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Apollo 13 | "Houston, We Have a Problem" 

Universal Pictures
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For the 50th anniversary of the historic Apollo 13 space mission, watch the iconic "Houston, We Have a Problem" scene from the film by Ron Howard!
Buy/Rent Apollo 13!
Amazon: www.amazon.com/Apollo-13-Tom-...
iTunes: itunes.apple.com/us/movie/apo...
RU-vid Movies: • Apollo 13
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Universal Pictures Home Entertainment: www.uphe.com/movies/apollo-13
Stranded 205,000 miles from Earth in a crippled spacecraft, astronauts Jim Lovell (Hanks), Fred Haise (Paxton) and Jack Swigert (Bacon) fight a desperate battle to survive. Meanwhile, at Mission Control, astronaut Ken Mattingly (Sinise), flight director Gene Kranz (Harris) and a heroic ground crew race against time - and the odds - to bring them home.
© 1995 Universal City Studios, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Cast: Tom Hanks, Ed Harris, Bill Paxton, Kevin Bacon, Gary Sinise, Kathleen Quinlan, Mary Kate Schellhardt, Emily Ann Lloyd, Miko Hughes, Max Elliott Slade, Jean Speegle Howard, David Andrews, Chris Ellis
Produced By: Brian Grazer
Directed by: Ron Howard

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8 апр 2020

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Комментарии : 5 тыс.   
@JasonF314
@JasonF314 4 года назад
Never travel with Tom Hanks
@islandpalm148
@islandpalm148 4 года назад
@jeff lockaby Stuck in an Australian hospital.
@FutureDeep
@FutureDeep 4 года назад
What if you're just running behind him?
@majorrgeek
@majorrgeek 4 года назад
@jeff lockaby - don't forget Forrest Gump walks 3 times across America another bad movie
@gunnerr8476
@gunnerr8476 4 года назад
Look at me, I'm the Spaceship Captain now.
@hevyjameshulleza461
@hevyjameshulleza461 4 года назад
He got Covid 19 in real life too... lol...
@drg8687
@drg8687 3 года назад
If you think about it, what they accomplished was far more impressive than landing on the moon.
@YoutubeIsRetarded689
@YoutubeIsRetarded689 3 года назад
That's no lie.
@michalsoukup1021
@michalsoukup1021 3 года назад
13 is called succesful failure for a reason.
@catluva74
@catluva74 3 года назад
@@wankamkwan5858 ok so NASA faked 6 landings and one emergency that would definitely draw the attention to a con?
@trunghieunguyen8324
@trunghieunguyen8324 3 года назад
Yeap
@davros_adl8155
@davros_adl8155 3 года назад
@@wankamkwan5858 They were staged. Since a Lunar SSTO was impossible, the Saturn V had 3 Stages, and the LEM had 2! (haha sike you bad)
@kchishol1970
@kchishol1970 Год назад
What I like about this film is that the crew, may have been on Apollo 13, but they were PHENOMENALLY lucky this happened near the start of the mission, when they had a maximum of power and supplies. If it happened at the moon or on the return trip, they never would have survived.
@ryandoeren6638
@ryandoeren6638 Год назад
Could you imagine being out in space in nothing but a tin can and you're told "You got 15 minutes of life support".
@Jayteaseepiirturi
@Jayteaseepiirturi Год назад
@@ryandoeren6638 I've got this thing on DVD. There are times that I watch this thing over and over. Sometimes with commentary with Jim Lovell. He's impressed with how accurate everything is although he will point out whatever's been added or changed for the sake of drama. In this particular scene "Houston, we have a problem" was actually "Houston, we've had a problem." But as I understand it, the action stuff is all very faithfully presented here.
@ronaldgarrison8478
@ronaldgarrison8478 Год назад
The Apollo 8 crew is also incredibly lucky that didn't happen to them, as they didn't even have a LM. And they knew this was a potential risk, but going by what the CIA said, they HAD to do it to beat those Rooskies.
@Jayteaseepiirturi
@Jayteaseepiirturi Год назад
@@ronaldgarrison8478 Oh yesssss, those Rooskiies. Like, why did it have to be a race, anyway? Well, okay, today we know what those guys are unfortunately capable of... but still.
@kchishol1970
@kchishol1970 Год назад
@@Jayteaseepiirturi It was a Cold War rivalry without violence, but with public resources far more productively used than for a shooting war like in Vietnam.
@swirlingabyss
@swirlingabyss Год назад
Damnit. I've got to go to bed in fifteen minutes, but now I NEED to watch Apollo 13 for the hundredth time.
@michaelklein3112
@michaelklein3112 Год назад
Well worth it! Work or the kids or the wife can wait! 🇺🇸👍🤓👍🇺🇸
@bodychoke
@bodychoke Год назад
I support this.
@stevedalbor1001
@stevedalbor1001 2 месяца назад
Good luck!
@hectorfernandez4098
@hectorfernandez4098 3 года назад
"Work the problem, don't make it worse by guessing". That should be hanging on the wall in every support desk office and workshop. Brilliant film, great acting and truly NASA's Finest Hour.
@InquisitorMatthewAshcraft
@InquisitorMatthewAshcraft 3 года назад
Not to mention Tough, and competent.
@samsignorelli
@samsignorelli 3 года назад
Like a lot of the dialogue, that WAS actually what Gene Krantz said. The audio from that part of the mission is actually on RU-vid...several hours of it.
@timregan1005
@timregan1005 3 года назад
not in this country... bitch about the problem and then cry some more is the 2021 america
@dennisanderson3895
@dennisanderson3895 3 года назад
I was thinking the same! No wonder Gene was the mission director: $#!+ blows up in your face and he was level-headed to remain focused on *solving* the problem, not that there *is* a problem (which you cannot affect).An amazing guy!
@samsignorelli
@samsignorelli 3 года назад
@@dennisanderson3895 Don't forget the other flight directors on the mission: Glynn Lunny, Milton Winder, and Gerry Griffin....Krantz was the lead director, but didn't do the entire mission by himself. In point of fact, the O2 tank blew when Krantz and his team were about done with their shift...Glynn Lunny came on about an hour after the tank blew, and at that time they were still in the middle of the initial response.
@derpinbird1180
@derpinbird1180 3 года назад
I still can't get over how hopeless and terrifying that would be.
@PurpleChipz
@PurpleChipz 3 года назад
There is a recording of this moment here on youtube in which you can hear how the astronauts and mission control reacted and the tone of there voice, you would think they would be freaking out but they are so calm and professional in there voice and responses you can't even tell something was actually wrong. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-PpTleKyn3gc.html
@jshepard152
@jshepard152 3 года назад
@@PurpleChipz Because they were test pilots. Test pilots don't freak out.
@Dracule0117
@Dracule0117 3 года назад
@@jshepard152 Yep. Water is wet, the sun is bright, and test pilots keep their cool.
@jshepard152
@jshepard152 3 года назад
@@Dracule0117 But.... Where does the sun come up?!?
@dennyfrontier
@dennyfrontier 3 года назад
Have you ever played gta online and ran out of ammo in the middle? same thing
@twillison8824
@twillison8824 Год назад
Hands down one of the finest movies ever made.
@joshleach3349
@joshleach3349 Год назад
It’s in my top 10 for sure
@Nusca93
@Nusca93 Год назад
And people still don't seem to get that astronauts can infact take off those chunky suits while they're in flight hahaha this film clearly demonstrates this lol.
@ronaldtartaglia4459
@ronaldtartaglia4459 Год назад
Shit movie. Insulting to everyone who was involved
@Nusca93
@Nusca93 Год назад
@@ronaldtartaglia4459 Lmfao you're spun. It's one of the best movies out there. Did you have your eyes closed while watching it? Tom Hanks' acting was top tier. Same with Paxton and Bacon. I also love the casting for ground control in houston. Those guys nailed it.
@Nusca93
@Nusca93 Год назад
@Aniwayas Song Right? And people laugh this film off. Tom hanks/Paxton/Sinise are all legendary actors. Might put this on later tbh lol.
@Nusca93
@Nusca93 Год назад
I love this movie. The quote that sticks with me most is when Ken's in the simulator trying to figure out the problem on the ground and they ask if he needs a break. "If they don't get one I don't get one."
@francishunt562
@francishunt562 Год назад
It's a powerful line, but I'm afraid that never happened in real life. Ken Mattingly did an interview where he said he was never in the simulator during the mission, only as part of the crew before he was replaced for being exposed to German Measles.
@Nusca93
@Nusca93 Год назад
@@francishunt562 Ah dang lol so they actually replaced him irl cause of the damn measles eh lmao? I think they had him up in the sim cause it was his machine and he knew everything about it including how to squeeze those amps out. Guess they kept this scene in the movie to add to the drama/suspense eh?
@HO-bndk
@HO-bndk Год назад
Yes, he'll continue this vital task with low energy, impaired reasoning abilities and low response time, just to make a BS macho point. Stupid nonsensical scene.
@Nusca93
@Nusca93 Год назад
@@HO-bndk the scene shows their team work. Even though ken was on the ground cause of the medical crew he insisted on continuing to help em cause he was the one who knew about the simulator the most. No macho act was shown in this scene. Ken then goes to mission control as soon as they find the problem and he helps his friends land safely.
@user-ms1jn7iz8q
@user-ms1jn7iz8q 2 месяца назад
Ken staying back helped their safe return. How ironic.
@althea_1721
@althea_1721 4 года назад
I am in complete awe. This cast. This whole film. The actual event. Props to everyone involved in this historic moment.
4 года назад
What pisses me off are all these religious nutjobs who say we can't get into outer space because they all think a dome is covering the earth. And they even think that the earth is flat. Don't get me wrong. I have nothing wrong with people who read the Bible and are Christians. But these fringe case fruitcakes who say we were never in outer space with rockets & satellites belong back in the 12th century where the Church (the RCC) controlled everyone's lives.
@alval1077
@alval1077 4 года назад
JohnBornAgain1984 ooooooookey 👍
@ds1868
@ds1868 4 года назад
@@Aquien1 you are a nut job fruitcake looney.
@jd.3493
@jd.3493 4 года назад
JohnBornAgain1984 wait, you don’t think we landed on the moon? 🤣
@alvarnunez3215
@alvarnunez3215 4 года назад
The US military had its own secret space program and was second to the moon in 1948 after the N@ zi 's went there in '45. When Apollo 11 landed, they were right next to a moon base with hundreds of military personnel, and the crew were pissed because they thought THEY were going to be the first. NASA is just a false front to slowly let civilians bring themselves up to speed on the tech the US military has had for 70 years. They could have rescued the boys of Apollo 13 within hours, but risked their lives so they could keep the lie presentable, and are responsible for the lives lost in the Apollo 1, Columbia, and Challenger disasters because they were using technology a century behind what the US military, and now other countries in collaboration actually have.
@Sigma0283
@Sigma0283 4 года назад
Fifty years ago today, NASA Mission Control heard the words: “Houston, we’ve had a problem.”
@ryancool-pq5vu
@ryancool-pq5vu 4 года назад
The instrument panel was right in their face. I've seen a replica of one Apollo capsule. It is sort of the mission space cockpit at Epcot. Everything is very tight. Don't know how they dealt with the tight space.
@Sigma0283
@Sigma0283 4 года назад
ryan1981 cool lots of training and lots of time in the simulators.
@steveramirez2589
@steveramirez2589 4 года назад
That’s because this never actually happened. Everyone knows that. No way computer, let alone the technology had ability to reach the moon in actuality. Your cell phone is many times more powerful and could not handle take you to the moon.
@garysanderson5774
@garysanderson5774 4 года назад
@@steveramirez2589 why? Flying to the moon doesn't require gigabytes of RAM and processor.
@mattheww797
@mattheww797 4 года назад
so sad i never watched this movie but probably the all died
@JohnBrett715
@JohnBrett715 4 месяца назад
Gene's( Ed Harris) line "Let's look at this from a standpoint of status...what have we got on the spacecraft that's good?" Thats the voice of a guy in charge keeping calm during what was at the time the biggest catastrophe NASA faced. One of Ed Harris best performances
@timpatrickhanna
@timpatrickhanna Год назад
It's the little things all through this movie that do it for me. When Lovell says "Houston, we are venting something out into space" - the way Haise and Swigert shut up and immediately turn their heads to look that way makes it so much more real than actors reciting lines.
@sillyking1991
@sillyking1991 8 месяцев назад
as someone that worked on a sub, i find their later reaction more realistic. when he says it has to be the oxygen they both immediately check those meters. something that i would have expected they do basically as soon as they heard that they were venting something. looking for what pressure was falling too quickly. what i did find realistic in that line was how the immediately shut up when he said started talking. they're all in an emergency. But you still need clear lines of communication. And at least when i was in we were trained to assess the information you want to pass in terms of how important it is before saying it. the corollary being that other people did the same thing. so if you get interrupted while transmitting emergency information, you shut up because its assumed that the other person knows that their info is more important.
@NealX_Gaming
@NealX_Gaming 4 года назад
A lot of people don't get that oxygen was important because it was the fuel that powered the spacecraft (along with hydrogen in the fuel cells) - so losing the O2 tanks was critical because of power loss, not because of losing breathing oxygen. The LEM had enough spare oxygen tanks (meant for the moonwalking) to give them air to breathe for quite some time if they needed it, the issue was POWER.
@hatman4818
@hatman4818 4 года назад
Yeah, it's so enjoyable to watch how much they got right in the film after having grown up and done a ton of research on Apollo missions and their technology. They do their best to explain what's going on to a general audience with on the nose dialogue, but I could see why somebody with no background or prior knowledge on the subject could get lost or not really understand the gravity of the situation.
@k1productions87
@k1productions87 4 года назад
"Whoa, whoa, guys, power is everything. Power is EVERYTHING. Without it, they don't talk to us, they don't correct their trajectory, they don't turn the heatshield around,... we gotta turn everything off... NOW." - John Aaron
@chemsilestrat280
@chemsilestrat280 4 года назад
@Bilal Khalid get a life Bilal , nobody listens to you
@CathrineMacNiel
@CathrineMacNiel 4 года назад
@Bilal Khalid of course NASA is real, what are you talking about?
@Holdit66
@Holdit66 4 года назад
@@hatman4818 They do a pretty good job though, with lines like "If this doesn't work we won't have enough power to get home" or "If Swigert can't dock then we don't have a mission." which sound like very unnecessary things to say for people who know what's going on, but necessary so the audience understands the situation and knows what to concentrate on.
@MAnuscript421
@MAnuscript421 3 года назад
Jim Lovell: "We just lost the moon." That's such a heartbreaking line.
@sammencia7945
@sammencia7945 2 года назад
It may be a century until we return. A bigger loss than people realise.
@MAnuscript421
@MAnuscript421 2 года назад
@@sammencia7945 that's why I wished the Russians landed first, like in For All Mankind.
@stevendefiori5262
@stevendefiori5262 2 года назад
Jim had been on a previous mission where they had orbited the moon.
@topsecret1837
@topsecret1837 2 года назад
@@MAnuscript421 It was their fault, really. Their incompetent medical programs as a result of the bad economy resulted in Korolev, chief designer of their Kerolox rockets to die from complications of surgery in Jan 1966. They pulled themselves together for orbital missions, but fell flat on promises to reach the moon with the N1.
@rowanaforrest9792
@rowanaforrest9792 2 года назад
@@stevendefiori5262 Orbiting the moon, yes, but that's very different from landing and walking on the moon, which was what they were expecting to do. What a terrible disappointment! But they were immediately distracted by the urgency of trying to survive and return to Earth.
@MariaMartinez-researcher
@MariaMartinez-researcher 9 месяцев назад
The unsung hero, most remarkable and unenviable staffer in ground control: the guy in the turtleneck that had to answer to and tell the astronauts whatever it was needed, without the least hint of worry in his voice. 👏👏👏
@RappinPicard
@RappinPicard 4 месяца назад
That was was Jack Lousma, he would go on to fly Skylab 3 and command STS-3
@SkulShurtugalTCG
@SkulShurtugalTCG 22 дня назад
Prior to the building of the International Space Station, the person on that console (called CAPCOM, for Capsule Communicator) was always an astronaut. It was decided early on that the person talking to astronauts, should always be an astronaut.
@irishpolyglot
@irishpolyglot 2 года назад
Apollo 13 was 1970. This movie came out in 1995. When the movie came out, they were closer to the actual Apollo 13, than we are now to that movie. Let that sink in!
@ZH8050
@ZH8050 2 года назад
thank you, I am feeling really old now.
@Geographus666
@Geographus666 2 года назад
I get that with a lot of movies. I just recently realized that "The Dark Knight" is already a 14 year old movie. Jurassic Park turns 30 next year.
@289cobra9
@289cobra9 2 года назад
@@Geographus666 Been 30 years. WOW!
@infonut
@infonut 2 года назад
The clencher is I remember BOTH. ... I need to buy my plot.
@Banditrcn24
@Banditrcn24 Год назад
its about to change tho SLS is our new Moon Rocket!! its actually out on the pad on NASA right now
@hatchcrazy
@hatchcrazy 2 года назад
Tom Hanks' delivery of Lovell's line, "We are venting something out into space," gives me chills every time. He reports it with professional calm but also an incredible gravity and it just drops on every other character like a hammer. You can see the realization wash over them that this is not a glitch but a real and extremely dangerous problem. And that one shot of the tumbling spacecraft "falling" towards the moon in silence...what a masterpiece of wordlessly conveying emotion.
@motokid6008
@motokid6008 2 года назад
I stumble upon this 2 months later and your comment reminds me of another scene that puts hanks in the running for GOAT. At the end of Captain Phillips. The nurse is an actual nurse not an actor. Hanks on set simply told her to do her job as if it were real life. He was able to mimic a person in shock so well that the nurse did not have to act.
@KingdaToro
@KingdaToro 2 года назад
Note the dolly zoom on Ed Harris when he reacts to it!
@evanhaskel206
@evanhaskel206 2 года назад
I suspect a few hearts stopped in Houston when Lovell reported that.
@grizzfan08
@grizzfan08 2 года назад
When it pans back to the guys at Houston, it went so quiet you could hear a pin drop.
@alcohashbo3637
@alcohashbo3637 2 года назад
amogus
@hakimi6640
@hakimi6640 3 года назад
This film teaches me 1.Never Panic 2. Never make a decision on an emotion 3.( point deleted because people are sensitive)
@jshepard152
@jshepard152 3 года назад
4. Don't fry your oxygen tank with excessive voltage.
@NameNik223
@NameNik223 2 года назад
5. Never travel with Tom Hanks
@hakimi6640
@hakimi6640 2 года назад
@@NameNik223 lmao
@petergray7576
@petergray7576 2 года назад
6. For every problem- big or minor- a NASA engineer probably has a solution.
@ChilledP
@ChilledP 2 года назад
7. Never masturbate with sandpaper
@petermacdonough9077
@petermacdonough9077 Год назад
5:18 "We're not gonna have much power...The ship's bleeding to death."---Those words have got to the most haunting words you can hear a pilot say in that situation. I remember seeing this when I was 6-years old and it has always stayed in my memory. It really is amazing how they came together as a team to survive what happened up there 240,000 miles away from earth. And you have no way of stopping it!!!
@stevenschiro1838
@stevenschiro1838 10 месяцев назад
Just thank god that it happened early in the mission. After the moon landing, they get rid of the LM. If it happened on the return trip, they would have had no chance
@superstarajl
@superstarajl 10 месяцев назад
Can someone explain to a non-scientific bloke why having no oxygen affects the power? I understand that with no oxygen, they can't breathe, but the ship would presumably still have power? I don't quite get the science...
@stevenschiro1838
@stevenschiro1838 10 месяцев назад
Power is generated from Fuel Cells that combine Hydrogen and Oxygen to make electricity (and nicely enough, water for drinking and to cool their systems). This is also what the space shuttle used. Here is a cool video at 12:37 shows they fuel cell setup - ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-cFBRawYov00.html The reason so much emphasis after that was on their batteries and shutting everything down to save power, is because their way of making it was basically destroyed, and they were left with only emergency backups.
@superstarajl
@superstarajl 10 месяцев назад
@@stevenschiro1838 super interesting. Thanks for the information!
@foldervtolvr
@foldervtolvr Год назад
This movie truly captures something I think we forget about astronauts a lot. These people may be having fun being in space and talking to people about it, but these are the brightest minds NASA could find and they have been through so many simulations that if something goes wrong they know what to do, and if they don’t, they have hundreds of people back on the ground with the sole goal of helping them complete the mission
@SaraMorgan-ym6ue
@SaraMorgan-ym6ue 2 месяца назад
imagine your on a spaceship and you figure out your venting a gas into space it's time to shit your pants
@Kalentros
@Kalentros 2 года назад
"What do we have on the spacecraft that's good?" Three astronauts. That was my first thought.
@bobareebop
@bobareebop 2 года назад
Excellent.
@nyy190343
@nyy190343 3 года назад
The amount of "oh shit"moments in this clip. How long does it take to power up the LEM? 3 hours You have 15 minutes
@ianroberts6531
@ianroberts6531 3 года назад
He understood the real question, hence the reply "3 hours by the checklist..."
@generalralph6291
@generalralph6291 3 года назад
“You have fifteen minutes, Mr. Scott!”
@EndellionQT
@EndellionQT 2 года назад
@@generalralph6291 "I just cannae do it C'tain, I don't have the power!""
@generalralph6291
@generalralph6291 2 года назад
@@EndellionQT I think there was a containment field breach, right?
@donjorge8329
@donjorge8329 2 года назад
Scotty can do it in 10.
@Sandman42008
@Sandman42008 Год назад
When we said we just lost the moon… that gave me chills
@Jayteaseepiirturi
@Jayteaseepiirturi Год назад
It could be that English is a foreign language to me... but that line, "We just lost the Moon", sounded to me as if it was trying to be horrifying or dramatic. No idea what Lovell actually said Ironically, the Finnish subtitle - sinks in with much more finality for me (I'm Finnish, so...). Much drier, much more colloquial. Just more of 'fuck this shit', you know. I'd detranslate it as quipping "Not going to Moon, then". At any rate. Imagine the moment when you've just been told that, your grand mission to do something larger than life, something you've been eagerly waiting for... has precisely gone bust.
@HeroGenix
@HeroGenix Год назад
@@Jayteaseepiirturi I can get that for a non-english speaker it can definately come off as that way. For context astronauts of the era trained pretty much every day and very few of them even got assignments in space, let alone a moon mission. No matter how dire the situation, having the mission you've trained years for only to have it replaced with a nightmarish scenario is not an easy thing to digest. That admission of "We just lost the moon" is an emotionally crushing thing to happen to the astronauts. of course, this is a film and artistic license is taken, but I think it does convey that sense of loss from the apollo 13 crew
@Jayteaseepiirturi
@Jayteaseepiirturi Год назад
@@HeroGenix Well... I'll take your word for it. :)
@lagersparadice8739
@lagersparadice8739 Год назад
@@Jayteaseepiirturi This is like training for the Olympics for years(maybe even your whole life), qualifying, getting to the venue, warming up, then as you start your event you break your leg and never get to compete again.
@Tinandel
@Tinandel Год назад
Still one of my all-time favorite movies. Maybe even my absolute favorite.
@raven4k998
@raven4k998 Год назад
Huston we have a problem outside window 1 I can see it now it's some kind of gas leaking out of the space craft it's got to be the oxygen we copy apollo 13 on your venting......
@plasticflashlight3039
@plasticflashlight3039 Год назад
Just remember these actors made it look like the real guys lost their minds and freaked out like monkeys, while the real players played the whole thing as cool as cucumbers.
@SaydeeEnward4500
@SaydeeEnward4500 Год назад
And it's based on a true story
@tanall5959
@tanall5959 4 года назад
Two things you never want to hear in space: 'The ship is on fire' and 'The ship is bleeding'.
@nicholasluigi
@nicholasluigi 4 года назад
What about "Uh-Oh" - STS-51L, or "AHHHHHHHHH" - Apollo 1
@AudioArcturia
@AudioArcturia 4 года назад
@@nicholasluigi that's dark but funny as fuck...lol
@unknownz1238
@unknownz1238 4 года назад
You never wanna hear Your outta fuel, your on fire, and no air
@nicholasluigi
@nicholasluigi 4 года назад
@Robert Taylor what is that from
@EightThreeEight
@EightThreeEight 4 года назад
@@nicholasluigi A film called Event Horizon. Don't watch it; it's crap. Or at least that's what I think.
@NiVi192
@NiVi192 3 года назад
*"Gene, the odyssey is dying, from my chair here, this is the last option!"* You gotta be rather brave and confident and of course brilliant in your field to tell your commander to shut down the nation's space mission! And there better be strong mutual trust on both sides!
@ripelivejam
@ripelivejam 3 года назад
Clint Howard is a treasure.
@spiritas5372
@spiritas5372 3 года назад
Not as much as you'd think. Everyone in that room was the best, full stop. Sy was even better then that. When he says stop God himself would stop.
@NormAppleton
@NormAppleton 2 года назад
Well it's Clint Howard, he used to tell a Grizzly bear what to do
@henrikmikaelkristensen4784
@henrikmikaelkristensen4784 2 года назад
The movie doesn't show that everyone in that control room had a separate team of people working with them in other locations to work on the data and figure out what options they really had. Sy Liebergot was in constant communication with his team of 3 other specialists. He wasn't just looking at numbers on his screen and taking a guess. Sy had agreed with his team that the best option was to isolate the surge tank, because they needed it for re-entry. Only when they had come to that agreement, did Sy inform Kranz of the recommendation. The recommendation was opposite of what Kranz expected, but it was well-informed.
@danieldickson8591
@danieldickson8591 2 года назад
@@henrikmikaelkristensen4784 Everything you say is absolutely true. But Sy was the one who had to weigh that analysis and decide to present the option to Gene Kranz. His role was still crucial, but for dramatic purposes focusing on him in the movie played better.
@SunnnyDay
@SunnnyDay 2 месяца назад
I met a beautiful woman in 1995, we saw this film together on our first date. Our first kiss at the end of the date was memorable and we were married within a year !
@hgbugalou
@hgbugalou Год назад
That shared moment of silence after Lovell tells Houston the spacecraft is venting. That is everyone in the room knowing they may lose 3 men in space for the first time in American history, and they just might be powerless to help. Then immediately their engineering minds kick back in and they jump right into trying to figure out the problem and fix it and the silence is broken.
@RandalBauer11
@RandalBauer11 4 года назад
"Houston, we have a problem" is often singled out for being an iconic line but whenever I think about this scene it always goes back to Lovell's line at 7:22 when he reads between the lines of Houston's advise and casually states they've "lost the moon." It's such a devastating line and the way Ron Howard holds on the cuts of everyone's realization of that moment is potent.
@lostnumbr
@lostnumbr 4 года назад
Although, the real Jim Lovell knew it as soon as the explosion occurred. It was, however, just one example of very acceptable artistic license.
@redemolisher
@redemolisher 4 года назад
@@lostnumbr damn didnt know that. but still its a brilliant piece of story telling and i bet the real folk involved here would probably approve.
@mozzjones6943
@mozzjones6943 4 года назад
In the real situation he said "Houston, We've Had a Problem" Because when information gets back to earth any issues have already happened.
@jamesw9930
@jamesw9930 4 года назад
Yeah, but ironically most people can only name 4 apollo astronauts, Armstrong, Aldrin, Collins . . . and Lovell. Saving 13 made him more famous than being the 5th person on the moon would have.
@lostnumbr
@lostnumbr 4 года назад
@@jamesw9930 exactly. While I'm sure Lovell still would have preferred to have walked on the moon, he's gained an appreciation for the unique experience of surviving such a potentially deadly disaster.
@GameArchiver
@GameArchiver 2 года назад
Apollo 11 & Apollo 13 will always be remembered as the two most important Apollo missions.
@peterdemkiw3280
@peterdemkiw3280 2 года назад
Apollo 8 was pretty important.
@tarsxenomorph8845
@tarsxenomorph8845 2 года назад
And don't forget Apollo 12 "Steely eyed missile man" Set SEC to AUX
@TheUrbanEMT
@TheUrbanEMT 2 года назад
Apollo 1 as well.
@LukeKetchum7003
@LukeKetchum7003 2 года назад
@@TheUrbanEMT Sadly however, the astronauts during that test died in a fire.
@jasonkoch3182
@jasonkoch3182 2 года назад
@@peterdemkiw3280 I was gonna say ... Apollo 11 doesn't happen without Apollo 8.
@debbysmith5346
@debbysmith5346 10 месяцев назад
This whole series was incredible. I'm 64 and been such a NASA fanatic. I remember those that died on the pad. Grisholm, White and Chaffee. I was a kid. I remember moon landing at 0345. I remember when the Challenger blew up. Part of me went with it. In memory of Dr. Judy Resnick..
@SaraMorgan-ym6ue
@SaraMorgan-ym6ue 2 месяца назад
Shutting down the fuel cells did I hear you right imagine being stoked to go to the moon and hearing that one😢😭
@kevinwalsh3782
@kevinwalsh3782 2 года назад
"Work the problem. Don't make anything worse by guessing." Heard that line over 20 years ago and I still think about it when I have a problem...Krantz actually said it too...if you'd like to look it up and listen to the actual radio communications you can hear him say it...
@fifdaddy
@fifdaddy Год назад
Totally agree
@jamesmay4877
@jamesmay4877 4 года назад
RIP Bill Paxton, who sublimely embodied Fred Haise in this picture.
@BoogerDeluxe22
@BoogerDeluxe22 4 года назад
So many iconic roles...
@BAZZAROU812
@BAZZAROU812 4 года назад
He was a good guy.. He passed away after having heart surgery.. He was awesome in Twister.. ❤️
@BAZZAROU812
@BAZZAROU812 4 года назад
@Marlon Quintana-Nieto Alien's.. 👍
@st0n3p0ny
@st0n3p0ny 4 года назад
@@BAZZAROU812 Underrated movie. One of Philip Seymour Hoffman's best roles. And for Paxton, Twister was a more significant role than Titanic.
@thaituandat31
@thaituandat31 4 года назад
Sorry, now, I just know that info. Too bad. He is in my mind while I am watching it again. :(
@sgtgiggles
@sgtgiggles 5 месяцев назад
The real audio of this event was even more calm. These guys, from the ship crew to the team on the ground are my heroes
@Werrf1
@Werrf1 3 года назад
I will never, ever get tired of this masterpiece of a film. The performances, the music, the effects, the editing, the pacing...everything is just spot on. It's a film I come back to again and again, and it always feels fresh and new.
@fifabublz17
@fifabublz17 3 года назад
I agree, i’ve seen it so many times.
@KayoMichiels
@KayoMichiels 3 года назад
Not to mention, the perfect casting, and then Ron Howard collaborated with Tom Hanks again to make the HBO mini-series 'From The Earth to The Moon'
@hotcoffee7933
@hotcoffee7933 3 года назад
Easily one of the best movies ever produced.
@dennisanderson3895
@dennisanderson3895 3 года назад
Agreed - especially for one who witnessed the drama play out r/t via network news coverage! (I used to watch Mercury launches on TV while my dad trimmed my hair!)
@inevitableleopard3810
@inevitableleopard3810 3 года назад
Me too.
@jackspry9736
@jackspry9736 2 года назад
RIP Jack Swigert (August 30, 1931 - December 27, 1982), aged 51 and RIP Bill Paxton (May 17, 1955 - February 25, 2017), aged 61 You both will be remembered as legends.
@excrono
@excrono 8 месяцев назад
At least Bill Pullman is still with us.
@jmnemonic99
@jmnemonic99 6 месяцев назад
@@excronoI'm here in Nov/23 after Mattingly was just announced to have died.
@justinhackstadt6677
@justinhackstadt6677 8 месяцев назад
To stay cool under pressure like these men did was absolutely legendary that fateful day. ❤
@rudedogflicks
@rudedogflicks 11 месяцев назад
One of the few perfect movies. There are tons of quotable scenes in this movie but for my money, the interaction between Sy (Clint Howard) and Gene (Ed Harris) where Sy says the have to close the reactant valves on the fuel cells epitomizes one of the major, maybe even the major themes of the movie. That is a team of very smart and capable people working together under extremely stressful circumstances to solve a crisis. Sy is the best at what he does and agonizes over what he knows he needs to recommend. He knows that closing the valves will end the mission but he is confident in his conclusion. Gene doesn't second guess him, doesn't ask anybody else to check Sy's numbers or go back and forth. He acknowledges the gravity of this decision and then moves forward. He trusts his team. Always gives me chills how epic that small moment is.
@JELB1960
@JELB1960 3 года назад
It's a testament to Ron Howard's directing that one catch watch this movie, knowing the outcome, and still be gripped with suspense during the atmospheric re-entry. A real masterpiece of movie making.
@chrispile3878
@chrispile3878 Год назад
Exactly. Most Hollywood films think they have to add drama to make the movie good. The actual events were dramatic enough without having to invent something new to keep audiences on the edge of their seats.
@lukepedersen2899
@lukepedersen2899 Год назад
@@chrispile3878 I mean... this is one of the more dramatic events to have ever occurred.
@chrispile3878
@chrispile3878 Год назад
@@lukepedersen2899 So you agree with me.
@lukepedersen2899
@lukepedersen2899 Год назад
@@chrispile3878 Oh totally! Love how it plays out so realistically! I just don't know if most 'based on a true story' films can lean as heavily on true events as Apollo 13 does since most events aren't so organically dramatic. I probably misunderstood your original comment through the foggy lens of internet communication.
@MsSez
@MsSez Год назад
I can’t think of a bad Ron Howard movie
@stephentejada2769
@stephentejada2769 3 года назад
There's a lot of survival stories out there ranging from the Titanic to the destructive Kobe Earthquake. But this. Tumbling out of control literally AWAY from our planet into the empty vacuum of space and yet somehow made it home with such few resources only outweighed by the sheer willpower of the three astronauts and the ground crew... There are no words.
@andrewsstation6436
@andrewsstation6436 3 года назад
God really helped the astronauts and the flight crew at Mission Control to bring them home safely.
@ryans756
@ryans756 3 года назад
@@andrewsstation6436 You can believe what you want, buddy, but what got those men up there in the first place, and back, alive and able to see their families, was science, human ingenuity and courage.
@michaelbee2165
@michaelbee2165 2 года назад
@@ryans756 And GOD.
@ryans756
@ryans756 2 года назад
@@michaelbee2165 The only trouble I have with that, Michael, is that if God got men up there then God also denied the men and women of the USS Challenger, which exploded live on television. Well, not the "only" trouble I have with it but a good starting point and perhaps something for you to think about. There may or may not be a God, but if there is, does he or she REALLY interfere with human events? If it makes you happy to believe that, and with happiness being quite rare these days, I won't try to convince you otherwise.
@rowanaforrest9792
@rowanaforrest9792 2 года назад
@@andrewsstation6436 I absolutely agree. And God put Ken Mattingly in position to figure out the critical re-entry sequence in the simulator. Had Mattingly been on Apollo 13 and Swigert been on Earth, could Swigert have done as well in the simulator? We'll never know, but it seems doubtful. God made sure everyone was in the right place and time to save these astronauts.
@sethraelthebard5459
@sethraelthebard5459 Год назад
I can see why 3:10 is the most replayed part of this video. It still remains the most chilling moment of the entire film in my opinion. At that moment, the fear and confusion fall silent, the music kicks in, and everyone in the audience muttered a collected "oh shit...." You have to remember that in 1970, losing the oxygen meant, to most civilians that these guys were already dead.
@Matt-wf7ry
@Matt-wf7ry Год назад
Apollo 13 is the pinnacle of telling a story that you already know almost everything about and still getting you to be on the edge of your seat as it unfolds.
@CaminoAir
@CaminoAir 3 года назад
This movie once again shows how important music is. Music can make the editing flow more smoothly and help pull the whole film together (at least in the way that we experience the film). James Horner did an excellent job.
@rowanaforrest9792
@rowanaforrest9792 2 года назад
James Horner was 1 of the GREAT soundtrack composers. He's done so many brilliant ones, including Apollo 13.
@wibblewobble1934
@wibblewobble1934 2 года назад
@@rowanaforrest9792 RIP. Him and Ennio we've lost two of the absolute greats
@dinkydoyle6156
@dinkydoyle6156 2 года назад
DOOM Metal
@dannypipewrench533
@dannypipewrench533 2 года назад
The Apollo 13 soundtrack is by far among the best orchestral music, if not the best. I always listen to it on Highway Adventures.
@SergeantExtreme
@SergeantExtreme 2 года назад
What about No Country For Old Men?
@lochnessmonster5149
@lochnessmonster5149 3 года назад
Actual quote: "Houston, we've had a problem."
@TheBonsaiZone
@TheBonsaiZone 2 года назад
A chance to correctly write history and it's blown, sad.
@someguy6220
@someguy6220 Год назад
Met Fred Haise a few months ago at a talk he was doing in Manhattan, it was great. He speaks so young-like. It's astonishing the intelectual capability of these men and how even today they speak so fluidly and well, recollecting events from their childhood. Wish I was able to ask him about his shuttle testing days, but was still a fun event.
@joesimon2018
@joesimon2018 Год назад
I was in 2nd grade when this all went down. I didn't understand what was going on but I do remember my teacher asking all of us the pray for Apollo 13. That they were all up there in space trying to get home.
@joelburlingame5693
@joelburlingame5693 Год назад
Now they'd fire the teacher for saying that...
@joesimon2018
@joesimon2018 Год назад
@@joelburlingame5693 no they wouldn't, drama queen
@joelburlingame5693
@joelburlingame5693 Год назад
@@joesimon2018 No need to call names. I was just posting my thoughts at that moment.
@joesimon2018
@joesimon2018 Год назад
@@joelburlingame5693 Sounds like you have a conservative right wing prayer in school chip on your shoulder
@joelburlingame5693
@joelburlingame5693 Год назад
@@joesimon2018 A little, yes. I assume you're young if you think calling people names is good for anything. Grow up.
@EnterpriseXI
@EnterpriseXI 4 года назад
Fred Haise: "We're not going have power much longer. Ships bleeding to death." Still gives me chills
@dennisanderson3895
@dennisanderson3895 3 года назад
These guys were SO professional! They knew they *might* be "dead men walking" but kept calm and cool and did what they could to up their odds in a professional manner! I'm reminded of something I read some while back: On his flight, Yuri Gagarin's at one point began tumbling out of control. (This was only revealed after the collapse of the USSR.) Per the audio tapes, Yuri remained completely calm, dealing with the situation rather than reacting TO it. With no politics, I do consider him a heroic human pioneer.
@jayjay-bz3rr
@jayjay-bz3rr 4 года назад
Because of the corona virus news coverage, the 50th anniversary of Apollo 13 will probably be overlooked, or not given the honor it deserves.
@cindys9491
@cindys9491 4 года назад
And once again, we say "Houston, we have a problem." Having to improvise an on-the-spot solution, like them. Apollo 13 and COVID-19 both forced people to pull together and brainstorm solutions in the face of catastrophe. Hopefully we will succeed.
@cindys9491
@cindys9491 4 года назад
@@orlandopockets6372 i know. But I'm referring to the common quotation.
@subratarabidas6517
@subratarabidas6517 4 года назад
oh thats why a 1995 movie on my feed, i was wondering about it, thanks
@cindys9491
@cindys9491 4 года назад
1970-2020
@cindys9491
@cindys9491 4 года назад
@Hal 9000 not the Apollo 11 landing. The Apollo 13 emergency was 1970.
@TheNerdForAllSeasons
@TheNerdForAllSeasons Год назад
Apollo 13 is a perfect movie. FLAWLESS.
@Hartinmouston5158
@Hartinmouston5158 Год назад
I forgot what an outstanding film this is; this and Chernobyl are one of the greatest examples of mankind’s resilience in the face of chaos.
@dickbong3661
@dickbong3661 2 года назад
I love all the comments of people being amazed by how calm they're all being, cause like. By NASA standards, they're all losing their shit and need to chill the fuck out immediately; the movie played up the response of the astronauts/mission control, cause their real reactions would just be boring to watch. Seriously, the actual recordings of Swigert talking with Houston after the explosion are incredibly dull, I think at one point Swigert sounds mildly confused for half a second about what the problem is, and that's the most emotions anyone shows. When Lovell cuts in to report they're venting gas out into space (which they knew was a MASSIVE PROBLEM), he sounds like he's talking about the weather for all the concern in his voice. Astronauts have balls of solid fucking titanium.
@whovianhistorybuff
@whovianhistorybuff 2 года назад
During the space race NASA would often say about their astronauts having "the right stuff", how you said it is exactly what they're talking about, the ability to remain calm and work their way around ANY problem no matter how life threatening it is.
@AidanSverre
@AidanSverre 2 года назад
Is your username “dick bong”?
@dickbong3661
@dickbong3661 2 года назад
@@AidanSverre I'll have you know this name is in honour of an American pilot by the name of Richard Ira Bong, who preferred to go by Dick, and died near the end of WW2. Truly, a hero. The name "Dick Bong" should live on forever, god bless.
@will2brown50
@will2brown50 2 года назад
Literally they are far more panicked in the film than they appeared to have been in the recordings.
@danieldickson8591
@danieldickson8591 2 года назад
Another thing that impressed me was the entire Mission Control crew in shock for about ten seconds after Jim Lovell tells them Odyssey is venting gas, because they know how serious that is. As soon as Deke Slayton breaks the silence acknowledging that, they all leap into action. True professionalism.
@Pixelologist
@Pixelologist 4 года назад
This is a bloody brilliant film on so many levels. We already KNOW how it comes out, of course, and it STILL keeps me on the edge of my seat.
@someolddude3858
@someolddude3858 3 года назад
Sort of like every Bible movie ever made.
@MrDonsullivan
@MrDonsullivan 2 года назад
Yeah me too. Crazy fantastic movie that can do that huh?
@cinemaipswich4636
@cinemaipswich4636 Год назад
Those 3 men became the fastest astronauts ever. When they went around the moon, they were traveling at 24 Kilometers per second. That is 8,600 Kilometers an hour. When I look back to those days, I think they were the bravest people in the world.
@davez5201
@davez5201 9 месяцев назад
*86,400 km/hr
@cannedheat2264
@cannedheat2264 9 месяцев назад
That’s a extraordinary feat.
@corvetaumbr2410
@corvetaumbr2410 8 месяцев назад
Not only that, but they also became the farthest astronauts from earth when they went around the moon aswell, 400 171 kilometers away from the planet on 00:21 April 15th UTC, a record that still awaits to be broken nowdays
@mistertagnan
@mistertagnan 4 месяца назад
This is incorrect afaik, escape velocity from the moon is fairly low, I want to say like 3km/s. In addition, re-entry occurred at just shy of 11km/s, so moving at 24km/s - over twice the Earth’s own escape velocity - seems incorrect
@mikexxxmilly
@mikexxxmilly 2 года назад
Bill Paxton is one of my favorite actors from the 90s... Such a great guy
@Zeldafan1009
@Zeldafan1009 4 года назад
3:45 I LOVE this scene. NASA heads the news and despite it being worst case scenario, they only allow themselves a moment’s shock before they shift into trying to fix the problem. Such a great example of working under pressure.
@jimthompson8947
@jimthompson8947 2 года назад
And despite adequate technology, English speakers still continue to press "post" before proofreading.
@excrono
@excrono 8 месяцев назад
@@jimthompson8947When I see “edited” on a comment, I respect them more as a poster.
@julieenslow5915
@julieenslow5915 4 года назад
I remember when this happened. The whole world witnessed it. The whole world stopped and hoped or prayed for these three men. NASA used slide rules and their heads, teamwork and prayer and we all held on to our seats while it played out in real time. It seemed to take forever before we knew if they would make it or not. I am sure for these three men, the loss of a moon landing was a loss they still mourn. But even they had to count the result both a miracle and a very happy answer to a lot of prayer and good wishes. Three brave men who toughed it out - the journey was incredible.
@procta2343
@procta2343 2 года назад
My grand dad told me about this and watched the moon landing too, He said the world really came to a stand still. I bet it was the most intense time for everyone, waiting to see if the three men would have made it back.
@seantalkingthroughthemedia4838
@seantalkingthroughthemedia4838 2 года назад
This is one of the greatest historical movies ever made. Oscar caliber performances across the board.amazing film
@hblanche
@hblanche 3 месяца назад
Howard wasn't even nominated for Best Director, and the film lost to Bravehard. Both were tragedies.
@henrylant7049
@henrylant7049 8 месяцев назад
The movie makes this event way more intense in terms of the dialogue. To think that these guys were cool as a cucumber while their life boat sprung a leak is insane. In real life, Jim Lovell was calm and collected over the radio. Just badass.
@Doctor699
@Doctor699 2 года назад
That shot of Bill Paxton when they've been ordered to shutdown two fuel cells. Perfectly captures how Fred Haise said he felt at that time. Sick to his stomach with disappointment knowing the mission was now aborted.
@stephencourton3328
@stephencourton3328 7 месяцев назад
I think by that time they knew weren't landing on moon and more worried if would ever get home?
@spongekiller178
@spongekiller178 2 года назад
This is by far the greatest feat by humans to this day. The fact they were able to work without sleeping and get those men home is amazing. God bless these men.
@paul81491
@paul81491 Год назад
"by far the greatest feat by humans to this day" ?? really?
@Videosakko
@Videosakko Год назад
@@paul81491 yeah i would maybe not say the GREATEST but up in the top10 list for sure
@power2084
@power2084 Год назад
@@paul81491 He has delusions. He even believes in a sky daddy, "god bless these men".
@paul81491
@paul81491 Год назад
@@power2084 Whilst I am an atheist myself, your comment really doesn't grasp the magnitude of religious impact on culture and it's historic importance for society. The christian believes also can not be simplified by "believing in a sky daddy". I do agree however it is indeed delusional to say this is the greatest achievement by humankind.
@power2084
@power2084 Год назад
@@paul81491 it's a bad impact on culture and society. Religion poisons everything.
@grizzfan08
@grizzfan08 2 года назад
Gene Krantz was calm, cool, and collected throughout this mission, as was EVERYONE else attached to it. You really have to give credit where it's due.
@boepiesnoep7867
@boepiesnoep7867 3 месяца назад
Imagine Bill Paxton just mentally collapsing at this point shouting "GAME OVER MAN, GAME OVER"
@chriscaldwell4737
@chriscaldwell4737 4 года назад
Ed Harris with a MasterClass in leadership.
@kingofthings7929
@kingofthings7929 3 года назад
Good enough that the real Gene Kranz approved of it. Said something along the lines of hiring him to do the job based on this performance.
@nlcatter
@nlcatter Год назад
Kranz was real person not an actor
@BdaBeast115
@BdaBeast115 2 года назад
Gene's tenacity and calmness is something I admire. A nearly impossible situation, and he's calm, which ultimately got them back home. Bravo Gene and bravo Ed Harris for playing his role flawlessly.
@jotajmg
@jotajmg 10 месяцев назад
I bet the real-life astronauts in that situation were not as calmed but surely were not losing their minds to it as they knew the risks involved, they were prepared for the worst and trusted their ship and control room peers.
@lufasumafalu5069
@lufasumafalu5069 8 месяцев назад
it just a movie
@grf15
@grf15 5 месяцев назад
An accurate movie, or haven't you heard?@@lufasumafalu5069
@rdhunkins
@rdhunkins 3 месяца назад
Kranz is a hard man, and he was in the right place at the right time.
@tayduatrinhcoi
@tayduatrinhcoi 3 месяца назад
@@jotajmg If you're curious about the real event, you can check out the podcast "13 Minutes to the Moon" by BBC. They went into very deep details about the event. Very high production quality podcast and it even has a Hans Zimmer soundtrack.
@bana2s
@bana2s 8 месяцев назад
This was an AMAZING movie. I remember the mission and knew everything that was going to happen, and I *still* was on the edge of my seat!
@shererid
@shererid Год назад
You're in a small, albeit amazingly complex, construction of metal and plastic surrounded by LITERALLY NOTHING. Nerves and balls of steel. Absolutely incredible.
@thecursor1
@thecursor1 3 года назад
Gene Kranz would tell God to calm down and go bring him options.
@DavidMcCoyII
@DavidMcCoyII 3 года назад
And God will reply, be still and know that I am God. I will be exalted in the Nations, I will be exalted in the earth.
@thecursor1
@thecursor1 3 года назад
And Gene will reply “That is not conducive to a solution.”
@popot4627
@popot4627 3 года назад
That’s why he was the best
@timothylong8601
@timothylong8601 3 года назад
The rock was the best movie for him from time to time this country must be cleansed by the blood of patriots u notice the word is built upon riot right?
@thecursor1
@thecursor1 3 года назад
Yes, because the American Revolution had zero riots
@davidred1809
@davidred1809 2 года назад
Clint Howard is probably the most under appreciated actors ever. He has been just about every movie made. He always has small roles but you know he’s there. He’s an amazing actor.
@aisle_of_view
@aisle_of_view 9 месяцев назад
Saw the whole Howard family waiting to get into Oceans 11, they were all so nice and sweet.
@adriande1
@adriande1 3 месяца назад
It’s cause he’s ugly. Ugly people get no respect in Hollywood
@williamkolstad6435
@williamkolstad6435 Год назад
I remember when this happened back when I was young. Being a big fan of the Space program it was clear that this was life and death. Apollo 13 is an amazing story of bravery and innovation in the face of adversity. One of Ron Howard's greatest works.
@jjstraka1982
@jjstraka1982 10 месяцев назад
This movie had such an amazing sense of time and place. Just masterful.
@sidd_not_vicious2609
@sidd_not_vicious2609 Год назад
I can't even begin to start to think about the pressure and stress and straight anxiety these brave-as-hell astronauts went through. I am floored by this
@thinkforyourself2109
@thinkforyourself2109 Год назад
Men in dangerous jobs deal with incredible tension every day but most of it's unacknowledged. 97% of the dirty and dangerous jobs are done by men. Women are not interested in crashing through that particular glass ceiling.
@CanadrienProductions
@CanadrienProductions 4 года назад
0:48 He did an amazing job at portraying the fear someone would have in that situation while simultaneously remaining laser focused. That one look always stood out to me. Great movie
@evanhaskel206
@evanhaskel206 2 года назад
Actually these guys reported what was happening in a very calm and matter-of-fact tone. I’m sure they were panicking on the inside, but what Houston heard said otherwise.
@yodatcht1321
@yodatcht1321 4 года назад
You always end up in the ocean with Tom Hanks.
@nancyjanzen5676
@nancyjanzen5676 3 года назад
Or a river.
@billygowhoop
@billygowhoop 2 месяца назад
Man if I was up there in the command module started rattling and all warning lights came on, I'd be freaking out. There's no way I'd be able to be as calm and professional as the guys who really did it. You listen to the recordings during the most dangerous and critical moments and these guys sound like they're doing the most routine task. Astronauts are just a different breed of human.
@Geographus666
@Geographus666 2 месяца назад
There is a reason NASA recruited the vast majority of their astronauts from military test-pilots. These guys were pretty much designed to be cool and collected, because freaking out would get you nowhere and will just make you do more mistakes. There are famous recordings of Chuck Yeager who came on radio almost sounding bored saying "I think I got an issue here!" while his experimental plane was already well in the progress of disintegrating around him.
@StopSayingGaslit
@StopSayingGaslit 2 месяца назад
Thing is…you never would have even had the chance to be in the command module. Nobody would have let you anywhere near it lol
@hgbugalou
@hgbugalou Год назад
One of the best things about this movie is they highlighted all the people on the ground and how they made this miracle happen. It also showed how great leadership is key to success.
@allenjenkins06
@allenjenkins06 2 года назад
I forgot how many amazing actors are in this movie.
@robertstaples3256
@robertstaples3256 2 года назад
It's one of those movies in which almost every single actor in the whole movie is giving it their all. Every one. When you have that kind of energy and enthusiasm on set, the entire movie is elevated to a whole other level of brilliance and relatability.
@allenjenkins06
@allenjenkins06 2 года назад
@@robertstaples3256 Agreed. Everyone is going for it. The only thing it's truly lacking, in my opinion, is a killer female performance, which I suppose is an unavoidable consequence of the context of the time and the decision to focus the story on Mission Control. I know Kathleen Quinlan got an Oscar nom as Marilyn Lovell, but I still feel like that's something that is missing.
@donpettitwedestroyedtheapo6488
@donpettitwedestroyedtheapo6488 2 года назад
Armstrong, Aldrin and the other Apollo astronauts are better actors
@the18thdoctor3
@the18thdoctor3 2 года назад
@@donpettitwedestroyedtheapo6488 No, they're not, because they're astronauts, not actors.
@donpettitwedestroyedtheapo6488
@donpettitwedestroyedtheapo6488 2 года назад
@@the18thdoctor3 No because they faked the lunar landings
@evanhaskel206
@evanhaskel206 2 года назад
In real life, the explosion happened about 90 seconds after Swigert initiated the stir, not around the same time that he started it. Lovell also thought that Haise had been playing with the cabin repressurization valve until he saw that Haise was just as puzzled as he was. Haise also said that he and Swigert never butted heads like in the movie because nobody could’ve known that the stir was what caused the explosion.
@supersaiyaman11589
@supersaiyaman11589 Год назад
In real life, the explosion happened about 90 seconds after Swigert initiated the stir, not around the same time that he started it. Lovell also thought that Haise had been playing with the cabin repressurization valve until he saw that Haise was just as puzzled as he was. Haise also said that he and Swigert never butted heads like in the movie because nobody could’ve known that the stir was what caused the explosion. IF that is true why is it in the movie one would think that would want an accurate movie
@u805
@u805 Год назад
@@supersaiyaman11589 Because it is Hollywood and they are averse to historical accuracy.
@FureyinHD
@FureyinHD Год назад
@@u805 well they have to make a movie that's engaging
@Alxnick
@Alxnick Год назад
@@u805 Apollo 13 is more accurate than some documentaries. There's some things that you have to change and alter because you don't get a six day run time.
@softdrink-0
@softdrink-0 11 месяцев назад
@@supersaiyaman11589because it’s Hollywood? Look at black Cleopatra 😂
@chipgriffiths3655
@chipgriffiths3655 2 года назад
I remember well when this happened. Our school had just installed TV monitors in all our classrooms as a bonus for a successful raffle sale the previous year. This was the first event we watched. Without missing a beat, our whole class got out of our seats and knelt and prayed for the astronauts safe arrival back home. I'll always consider this a miracle. We were 8/9 years old. This event still amazes me because of what all of those men and women did and accomplished. The astronauts safe return home.
@M1tjakaramazov
@M1tjakaramazov Год назад
"ok copy you're venting..." I'm gonna use that thought whenever something really really bad happens in life.
@TooYoungToDie_TooOldToLive
@TooYoungToDie_TooOldToLive 4 года назад
The real quote is, “Houston we’ve had a problem”.
@liquidbraino
@liquidbraino 4 года назад
Well what do you expect? Universal's globe is spinning the wrong direction. Earth rotates or spins toward the east, and that's why the Sun, Moon, planets, and stars all rise in the east and make their way westward across the sky. But if you look at the globe fountain at USH it's going the opposite direction. it's Hollywood, not reality. But of course if it was spinning the right direction the words would be moving backward.
@yourstatementisrightunlike7366
@yourstatementisrightunlike7366 4 года назад
@@liquidbraino wtf
@christinaelgarresta3813
@christinaelgarresta3813 3 года назад
And Im pretty sure Jim Lovell actually didn’t say that. It was actually Jack Swigert.
@EVAUnit4A
@EVAUnit4A 3 года назад
@@christinaelgarresta3813 Yes and no. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-PpTleKyn3gc.html *Swigert:* "Okay, Houston, we've had a problem here." *Mission Control:* "This is Houston. Say again, please." *Lovell:* "Uh, Houston, we've had a problem. We've had a Main B Bus undervolt..."
@christinaelgarresta3813
@christinaelgarresta3813 3 года назад
@@EVAUnit4A Oh ok makes sense
@kylehollens9655
@kylehollens9655 4 года назад
One of the best movies ever made in my opinion.
@grinchoi1
@grinchoi1 3 года назад
Without a doubt
@optimisticcosmic
@optimisticcosmic 22 часа назад
The 90's were the best decade in movie making. Titanic, Jurassic Park, Apollo 13, Shawshank, just to name a few.
@GipsyD29
@GipsyD29 Год назад
I just watched the real Apollo 13 "Houston we have a problem" and now the movie is recommended to me. Thanks RU-vid
@Taqruinnius
@Taqruinnius 4 года назад
These men had more balls than I will ever have in my life
@MrDavidh4
@MrDavidh4 4 года назад
Nerves of iron!
@yonatanschlussel
@yonatanschlussel 3 года назад
Wits of steel!
@themocaw
@themocaw 3 года назад
Steely Eyed Missle Men.
@donpettitwedestroyedtheapo6488
@donpettitwedestroyedtheapo6488 3 года назад
It was a film!
@Cailus3542
@Cailus3542 3 года назад
@@donpettitwedestroyedtheapo6488 It actually happened.
@LeeMaitland
@LeeMaitland 2 года назад
3:00 'Houston... we are venting something out into space'. Instant goosebumps. One of those moments when time slows and shit gets real really fast.
@m1k3fx
@m1k3fx 2 года назад
Love the acting, Ed makes me feel safe.
@KuKoKaNuKo
@KuKoKaNuKo Год назад
Every time RU-vid throws this into my recommended I watch it. This scene is sooooo good. Fantastic acting all around. Such an amazing movie.
@excrono
@excrono 8 месяцев назад
I don’t wait for RU-vid to recommend it, I come myself.
@mattturner7531
@mattturner7531 4 года назад
Whenever young engineers have an issue that they don't think they can deal with...I always tell them the story of Apollo 13. 9:15 is a great example...basically 15 minutes to get it up and running or you're dead.
@webduelist
@webduelist 4 года назад
the martian while not a true story is also a good "Shut up work the problem" story.
@nancyjanzen5676
@nancyjanzen5676 3 года назад
Those guys could work faster with a slide rule than some people can today with a computer.
@cherylb6755
@cherylb6755 2 года назад
Matt Turner~ I think of this as The Apollo 13 Effect - if NASA could figure out how to cheat death in a short amount of time with only the things on the spacecraft.... As an operations professional I have referred to it many times.
@stargazer7644
@stargazer7644 Год назад
Except that the "15 minutes or you're dead" is baloney. They can reinitialize the IMU if they have to, they'd just prefer not to. It is Hollywood sensationalism. From the time they made the "15 minutes of power left in the CM" call, it took them 36 minutes to get the LM IMU aligned from the CM IMU. Know why it wasn't a calamity? Because they tied the LM and CM power systems together until they finished. They didn't get the CM powered down until over an hour after the "15 minutes left" call.
@jefftube58
@jefftube58 Год назад
Excellent idea, telling this to young engineers.
@user-ee1fn4vt8b
@user-ee1fn4vt8b 2 года назад
Me trying to finish my presentation for tomorrow: "We've got serious time pressure here, Jim"
@martins.28
@martins.28 Год назад
One of the best movies ever made. I watched it - I don't know - at least 10 times already and it's still thrilling every time I watch it.
@princessozmaofoz5242
@princessozmaofoz5242 Год назад
I watched this movie with my brothers today. Incredibly intense, accurate and epic movie. I'm mind blown when I think about that this truly happened, the astronauts really were in this situation. Damn... I can't believe they made it, everything was SO CLOSE! 😅 This and 2001 are my favourite space movies 10/10
@Anamnesia
@Anamnesia 4 года назад
Apollo 13 is one of the classics. Up there with Back To The Future!
@mikeallen5865
@mikeallen5865 2 года назад
If I could press the like button more than once, I would!
@odysseusrex5908
@odysseusrex5908 2 года назад
I love the look on Tom Hanks' face when CapCom tells him they have les than fifteen minutes of power left. Good acting.
@PMdaddyArgent
@PMdaddyArgent Год назад
Will never tire of this movie
@notanaccidentorg
@notanaccidentorg День назад
I took a tour of the old control room and was amazed at just how small it was. Not to mention the fact they smoked in that room. Thanks
@tnerbtnerb5136
@tnerbtnerb5136 3 года назад
3:18 This shot isn't given enough credit. The Parallax effect, zoom in on the Director, looming orchestral chord, thementioning of the ominous source of all the problems over the Radio by Lovell. In 2 seconds you can see the full horror of the situation sweep into that room.
@springplus300
@springplus300 3 года назад
This is one of the best uses of dolly zoom I can think of, off the top of my head. The effect is so often exaggerated, to the point of being comical. Here, it's subtle and works brilliantly. They say the best visual effect are the ones you don't notice - and it makes sense that that goes for in-camera effects too.
@johnlucio6847
@johnlucio6847 2 года назад
Yes it's beautifully executed, the dialogue, the direction, the score, absolutely chills me, it's haunting, Ron Howard and James Horner and everyone involved with this film really nailed it, it's so gripping.
@roquefortfiles
@roquefortfiles 2 года назад
Its called the reverse zoom. Also the Vertigo shot. Spielberg used it to probably the best effect on Roy Scheider in Jaws. Scorsese uses it very subtly in the diner in Goodfellas. Camera moves to the actor while the zoom lens gets pulled out. It makes the background zip away.
@ThinkPIONEERing
@ThinkPIONEERing 3 года назад
“let’s work the problem, not make things worse by guessing” ....... That mission director has some serious leadership skills...
@laurenbonn3651
@laurenbonn3651 Год назад
The absolute best movie ever made. It gives me chills every time I watch it.
@ayakotami3318
@ayakotami3318 3 месяца назад
Fun fact: For those unknown Tom Hanks was 38 and a few years shy of Lovell's age when this movie was released. The movie also won 9 Academy Awards including Best Picture, Sound, and Editing. Still an amazing movie and amazing men. I still remember hearing about this from dad and the two of seeing it a week after it came out. One of my favorites based on true story and it got me into loving Astronomy and Astrology. 😊
@TasmanianTigerGrrr
@TasmanianTigerGrrr 2 месяца назад
Thank you for the fun facts, i had fun and hope to have more fun later on in the day
@TheKuLeR
@TheKuLeR 3 дня назад
NOMINATED for 9 Academy Awards (won for Sound and Film Eduting)
@donelsonsheean8142
@donelsonsheean8142 4 года назад
Of all the things that went wrong on this trip, there are those things that went right on this trip as well. Throwing out standard procedures and going with unorthodox measures as well as outside the box thinking is what made the difference in getting that crew home.
@procta2343
@procta2343 2 года назад
you have to do things like that in life, i always say think out side of the box. not just follow what it says on the paper etc.
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