My daughter was
awestruck by it.
That could easily end
the “Through a Kid’s Eyes” portion of the evening, but I need to continue and explain
why parents should be sharing this film with their children.
I was born six months
after the first moon landing and a month before Apollo 13 caught everyone’s
attention again. We grew up while the
Apollo missions were still fresh in the cultural mindset, and the transition
into the space shuttle era brought enough reminders and progress to keep the early
space program in our minds.
The knowledge of those
amazing feats and accomplishments of those years has faded over time. The authenticity of Apollo 13, by design, is an important reminder of what was done.
My daughter had just
finished a presentation on Neil Armstrong before seeing it, but there were many
aspects of how the missions worked that weren’t obvious in hindsight. The idea that the men were strapped into a
tiny capsule atop over three hundred feet of high explosive filled booster is
something that needs to be visually experienced to be appreciated.
Also, while she knew
computers were both in the craft and on the ground, learning that her Penguin
cased IPod had more computing power than the machine guiding them to the moon
was an eye opener.
Even the idea, which was
routine through most of my childhood, of a three stage rocket system was
completely foreign to her. When the
first stage blew free, she screamed, assuming that was the “problem” they
famously told Houston about having.
Part of the importance
about this film is showing kids what was done to let them marvel at the sheer
bravery and audacity of it. The one time
during that mission when the astronauts said they were least worried about
something going wrong was during the “routine” flight behind the moon.
That would be the point
when they became the people who still hold the record for being the furthest
away from the Earth, and were completely cut off from any contact with the rest
of human civilization.
Another part is to show the
kids about the power of intelligence and learning.
Heck there’s a dramatic
scene focusing on a row of guys doing life or death long division.
MATH MATTERS!
The scientists and
engineers aren’t the goofy sidekicks or helpers in this real world drama,
they’re the heroes.
And let’s not forget
about reminding kids about the space program in general.
There’s a working space
station up there people! It has a live feed on the web and everything. My nerdy friends and I would have missed
afternoon cartoons regularly if something like that was available. We inhabit such a tiny portion of the
universe, under a tiny set of conditions that can support us. It’s kind of silly to forget about the rest
of it, if only to make sure a big chunk of it isn’t going to smack into us
someday.
The final important
thing about Apollo 13 is the attitude
and absence of negativity. People far
too often focus on failure and disasters.
The shuttle disasters
get more play than all the scientific information they garnered, and (again)
the freakin’ space station they put up.
The initial Hubble focus
problems were widely ridiculed in the press, but all the data it’s give us
since being fixed barley makes a peep.
(It was designed to be
serviced by the shuttle, not just stuck up there, anyway.)
And, of course, the
crashings on Mars got way more news time than the data streaming back from
various crawlers and robots.
The one thing people
associate with Apollo 13 is,
“Houston, we have a
problem.”
But by watching the
recreation Ron Howard and company put together, far stronger positive messages
stay with the viewer.
Several from Gene Kranz
“Let's work the problem,
people. Let's not make things any worse by guessing.”
“I don't care what
anything was designed to do. I care about what it can do.”
“With all due respect,
sir, I believe this is gonna be our finest hour.”
“We're not gonna go
bouncing off the walls for the next ten minutes, because we're just gonna end
up right back here with the same problems!”
His Wife, MarIlyn:
“Those people don't put
one piece of equipment on my lawn. If they have a problem with that,
they can take it up with my husband. He'll be home... on Friday!”
they can take it up with my husband. He'll be home... on Friday!”
And his Mom:
“Well, don't you worry,
honey. If they could get a washing machine to fly, my Jimmy could land it.”
While not all are exact
quotes, they capture the flavor and the focus of those individuals.
After all, “Houston, we
have a problem,” isn’t a one hundred percent correct quote either.
When experiencing the
film, it’s much more likely that this line by Gene Kranz with stay with a young
viewer:
“I want this mark all
the way back to Earth with time to spare. We've never lost an American in
space, we're sure as hell not gonna lose one on my watch. Failure is not an
option!”
It isn’t a real quote
either, (though Kranz liked it enough to use it as the title of his
autobiography) but like almost all of the few things in the film that the movie
makers took some dramatic liberties with, the truth is far more awesome:
Apollo 13 Flight
Dynamics Officer Jerry Bostick:
"As far as the
expression 'Failure is not an option', you are correct that Kranz never used
that term. In preparation for the movie, the script writers, Al Reinart and
Bill Broyles, came down to Clear Lake to interview me on 'What are the people
in Mission Control really like?' One of their questions was 'Weren't there
times when everybody, or at least a few people, just panicked?' “My answer was
'No, when bad things happened, we just calmly laid out all the options, and
failure was not one of them. We never panicked, and we never gave up on finding
a solution.'”
No comments:
Post a Comment