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Forum:Free Space
Topic:Apollo 10 1/2 (Richard Linklater/Netflix)
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Robert PearlmancollectSPACE
In 'Apollo 10 1/2,' Richard Linklater directs nostalgic trip to the moon

Before launching the Apollo 11 mission to land the first astronauts on the moon, NASA secretly sent a fourth grader there first.

That is just one of the storylines in director Richard Linklater's new animated film, "Apollo 10 1/2: A Space Age Childhood," now streaming on Netflix. In the movie, Linklater transports viewers back to 1969, taking them on nostalgia-driven trip to not just see, but experience the lunar landing just as he did — coming of age while living in and around Houston, Texas.

music_spaceThis movie tells the story of quite a many of us cSers, the sixty-something set.

The animation renders a lot of NASA iconic photographs and movie clips in a very appealing visual style.

As an trivia aside, Internet Movie Data Base provides:

Jack Black, who voices older Stan, has a personal connection to NASA and the space program. His mother, Judith Love Cohen, helped develop the Abort-Guidance System which ultimately helped get Apollo 13 back to Earth.
perineauI thought it was one of the best flashbacks to the late 60s that I have ever seen.
Jurg BolliI just saw it and enjoyed it quite a bit, well done and funny.
Gordon Eliot ReadeI loved the movie however something puzzles me. El Lago Texas is small. It’s just 0.6 sq. miles. I recently visited and it was my impression that everyone pretty much knows everyone else. Neil Armstrong, Frank Borman, Ed White and any number of other astronauts lived there. Their children would have attend Ed White Elementary School.

Stan, the boy in the movie, would’ve ridden his bike past the Armstrong house and seen all the TV reporters on the lawn during the Apollo 11 mission. He would’ve attend the same school as the children of many of the astronauts and, given his age, likely would’ve been in the same class.

Why wasn’t that included in the movie? Come to think of it if NASA had really needed to select a kid for a secret mission to the moon why not chose the son of an astronaut as opposed to the son of the guy who ran the shipping and receiving department?

Robert PearlmanStan is intended to be representative of every kid at that time, as we see through his eyes a mixture of his daydreams and the larger-than-life reality he and everyone else lived through that summer.

Stan is also loosely based on director Richard Linklater, who didn't grow up in Houston or the surrounding suburbs, but was in Texas in the neighboring cities.

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