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The Right Stuff

"How the future began."

At the dawn of the Space Race, seven test pilots set out to become the first American astronauts to enter space. However, the road to making history brings momentous challenges.

Top Cast

  • Sam Shepard

    Sam Shepard

    Chuck Yeager

  • Scott Glenn

    Scott Glenn

    Alan Shepard

  • Ed Harris

    Ed Harris

    John Glenn

  • Dennis Quaid

    Dennis Quaid

    Gordon Cooper

  • Fred Ward

    Fred Ward

    Gus Grissom

  • Barbara Hershey

    Barbara Hershey

    Glennis Yeager

  • Kim Stanley

    Kim Stanley

    Pancho Barnes

  • Veronica Cartwright

    Veronica Cartwright

    Betty Grissom

  • Pamela Reed

    Pamela Reed

    Trudy Cooper

Overview

At the dawn of the Space Race, seven test pilots set out to become the first American astronauts to enter space. However, the road to making history brings momentous challenges.

Rating

7.4 / 10
971 Reviews
2 Popular

1 Reviews

  • Filipe Manuel Neto
    Filipe Manuel Neto
    8 Jul 20, 2023

    **Overall, it's a good movie about the start of the space race.** The space race was one of the aspects that marked the intense rivalry between the USA and the Soviet Union during the Cold War. There was the notion that space could be a battleground or a zone of influence, as colonial territories had been decades before, and that the nuclear threat made it urgent to dominate space. That's why the Mercury Program was born, responsible for the first suborbital and orbital flights carried out by the USA. Directed by Philip Kaufman, the film is very good and very well made, even if, at times, it resembles an expensive advertisement for NASA and what was done by the North Americans in the space race. It is a long film, with three hours, but that is justified by covering a large period of time and giving us a very global view of the Mercury missions. This leads me to another problem: you need to have a minimal knowledge of the program and who was part of it to be able to understand everything the film shows, because there are not many explanations and the film presumes that the audience knows what they are watching. The cast is, perhaps, one of the most important aspects of the film, since it is largely based on the development of the characters and on the way each actor worked and developed his character. And there is no doubt that we have a wide range of talented artists here where Sam Shepard, Fred Ward, Ed Harris and Dennis Quaid dominate the canvas and capture our full attention. There's no way to single out just one or two, I think each of them did the best they could with what they had at hand, and director Kaufman got the best out of them all. It's a very light film, not a dense drama full of technical aspects or complicated ideas. The film even manages to give us an idea of the political and financial management of the project, and the use that American politicians were making of it for electoral purposes. There's some room for humor, but it's not a movie that makes us laugh out loud. The most comical situation for me was the way in which an American vice president was stopped at the door of an astronaut's house by his wife. The dialogues are good, they are well written, and the visual and special effects used are convincing. This film also has good cinematography and a very atmospheric soundtrack.

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