'First
Man' shows Armstrong's view after Moon landing, sitting
in 'tin can'
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[August 30, 2018]
By Robin Pomeroy
VENICE, Italy (Reuters) -
Everyone knows what Neil Armstrong said as he stepped
onto the Moon, and when Ryan Gosling delivers the line
in "First Man", which opened the Venice Film Festival on
Wednesday, it sounds like dialogue as familiar as "To be
or not to be".
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But Oscar-winning "La La Land" director Damien Chazelle takes
the viewer deeper than that epic moment when Armstrong took "one
small step for (a) man, one giant leap for mankind," to show
what it must have felt like to leave the world behind, with a
high chance of never coming back.
"This was a story that needed to hinge between the Moon and the
kitchen sink," Chazelle said of the film that begins in 1961 as
the United States trails the Soviet Union in the space race,
through to the 1969 Moon landing - with many personal and
professional crises on the way.
At the kitchen sink is Armstrong's wife Janet, played by "The
Crown" actress Claire Foy, who tells a friend she married the
aeronautical engineer "because I wanted a normal life", but
finds herself bringing up a family in extraordinary
circumstances.
The mundanity of real life in "First Man" contrasts with the
enormity of the mission.
Armstrong is told he has been selected to head the Apollo 11
mission in the unglamorous setting of his work's toilet. When he
tells his son he is going to the Moon, the boy replies by asking
if he can play in the garden.
"Their dad wasn’t an astronaut, he was their dad," said Foy,
who, like the rest of the cast, spoke to Armstrong's family to
prepare for a film that dials down the patriotic glory and
focuses on the bravery and frailty of its characters.
While the Oscar-winning space adventure "Gravity", which opened
Venice in 2013, seduced audiences by the graceful beauty of
floating above the Earth, "First Man" squeezes the viewer into a
cramped capsule from which Armstrong gets occasional glimpses of
the Moon as he steers towards touch-down - scenes Chazelle made
deliberately claustrophobic and disorientating.
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"Space is obviously mostly this kind of black void, and you’re
traveling searching for objects, or searching for landing areas, in
this expanse that is mostly completely nebular, and then on top of
that you are in these kind of flying tin cans," he told reporters.
"So everything about it felt terrifying to me and made me all the
more the amazed that it even halfway worked out - so I wanted to
capture that."
Co-produced by Steven Spielberg, "First Man" is based on a 2005
biography by historian James Hansen which hints at a remarkable
gesture Armstrong may have made while standing on the Moon.
In the movie's version of that scene, Armstrong lifts the reflective
outer visor on his helmet, revealing his suppressed anguish as he
remembers a tragedy in his life, many years ago and a world away,
before composing himself for the journey home.
"First Man" is one of 21 movies in competition for the Golden Lion
which will be awarded on Sept 8.
(Reporting by Robin Pomeroy; Editing by Andrew Bolton)
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