I'm 45 minutes into disc 1 of my latest Christmas gift from my kids ... and thrice I have nearly been in tears. The first came as Pres. Kennedy set a goal so many of us know so very well. The second crept upon me as I watched Ed White reluctantly returned to his Gemini capsule, on "the saddest day of my life." The third... whispered as Deke Slayton walked alongside Gus Grissom during a hunting trip, asking Gus if he would command the Apollo 1 flight.
Tom Hanks' "From the Earth to the Moon" is special. When you've lived your entire life dreaming of the stars, knowing you're too short and too nearsighted and just plain born in the wrong era to ever see them unhindered... you take whatever means you can to get there. No matter how vicariously. Thanks to one of my best friends who had loaned me his VHS tapes - you're a god, Doug - my wife & I lived through all twelve episodes. All of the stories about "Can We Do This?" and "Spider", about "Gallileo Was Right" and "The Original Wives Club". Watching these episodes.. I was there. I was frelling THERE!! Living through it all again, and not just reliving the episodes. The events they represented. These days... the Cynic in me doubts we will ever reach these heights again in my lifetime. The Dreamer in me can't wait to get the party re-started. And thanks to Mr. Hanks and his party of experts, I think I'll get the champaign chilling. Well, maybe Mt. Dew
So why post this in here? Because I'm curious about the primary reasons for the cessation of the Apollo program. Was it completely budgetary? Was it felt we achieved what we could for the time? Yes, there are allegedly plans for a return to the moon, for a manned trip to Mars... but just how likely is it that such will ever be pulled off? At least at a time when you and I can witness it.
Tom Hanks' "From the Earth to the Moon" is special. When you've lived your entire life dreaming of the stars, knowing you're too short and too nearsighted and just plain born in the wrong era to ever see them unhindered... you take whatever means you can to get there. No matter how vicariously. Thanks to one of my best friends who had loaned me his VHS tapes - you're a god, Doug - my wife & I lived through all twelve episodes. All of the stories about "Can We Do This?" and "Spider", about "Gallileo Was Right" and "The Original Wives Club". Watching these episodes.. I was there. I was frelling THERE!! Living through it all again, and not just reliving the episodes. The events they represented. These days... the Cynic in me doubts we will ever reach these heights again in my lifetime. The Dreamer in me can't wait to get the party re-started. And thanks to Mr. Hanks and his party of experts, I think I'll get the champaign chilling. Well, maybe Mt. Dew
So why post this in here? Because I'm curious about the primary reasons for the cessation of the Apollo program. Was it completely budgetary? Was it felt we achieved what we could for the time? Yes, there are allegedly plans for a return to the moon, for a manned trip to Mars... but just how likely is it that such will ever be pulled off? At least at a time when you and I can witness it.
That happened three years before I was born, so I didn't live through it. But I was almost in tears when the episode came on. Especially that first scene in Mission Control when they have just found out that Grissom, White and Chaffee are all dead.

A Grumman employee, he headed up the project from their first proposal through the last landing. He is an engineer and occasionally the book does get hung up on technicalia, but those few pages you might skim through are more than made up by stories told by the guy who was there, who designed and built the damn thing. It is a fascinating tale and you realize how much they were making this up as they went along. There is a chapter alone on making the drawings from which the LM was built. Remember, this was back in the day of T-squares and lead pencil engineering drawings. A major hang-up was getting all of those done. They had to average 500 a week. I had no idea. Kelly is also a good enough author to tell the story that he knew best. It's a technical book that in general doesn't read that way.
