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T O P I C R E V I E WHart SastrowardoyoThe events of "Chappaquiddick," the John Curran-directed film about the Ted Kennedy incident that happened in mid-July 1969, is played against the backdrop of the first moon landing, including audio, TV footage, and shots of the New York Times' front pages.While the timing is coincidental, I can't help but think that the moon landing was used as a metaphor for Ted Kennedy's struggle — that perhaps the "one small step for (a) man" was Chappaquiddick, the "one giant leap for mankind" was his failure to ascend to greater things as his brothers did.ejectrI really don't connect the two what so ever.BlackarrowIt's probably apocryphal, but I understood that Ted Kennedy, as brother of the President who launched the challenge of Apollo, was invited to the launch at KSC and subsequent festivities at Houston, but declined as he had "other matters to attend to."pupnikI noticed the same thing when watching the film. The director was definitely using Apollo 11 in parallel with the main plot. Whether using mission control audio or news broadcasts to show the events in motion or using the moon landing as an example of how he lived in his brothers' shadow and how Ted Kennedy kept looking at it as an example of what he could have been. If you pay attention the moon appears in the sky in a lot of scenes, far too many to just be coincidence. A constant reminder of his family looming large over him. Although the film does show it to be a full moon, which isn't correct. capoetcI have not seen the movie, but since Chappaquiddick happened during the Apollo 11 mission (the accident was July 18, 1969), the media attention was drawn away from the event. The country was so engrossed in the moon landing that the Cappaquiddick story slid much more under the radar than it normally would have. Perhaps the moon landing backdrop in the movie is just used to provide historical context.Hart Sastrowardoyo quote:Originally posted by pupnik:The director was definitely using Apollo 11 in parallel with the main plot. Yes! This is what I mean. I'll probably have to get it through Redbox, but I noticed at one point, they used an audio clip talking about some sort of concern on the mission at the same time Ted was weighing some big decision.pupnikMany of the audio tracks use beeps and audio pops/scratches reminiscent of transmission between Houston and the spacecraft. The actual sound track doesn't seem to include the spoken audio clips, those must have been added in as part of the sound editing of the film. Although many of the tracks use this sort of "space theme" the track "Written Statement" is perhaps the most obvious about it.LM1The accident would have been on the front page of major newspapers for days. Ted Kennedy's career would have been over. But the first moon landing buried the story for a few days, which allowed Kennedy to organize a defense.Charisma is a very rare characteristic, but in my opinion all three of the Kennedy brothers had it. EMK survived the scandal because the Apollo 11 mission overshadowed it. BlackarrowIt depends what you mean by "survived the scandal." Does anyone doubt that he would one day have run for President, and that he would almost certainly have won it? The way he dealt with the death of Mary-Jo Kopechne cost him the Presidency. It is for the voters of Massachusetts to explain why they repeatedly decided that Ted Kennedy was fit to represent them in the Senate.
While the timing is coincidental, I can't help but think that the moon landing was used as a metaphor for Ted Kennedy's struggle — that perhaps the "one small step for (a) man" was Chappaquiddick, the "one giant leap for mankind" was his failure to ascend to greater things as his brothers did.
If you pay attention the moon appears in the sky in a lot of scenes, far too many to just be coincidence. A constant reminder of his family looming large over him. Although the film does show it to be a full moon, which isn't correct.
quote:Originally posted by pupnik:The director was definitely using Apollo 11 in parallel with the main plot.
I'll probably have to get it through Redbox, but I noticed at one point, they used an audio clip talking about some sort of concern on the mission at the same time Ted was weighing some big decision.
Although many of the tracks use this sort of "space theme" the track "Written Statement" is perhaps the most obvious about it.
Charisma is a very rare characteristic, but in my opinion all three of the Kennedy brothers had it. EMK survived the scandal because the Apollo 11 mission overshadowed it.
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