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Apollo 10: The Dress Rehearsal by Mark Gray
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Canada
DVD Cover InformationActor: Gene Cernan, John Young, Tom Stafford Director: Mark Gray DVD: Region Code 0 Audio: English (Original Language) Format: AC-3, Closed-captioned, Collector's Edition, Color, DVD, Full Screen, NTSC, Original recording remastered, Restored, Special Edition Picture Format: 1.33:1 Running Time: 373 minutes DVD Release Date: 2005-01-15 Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Studio: Spacecraft Films
Movie Reviews of Apollo 10: The Dress RehearsalMovie Review: Sometimes out of place Summary: 4 Stars
Although I'm writing about the Apollo 10 DVD from Spacecrat Films, this review also applies to the Apollo 9 DVD which is also from Spacecraft Films.
Yes, I thoroughly love this DVD. However, I'm very disapointed at the huge jumps in time with this DVD. They show the film magazines in order starting with magazine A and going down the alphabet from there. The problem with that is different astronauts used different cameras at different times when they shot their film. So one magazine shows a wider span of time than another. While I admit it may be helpful to some to watch the entire film magazine before proceding on to the next one, I don't subscribe to that philosophy.
Here's why. They show 16mm movies of the lunar surface from orbit BEFORE the film and audio of the translunar injection, which was about 2 hours after launch. I'd rather see the film and audio in logical sequence (even if a magazine has to be broken up) instead of the randomly placed events Spacecraft Films seems to have put together. This lack of sequencing is also a problem on the Apollo 9 DVD from Spacecraft Films. Having said that I don't believe the sequencing takes anything away from the beauty and historical value of this set.
I guess my real gripe is that they inserted interview and press conference audio clips over film that had nothing to do with what they were talking about in the audio. They could have inserted the interview over a relevant film clip, where available. There also seems to be a very little in flight audio from the astronauts. I'm sure that's not the fault of Spacecraft Films, but it is somewhat annoying to me.
As I'm writing this review, I'm watching the lunar surface from Apollo 10 while listening to a pre-flight interview of Gene Krantz. Yes, I admit there is relevance, but I'd still rather hear more in flight audio between the astronauts and Mission Control. There seems to me to be too many earth bound interviews in these (Apollo 9 & Apollo 10) DVD's. While they're helpful from a historical aspect, I bought these DVD's to relive the event, not to hear what happend months before or months after the flight. I wanted to feel what the astronauts experienced in real time.
If you're like me and have to have the Apollo DVD's these are definitely the ones to get. Yes, they cost a lot more than the slick produced "Readers Digest" versions other companies have released in the past, but these versions are more than worth the price. Overall Spacecraft Films has done an excellent job presenting the Apollo (and Mercury and Gemini) programs to the world. They have performed a great service to fans of the Apollo program such as myself. I own almost all the Apollo DVD's they've produced so far (lacking only 12 & 14). The lunar landing mission DVD's are much better organized than the 2 missions before Apollo 11.
If I had to buy it all over again, I would definitely buy this set. However, I hope in future releases Spacecraft Films would reconsider their editing these pre-lunar landing DVD's.
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