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Synopsis

A trio of American astronauts—pilot Buzz Lloyd (Gene Hackman), captain pilot Jim Pruett (Richard Crenna) and scientist Clayton Stone (James Franciscus) — are returning to Houston from their five month Ironman I mission to establish a Skylab-style space station. Unfortunately its retro-rockets fail leaving the men no way to get home. The trapped men in orbit have their oxygen supply in the space capsule severely drop to a dangerous point, as they exercise caution in breathing as they only have enough supply for a few days. On the ground, NASA head supervisor Charles Keith (Gregory Peck) tries to get them safely home by using his expertise and the suggestion is thrown out that one of them commit suicide to give them more oxygen. Veteran astronaut Ted Dougherty (David Janssen) convinces the reluctant Keith to begin a rescue effort. The launching of Dougherty’s spaceship from Cape Kennedy, Florida, however, is scrubbed because of a hurricane. Meanwhile the wives are brought to Houston and grim televised conversations with their husbands take place. The most touching scene is Celia Pruett (Lee Grant) in her farewell to her hero astronaut husband. Things seem hopeless, but as Yogi Berra says “It isn’t over, until it’s over.” Who would have ‘thunk’ a Russian spaceship would arrive in the nick of time with sufficient oxygen to rescue the surviving American astronauts — conjuring up a happy image of superpower cooperation to make a better world. —Ozu’s World of Reviews

Director

Original

John Sturges

One of Hollywood’s top action directors of the late 1950s and 1960s, John Sturges, for a time, was a name associated almost exclusively with large-scale action-adventure films. A one-time assistant in RKO’s blueprint department, Sturges spent most of his early career in the studio’s art department and editing room (an especially productive department, where directors Robert Wise and Mark Robson also got their starts), before joining David O. Selznick as a production assistant and later as an editor. He became a director in the U.S. Army Air Force, making documentary and training films, including Thunderbolt, in collaboration with veteran director William Wyler. He returned to Hollywood as a director and, for a time, made successful if fairly undistinguished films (mostly action or suspense) until 1954, when he took on Bad Day at Black Rock. Sturges, who had shown a knack for working with the increasingly difficult Spencer Tracy (in The People Against O’Hara), coaxed a great performance… read more

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