gene and his running with the problem. Just because you have plans does not give you the right to ignore problems sat there right in front of you
@WatercraftGames
@WatercraftGames 5 лет назад
u can get good memes out of this masterpiece
@CielBieDee
@CielBieDee 4 года назад
you solve the first problem, then the next one, then the next one after that. Until you get home.
@Geographus666
@Geographus666 4 года назад
That's actually how it really works. The Martian did a great job of getting that message across. I remember Chris Hadfield talking about "The Martian" and saying that this is how astronauts actually think, that's kind of their mantra. You identify the most serious problem and then you work that problem until you solve it. Then you tackle the next most serious problem, that is quint essential NASA.
@MaynardGKrebs-gv4vy
@MaynardGKrebs-gv4vy 4 года назад
"Any questions ?" Great movie....
@JJ-qo7th
@JJ-qo7th 3 года назад
How do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time.
@ohnobees8033
@ohnobees8033 Год назад
One little known fact about Apollo 13 was that using the Lunar Module's engine had already been tested on Apollo 9 a year earlier. So the work those astronauts did played a big role in deciding to use that engine for the whole stack.
@gkprivate433
@gkprivate433 Год назад
It was used on Apollo 10 and Apollo 11 and Apollo 12 also. Saying Apollo 9 is a bit off in your post. .
@brianchan8
@brianchan8 Год назад
@@gkprivate433it was with the csm I think
@GregoryTheGr8ster
@GregoryTheGr8ster 6 лет назад
They had to make some tuff decisions! No one knew what the correct course of action was. I'm sure glad that their new, improvised plan worked.
@laminatedsamurai
@laminatedsamurai 4 года назад
This entire movie defined what it was to be a "steely-eyed rocket man"
@iodedonpepto
@iodedonpepto 2 года назад
Ed Harris is criminally underrated
@princessozmaofoz5242
@princessozmaofoz5242 Год назад
I think he had a good career.
@GenGamesUniverse
@GenGamesUniverse 11 месяцев назад
"We do an about face, we bring the guys right home right now!" - Funnily enough, that IS what NASA and Lovell/Haise/Swigert did as they did not do what this film was implying, that they use Apollo 13 to slingshot around the moon and get home. They did a literal about face, using the lunar lander thrusters to get them back as at that point in time, they had not gone further than where they were when the initial explosion of the O2 tank happened.
@InDzienInTampa
@InDzienInTampa 2 года назад
Engineers would never be so agreeable today.
@MerchantIvoryfilms
@MerchantIvoryfilms 4 года назад
Lunar Module blows up and breaks Ed goes to projector to draw a plan Projector light breaks Ed goes to chalk board to draw a plan chalk board breaks
@brianmessemer2973
@brianmessemer2973 4 года назад
He'd take them all outside and use a stick to trace in the dirt. If the stick broke he'd use his finger. Why? Because he's Gene Kranz. They've never lost an American in space and they're sure as hell not going to lose one on his watch.
@falloutworldrecord
@falloutworldrecord 3 года назад
1:50 me when my gf asks me why am I using a spatula to scrape the dry tomato sauce splashes on the wall next to the oven
@eliaspeter7689
@eliaspeter7689 3 года назад
It's something Cave Johnson would say. We throw science at the wall and see what sticks.
@Rickshaw881
@Rickshaw881 6 лет назад
Just think,, somewhere, the people from NASA and IBM got together and had a meeting. "What should we tell employees on how to dress for work.?"""" "Well, sir,, I would suggest ties with short sleeved white shirts.!" "That's preposterous! They will look like geeks managing a fast food burger restaurant!" "It's settled then,, the geek look for everyone!"
@mikeflanary642
@mikeflanary642 6 лет назад
Well it was in Houston, Texas
@IronMan-tk8uc
@IronMan-tk8uc 5 лет назад
It was the 1960s, a much more formal time. Only a decade later and the controllers started to dress more smooth and laid-back in reflection of the changing times. This was showed on History's Failure is Not an Option: Beyond The Moon.
@dalethelander3781
@dalethelander3781 5 лет назад
I liked the Plantronics earpiece-microphones that attached to eyeglasses.
@NiVi192
@NiVi192 4 года назад
Oh boy... at that point, not even the overhead projector was working anymore! !! 😂🙈
@89sigma43
@89sigma43 Месяц назад
Gene Krantz and the ground crew are the real heroes of the story, IMO.
@BradyT918
@BradyT918 3 года назад
Classic scenario here, everyones thinking of the problem and not the solution. Gotta think outside the predefined box that they designed.
@nap0920
@nap0920 Год назад
The big circle completely changes from when he first draws it lol
@MrWest-ph5yg
@MrWest-ph5yg 4 года назад
Young Ed Harris FTW
@Dr.Kananga
@Dr.Kananga 10 месяцев назад
LEM is made of two stages, so they had extra fuel for additional burns, and once you get rid of the first stage you are dealing with a lower mass.
@lousanto1054
@lousanto1054 3 года назад
As I am listening to this, I'm staring at a Waxing Gibbus Moon through our 2-story living room window on Thursday, April 22, 2021.
@clausesanta5042
@clausesanta5042 5 лет назад
Ed Harris is supposed to witness another space disaster about 40 years later; "Gravity".
@erickohlhorst747
@erickohlhorst747 11 месяцев назад
If only these guys were in mission control when Columbia's port wing was KNOWN to have been hit by a chunk of insulation. Who knows if just one of these guys could have delayed the Challenger launch just 2 days following the freeze.
@IronMan-tk8uc
@IronMan-tk8uc 6 лет назад
Kranz always sharp as a nail, but this Grumman engineer is so condescending. The ability of a system to perform outside of its operational design has to be tested on these situations. I don't care what was designed to do, I care about what it can do. Perfect line.
@genshin16
@genshin16 6 лет назад
Government staffers always have a degree of disdain towards contractors. This movie highlights this on-going relationship really well through Ed Harris' character.
@Ares99999
@Ares99999 6 лет назад
But he's NOT being condescending. He's telling Kranz that it wasn't designed for it, so there's no way to guarantee it'll work. What, was he supposed to lie to Kranz?
@shannysalcedo3627
@shannysalcedo3627 6 лет назад
but he wasn't being condescending, he was being honest...Engineers are supposed to be honest
@PV1230
@PV1230 6 лет назад
it's CYA
@geomodelrailroader
@geomodelrailroader 6 лет назад
the Boeing engineers thought they could use the service module to get back but Kranz and Gerald Carr overruled them the explosion destroyed that spacecraft so it won't work which means Northrup Grumman will have to pick up the slack to get Apollo 13 home.
@Shadowkey392
@Shadowkey392 5 лет назад
First Man: the spiritual successor to “The Right Stuff” and this movie.
@jshepard152
@jshepard152 Год назад
No way. First Man was hot crap on a stick. Apollo 11 gets it right.
@blainewheaton9679
@blainewheaton9679 2 года назад
Deciding courses of action. People have opinions. The leader quickly and decisively says it isn’t an option while explaining why. Makes a conscious effort to move past our assumptions about ‘what things were designed to do’
@blainewheaton9679
@blainewheaton9679 2 года назад
Breaking Cognitive Bias
@sethkimmel7312
@sethkimmel7312 4 года назад
The LEM; another fine product of the "The Grumman Ironworks" ..... miss Long Island...
@renegadeoflife87
@renegadeoflife87 3 года назад
Northrop Grumman has returned to the spaceflight scene in modern times with their purchase of Orbital ATK. The builders of the LEM are once again building spacecraft.
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