Tag Archives: moon landings

First Man

Downbeat and contemplative, Damien Chazelle’s First Man hits all the Great Man of History biopic beats, but then executes them in a way that’s surprising, resulting in a humane and emotionally nimble film that focuses all its energy inward. A standard studio biopic of Neil Armstrong would seek to answer the question “What made this great person great?” Chazelle and screenwriter Josh Singer, though, address themselves to the question “What made this great person so withdrawn.”

Consider the realities that would tend to hamstring an Armstrong biopic. The men selected for the Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo programs in the 1960s were not selected for their charisma. And perhaps no astronaut exemplifies this better than Armstrong. Like every other early space program pioneer, Armstrong was something of a boy scout, a shirt-tucked-in company man — reliable, serious, a pilot and engineer who was able to stay rational under pressure.

Moreover, his reclusiveness later in life has rendered him more mythic than historical. Unlike some of the other astronauts, such as Buzz Aldrin, who were more willing to participate in documentaries and oral histories and the like, after Apollo 11 we hardly saw Neil Armstrong again. Other space program films, such as The Right Stuff and Apollo 13, have had to embellish personality conflicts and the like because, frankly, astronauts have even-keeled, boring personalities. That’s why they’re astronauts.

And so Chazelle enlists Ryan Gosling to play Armstrong. Gosling is kindred with Armstrong in the sense that they’re both eminently reliable — the script says “angrily,” and so Gosling plays it angrily; he’s not going to surprise you, but he’s not going to let you down either. Arguably Gosling is at his best when playing shut-down loners, emotionally closed off from the rest of the world (as in Drive). This is the portrait of Armstrong Chazelle renders, a man so competent and smart but can’t navigate a difficult conversation with his sons.

The film posits that the death of Armstrong’s young daughter, Karen, in the early sixties was the defining event of his life, not the Apollo 11 landing. The explanatory power of this choice seems as plausible as any to me. After a jostling, breaking-Earth’s-atmosphere test flight sequence, we begin not with Neil enclosed in a capsule but his daughter, receiving treatment for a childhood cancer as Neil and his wife Janet (Claire Foy) look on through a glass pane (panes, barriers, and doors are a motif). Armstrong’s engineering mind leads him to fill notebooks with equations concerning tumors and treatments. We cut from the treatment to the burial, the casket being lowered into the earth.

Alternating among 16-milimeter, 35-milimeter, and the IMAX film stocks, First Man is far more visually arresting than the lauded La La Land. The earthly scenes are well observed and downright impressionistic at times, with Chazelle even channeling Terence Malick’s domestic deftness in The Tree of Life. Televisions remind us that Vietnam and the social strife of 1968 are happening, and even as these touches feel more obligatory than necessary, Chazelle folds them into the background so casually they barely register.

Once we break the atmosphere, Chazelle juxtaposes the violence and vigor of space travel with the never-ending serenity of the inky void. Attention is paid to the tactile banality of the capsules, the rivets, the control panels. The film’s most exciting sequence is not Apollo 11’s landing but an earlier mission in which Armstrong manages to pilot a “rolling” (spinning) command module back into his control, saving the day. We rarely see master shots of the spacecrafts, rather, we’re in close on the faces and hands of the astronauts, noting each bead on sweat on their brows.

The movie’s idea that Armstrong’s single-minded focus is a function of his trauma of his having emotionally shut down after the loss of a child seems at once dubious and good enough to get by narratively. There is an appealing beauty to this construction. We see Armstrong’s first step, accompanied by the famous line, and we realize that when he’s exploring the moon “for all mankind” it was his daughter who was on his mind. The dramatic license that is taken here and there does seem to get at some larger truth about the man. Where something like Apollo 13 is a true Hollywood film about brilliant people overcoming adversity, First Man is about grief and pain. Its themes are entirely terrestrial.

For a work of popular storytelling that makes little effort to condense — the running time is roughly two-and-a-half hours — the actual climax, the Apollo 11 landing, is somewhat rushed, almost to the point of it being given short shrift. This may be by design. The idea is to depict relationships, which are back on Earth. Claire Foy’s performance as Janet Armstrong is centered in the narrative in a way that doesn’t quite correspond with the amount of depth the character has, making the film’s final shot, which is elegiac and gorgeous in its simplicity, seem almost like a cheat. But I suppose one of Chazelle’s strengths is making a certain kind of manipulativeness feel delightful.

First Man — FOUR STARS

Directed by Damien Chazelle

Rated PG-13

Universal

138 min.

Chappaquiddick

Far from being a salacious Lifetime channel movie, John Curran’s Chappaquiddick is a morally serious prosecution of not just Ted Kennedy’s infamous incident but of power and influence itself. Although it pulls a few punches (e.g., attempting to create sympathy for “Teddy” by stroking the violin of his inferiority complex regarding his brothers), it is more or less the movie Ted’s Republican rivals would want to see made, and, interestingly, the film is better for it.

The youngest Kennedy brother is played with remarkable verisimilitude by Jason Clarke, whose bulky features and nonchalance convey a certain amorality that is off-putting and at times scary. It’s not a caricature, rather, Clarke’s impression of Teddy (particularly the voice cadence) is nuanced and familiar — we feel he is Teddy. Clarke has always been an oblong, awkward leading man, which makes him so effective here. Teddy himself looked the part of someone who “should” be president. He had the family name and said all the right things. Yet he cut an uncomfortable figure in public life, lacking the deftness and poise of his brothers.

Curran and screenwriters Taylor Allen and Andrew Logan begin on Teddy being interviewed in 1969, a couple of days before the Apollo 11 moon landing that his late brother had promised the nation. Two things are established: that Kennedy’s “brand” and public persona is different from his private conduct, and that his flunkies fear him and do his bidding. Teddy cuts the interview short before getting on the phone to his Flunky #1 (Ed Helms) to arrange a party with “the boiler room girls” on Chappaquiddick Island that weekend.

Once there, it’s clear that Teddy uses his family name and his older brothers’ memory to arm-twist loyalty and even admiration for himself. It’s a combination of an inferiority complex — he’ll never live up to Jack and Bobby’s greatness — and an entitled egocentric worldview that presumes he will be president, at the very least. Among the boiler room girls (staffers who’d worked on Bobby Kennedy’s campaign and still felt profound loyalty to the Kennedy family) is Mary Jo Kopechne (Kate Mara), a former Bobby Kennedy secretary who is now disillusioned with Washington and chooses instead to work on a mayoral race in her home state of New Jersey. Teddy invites her to come work for him. He’ll be president some day.

Chappaquiddick gets to “the incident” fairly quick. After a day of boat racing and binge drinking, the evening party with the boiler room girls takes place. (Mara is given short shrift, as is Olivia Thirlby.) The girls are joined by the Senator, Helms’ character Joe Gargan, and the U.S. Attorney for Massachusetts (Jim Gaffigan). Chappaquiddick is satisfied that there’s no evidence that Teddy and Mary Jo were romantic. Instead, the two simply leave the party together in Teddy’s car, Teddy behind the wheel. The car flies off of a small bridge and lands upside down in about six feet of water. Teddy manages to escape the car, while Mary Jo dies. Chappaquiddick depicts Kopechne’s final moments more than once, presenting her final moments as a kind of ghost that haunts Teddy.

We’re then left with a process movie as Curran deconstructs how Kennedy and his star-studded strategy team engaged in the most cynical sort of damage control. Teddy didn’t report the accident until the following morning. This means as Kopechne’s body was being recovered by divers, Teddy was phoning not the police but President Kennedy’s old adviser, Ted Sorenson (Taylor Nichols), trying to figure out how to “play” the scandal. When Teddy arrives back at the party, soaking wet and traumatized, his first words to Gargan are “I’m not going to be president.”

The film is quite taken with the poetic irony of the moon landing coinciding with the incident, keeping Teddy’s having caused the death of Kopechne off of the front pages for several days. A full moon is in frame behind Clarke as he stares at the partially submerged car with Kopechne still inside it. I appreciated that these touches are layered in by Curran rather than emphasized to the point of obviousness. The irony is reiterated too many times but is always artfully handled.

What’s refreshing about Chappaquiddick is that it isn’t at all sanguine about Teddy’s actions. The film lands as an indictment of old-money types who leverage their power and influence to disguise their own moral turpitude. The scariest scene is not Kopechne’s final moments but the introduction of Teddy’s strategy team, convened by his father Joseph Kennedy (Bruce Dern). Teddy, scrambling to figure out what he’s going to do, enters a smokey room to find Robert McNamara (Clancy Brown), Sorenson, and Sarge Shriver (David DeBeck), and other elites have gathered to help him weasel his way out of taking any responsibility whatsoever. Dad, even in his non-verbal waning years, still has a lot of friends.

The strategy team’s unscrupulous recommendations and actions (they conspired with the local prosecutor to make certain Teddy got only a slap on the wrist) are cartoonish yet played with a realism meant to suggest “This really happened.” In the end, the film makes much of Teddy’s ultimate decision to remain in politics, positioning the Helms character as a voice of moral reason who gets ignored. We are not meant to feel sorry for Kennedy, per se, but I do think Curran’s efforts to humanize the man go too far. Many people feel small next to their siblings, and many don’t have unconditional love and acceptance from their fathers. They don’t all behave as Teddy did.

Chappaquiddick — THREE STARS

Directed by John Curran

Rated PG-13

Apex Entertainment

Entertainment Studios

Motion Pictures

101 min.