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Zane 2022-08-20 07:03:17
The moon has nothing but loneliness
Such a theme, but the author's shooting method is used to weaken the political expression. This is very good. In the film, President Kennedy is quoted as saying: "The reason why we choose to explore the moon is because of difficulty", which is the self of the film's topic selection Reference, in...
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Virginie 2022-10-17 19:29:45
Moon landing a little thing
A very typical American biographical film. There are not too many grand space scenes, but constantly outline Armstrong's space career with details and facial close-ups. The Apollo 11 moon landing only took up half an hour of the two-hour duration, and the emphasis on previous failures and...

Leon Bridges
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Colt 2022-05-18 10:47:09
3.5 Do a lot of right and do a lot of wrong. From a very personal point of view, the moon landing, excellent sound design, handheld photography and a large number of subjective perspectives minimize the distance between the audience and the character, making those successful or unsuccessful tasks are thrilling and particularly catching, but also emotional It seemed too late to express it, and the final sensational trick fell into a cliché. By joining the perspective of family and society to show reflections on this task, it adds a sense of hierarchy but also weakens the power of the emotional core to a certain extent. I should be able to get a lot of Oscar nominations for technical awards, and the sound effects, photography and soundtrack editing are very good.
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Garret 2022-05-18 20:32:44
Particularly beautiful: a large number of hand-held close-up and super close-up shots, the film grain is extremely obvious, the color is retro, outside the porthole, between the ejector separation, the sound stops abruptly when the lunar module is opened, and the space waltz actually has the illusion of seeing 2001. Particularly true: The film really restores the crudeness of space technology in the 1960s. From aircraft test flight to test to Apollo 11, it depicts the turbulence during launch, the centrifugal force during out-of-control, and the surface of the moon as an immersion test. The details and techniques can show the director’s ambition: three or five shots explain the initial relocation of the bereaved daughter, clean and neat; the details of the test flight cabin flies and the failure of the seat belt are real and depressing; the figure of the daughter flashed in the funeral and the crater is full deep feeling.
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Neil Armstrong: I don't know what space exploration will uncover, but I don't think it'll be exploration just for the sake of exploration. I think it'll be more the fact that it allows us to see things. That maybe we should have seen a long time ago. But just haven't been able to until now.
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Deke Slayton: Why do you think space flight is important?
Neil Armstrong: I had a few opportunities in the X-15 to observe the atmosphere. It was so thin, such a small part of the Earth that you could barely see it at all. And when you're down here in the crowd and you look up, it looks pretty big and you don't think about it too much. But when you get a different vantage point it changes your perspective.