By James Bowman on 9.17.07 @ 12:02AM
An unforgettable tribute to the men of Apollo.
Astronauts stand at the meeting point of heroism and celebrity.
Like other explorers, they have to their credit genuine, real-world
accomplishments that take guts as well as know-how and talent. But
although they go into space as representatives of a country,
although it takes a quasi-military organization like NASA to get
them there, they are seen as individuals. One of the
astronaut-subjects of David Sington's In the Shadow of the
Moon tells of how, after he had gone to the moon, everywhere
he went, in every country, people would say not "you" -- that is
America -- "did it" but "we" -- that is the whole human race --
did. That's the hallmark of the celebrity. He makes his audience a
participant in his fame.
Yet the film is not a celebrity vehicle but celebrates real
heroism and a consciousness of the heroic -- as when Eugene Cernan
speaks of his feelings of guilt about missing out on Vietnam when
so many of his fellow naval aviators had to fly and fight and die
or be captured there: "Whatever the rights and wrongs of it, that
was my war. They were my buddies....They fought my war for
me." But most of their appreciation of the heroic is in relation to
each other. Captain Cernan was the last man to walk on the moon.
Neil Armstrong, the first, does not appear -- his refusal to give
interviews adds to the air of heroic mystery about him -- but he is
clearly regarded as a hero by the others.
Charlie Duke speaks of him almost with awe as "Dr. Cool" and
remembers an occasion when, after almost being killed in a sudden
bail-out from the prototype lunar lander, Armstrong immediately
went back to his cubicle and shuffling papers. Just another day at
the office. "That's what you had to do," says General Duke. "The
mission goes on." Like all true heroes, these men admire the
heroism of others while being modest about their own. Alan Bean
says his heart-rate on launch shot up to 140 while John Young's
stayed at a steady 70. "I was too old for it to go any faster,"
Young comments.
It's Alan Bean who, along with Charlie Duke and Michael Collins,
has the most to say about his experience, and he says some of the
most interesting things. He notes, for instance, that after Tom
Wolfe's The Right Stuff came out he was amazed. "I'm the
same guy I always was, but now I've got The Right Stuff!" Later,
it's Captain Bean, too, who says of Neil Armstrong's pushing the
limit on the lunar lander's fuel in order to find a place to land
on that first mission. "No astronaut is going to say, 'I got low on
fuel and decided to turn around,'" he says. "No astronaut is going
to do that. It wouldn't be the right stuff."
To some it will seem a telling detail that, at least to this
extent, the astronauts learned how to be astronauts from Tom Wolfe
-- just as (so we are told by The Sopranos anyway)
Mafiosi have learned how to be mafiosi from Mario
Puzo and Francis Ford Coppola in The Godfather. But
heroism is always a collaboration between the heroes and those who
tell their stories. How would we even know what heroes were without
the tradition of heroic narrative going back to Homer? These
astronauts also still see themselves as part of a larger heroic
narrative that was set in motion in May, 1961, when President
Kennedy said, "I believe that this nation should commit itself to
achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on
the moon and returning him safely to the Earth."
Although Kennedy said in the same speech that "we go into space
because, whatever mankind must undertake, free men must fully
share," the speech itself added another reason by its implicit
pledge of the national honor to get to the moon -- and to get there
first. We learn from In the Shadow of the Moon that Apollo
8 in December of 1968 hadn't originally been intended as a moon
shot, but rumors reported by the CIA that the Russians were about
to try one made NASA change it to a moon mission, though not yet a
landing. It's also national honor that Charlie Duke has in mind
when he speaks of the successful landing and the astronauts'
satisfaction with it as a "great sense of accomplishment for
President Kennedy and the nation. We did what we said we were going
to do."
Dave Scott, who was the commander of Apollo 15 in the summer of
1971, makes the very interesting point that in all the science
fiction versions of travel to the moon, "I don't think any of them
imagined the whole world watching on TV." It was that which had the
potential to turn the astronauts from heroes into celebrities. We
should be grateful that, by and large, they have resisted this
temptation. Instead, as one of them so memorably puts it here, they
seem to have felt on their return from the moon that people were
looking at them and saying: "'This guy walked on the moon.' Now I
have to uphold that for the rest of my life." This terrific movie
shows us the men, now in their 70s, who have upheld it.
At one point, the film shows a clip from a CBS Evening
News broadcast from the time of the first moon walk. We see
the CBS logo and then, almost immediately, that of the familiar
rooster and a voiceover saying, "Brought to you by Kellogg's!" The
preview audience when I saw the film, burst out laughing at this,
it seemed so obviously, in the perspective of nearly 40 years'
worth of history, a crass attempt by a commercial organization to
bask in the heroes' reflected glory. That's rather how I felt by
seeing the movie advertised as "Ron Howard Presents." You didn't go
to the moon, Ron. You didn't even direct this picture. Take your
example of dignity and decorum from the astronauts themselves and
don't try to cash in on their fame.
topics:
Military, Russia