why can't i post phrases

Lorine 2022-03-21 09:01:15

I've watched it many times over the years. The first time I bought a D-version DVD, I've lost my DVD player. I also gradually got to know many old actors in it, and they are very kind.

I don't agree with some of the comments that the first half of the rhythm is slow. This film is stable and important without losing details, and the emotional description is in place. With these foreshadowings, the teamwork behind the team's unity has such an appeal...

It was amazing to be able to achieve this effect more than 20 years ago.

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Extended Reading
  • Marcellus 2021-10-20 19:02:50

    [Shanghai Film Festival Screening] Finally watched the 4K version on the giant screen. The effect is great. The adaptation of real events, coupled with the real weightlessness effect created by NASA's training flight aircraft, is very good. Although the whole film is full of aerospace terminology, it also greatly increases the sense of reality. In fact, the twists and turns of the event itself are enough to be exciting, disturbing, tense, and moving. The addition of dramatic bridges and American theme rendering colors is superfluous. Four and a half stars

  • Melba 2022-03-20 09:01:14

    Although I encountered a translated film again, the sound and the picture were misplaced in the end, and I fell asleep halfway through it, but it still doesn't affect the fact that it is a good film. The scene of the final successful return is still as moving as the perfect ending of all science fiction films (though it is not).

Apollo 13 quotes

  • John Aaron, EECOM Arthur: Power is everything.

    Gene Kranz: What do you mean?

    John Aaron, EECOM Arthur: Without it, they don't talk to us, they don't correct their trajectory, they don't turn the heat shield around. We gotta turn everything off, now. They're not gonna make it to re-entry.

    Gene Kranz: What do you mean "everything"?

    John Aaron, EECOM Arthur: With everything on, the LEM draws 60 amps. At that rate, in 16 hours, the batteries are dead, not 45. And so is the crew. We gotta get them down to twelve amps.

  • Jim Lovell: Okay, uh, good evening, America, and welcome aboard Apollo 13. I'm Jim Lovell, and we're broadcasting to you tonight from an altitude of almost 200,000 miles away from the... the face of the Earth, and we have a pretty good show in store for you tonight. We are going to show you just what, uh, life is like for the three of us in the vast expanse of outer space.

    [a controller at Houston glances at a TV and sees a baseball game is on instead]

    Jim Lovell: Okay, one of the first things we'd like to do is provide you with the appropriate background music. So, uh, hit it there, Freddo.

    Fred Haise: [playing Norman Greenbaum's "Spirit in the Sky"] Hello, world!

    Jim Lovell: That, uh, was supposed to be the theme to "2001", in honor of our command module Odyssey, but there seems to have been a last-minute change in the program.