Apollo 13 (1995) - It's Been a Privilege Flying With You Scene (10/11) | Movieclips
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- Apollo 13 - It's Been a Privilege Flying With You: The astronauts prepare for re-entry while mission control awaits the outcome.
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• Apollo 13 (1995) | Mov...
FILM DESCRIPTION:
This Hollywood drama is based on the events of the Apollo 13 lunar mission, astronauts Jim Lovell (Tom Hanks), Fred Haise (Bill Paxton) and Jack Swigert (Kevin Bacon) find everything going according to plan after leaving Earth's orbit. However, when an oxygen tank explodes, the scheduled moon landing is called off. Subsequent tensions within the crew and numerous technical problems threaten both the astronauts' survival and their safe return to Earth.
CREDITS:
TM & © Universal (1995)
Cast: Bill Paxton, Ed Harris, Gary Sinise, Kathleen Quinlan, Kevin Bacon, Tom Hanks
Director: Ron Howard
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2:15 things are really tense when even your ship controls start sweating
Loss of heat shield and velocity of how they are falling with their own sweat from the heat hitting the controls. Yes it is sweating
@@GTSgamer101 no it's moisture that was condensed on the metal now coming out of the instruments because of the deceleration and falling onto them. the instruments are above them, the heat shield is at their backs. they are falling towards earth back first, with the condensed water dripping onto them.
Stfu
@@Arsinoe22 Exactly dude exactly Your big brain i knew that high five ✋
Big brains
"With all due respect sir, I believe this will be our finest hour" I don't know why, but that bit always gets me teary-eyed. it's just such a testament to the human condition. Not what we are capable of when things are easy, when everything goes right, but the incredible feats of intelligence, ingenuity, and leadership that we are capable of when things go wrong. They could have given up at any moment, so many things going wrong. Even if they failed, it wouldn't be a disaster. It would be their finest hour because of what they were able to accomplish even with so much against them. And if they succeed? That's something else in its entirety.
He'd drawn that line in the sand earlier, when he said "Failure is not an option!"
This comment gave me chills. Great word choice and analysis it truly was an amazing scene and you have only magnified how special it really was. Thank you sir
@@paulpierce1366 Well, thank YOU, for the kind words
NASA lost that "can do" attitude.
Thank you for this, it is just exactly what I think when I watch this scene. Couldn’t find the right words.
Apollo 13 is the film that when you watch it a second and third time, you know the ending, but you watch and will be sitting on the edge of your seat until the end. You know the ending but you are totally taken in by how the movie is done. The suspense is crushing, but you know the ending.
Apollo 13 is a film that when you watch it the first time, you know the ending, but you watch and will be sitting at the edge of your seat
Makes you proud to be an American
It's the same with Titanic.
I watch Apollo 13 all the time, and no matter how many times I watch it, I always wonder during reentry "are they gonna make it?" even though I know the ending. That's just how good of a job Ron Howard did with this movie. You can watch it a million times and it always feels just as special.
So, Ltn. Dan was in mission control making sure forrest gump got back alive.
Yeah kinda funny yes.
That’s what I’m saying
"If you ever become a shrimp boat captain, that's the day I'm an astronaut"
Yes, never put that together, great observation
And late LT Dan became a CSI police detective whose supervisor was Bubba.
One technical and filming touch I love in this scene, when Mattingly says "Mark, 35 seconds to re-entry interface", it is exactly 35 seconds after 'mark' that they start re-entering Earth's atmosphere.
Our entire elementary school went to church that day, then they set up like a dozen TVs in the school auditorium and we watched them splashdown. Scary stuff.
@@px9029 Cmon man
Jesus Christ, what a jackass
@@px9029 ok gaymer
@@px9029 dude shut the hell up
pajasa62 My elementary school classes watched the Alan Shepherd and John Glenn missions on glorious black-and-white television.
I like the detail about Gene straightening up his appearance. They've done all they can and it's the final inning. It's a make or break moment and he's confident they'll make it
RIP Bill Paxton, three great actors, not to mention Ed Harris.
Eh Harris is the man; he was great in this movie- and a great scene right here to showcase his character.
Allen Han and Gary Sinise
Game not over, man! Game not over!
Yes Bill Paxton was a great actor. I especially like his figure in Aliens. Ed Harris is my favorite actor.
I wanted to mention that this movie is special because there are many really great actors. Besides Tom Hanks, Ed Harris, Bill Paxton and Kevin Spacey also Gary Sinise and some others...really underrated movie, also the soundtraxk is brilliant.
And thank you for choosing Apollo 13 Airlines
Air Oydessy or Air Aquarius.
You mean Apollo 13 spacelines
Apollo Airlines flight 0013.
Captain on intercom:
*"This is your captain speaking. We'll be experiencing a little bit of turbulence, and it appears we are venting something outside the aircraft. Please remain seated, we'll hopefully be through it shortly. There's a small possibility we may have to execute a water landing, again. Once again thanks for choosing Apollo Airlines."*
Still better than Malaysia Airlines
AA H bruhhhhhhh
One little discussed irony is that the "sick" guy was actually healthy, but stayed on the ground. One of the "healthy" guys went on the mission and got sick.
Yep. Fred Haise, the LEM(Lunar Excursion Module) Pilot, suffered a urinary infection. The one they had to kick out was Ken Mattingly, who was supposed to go as CSM(Command and Service Module) Pilot, but since the main Apollo 13 crew got exposed to Measles and he hadn't built up an immunity yet, had to get bumped. Fortunately, Ken did get to go to the moon in the end, on Apollo 16, as CSM Pilot once more.
The backup CSM pilot, Jack Swagert, who then became main CSM pilot, was the one who went, and he wasn't the one that got sick.
-Edited for further clarity
The ol switcheroo.
@@TheDonner000 Also Swigert happened to be an expert on emergency procedures for the command module, which came in handy.
@@leafyutube No, no. The ol' switcheroo is you poison your drink and then you switch it with the other person's.
@@TheDonner000 Small correction, exposure was to Rubella (also called 'German measles'), not measles
The shallowness is the reason it took another minute and 27 seconds for the signal to come back. So at 3 minutes, they were still falling into the atmosphere. Which is possibly why the parachutes were able to blow out and deploy. They had an extra minute to thaw out the ice.
1:55 functional or crippled craft, it's terrifying that the astronauts are always just along for the ride at this point, coming down on a flaming ball of steel that is entirely dependant on a handful of mathematical equations to not tumble over and explode, that scene gave me chills seeing the intense flames on the windows, must be a crazy feeling of knowing you are both dead and alive at the same time
To learn more about the mathematical equations, I recommend watching Hidden Figures.
That's The Edge. Where everything teeters on chance and you could die at any second or come out the other side a champion.
Once you go there you never completely come back. Part of you will always be driven. Pushed back towards The Edge.
could you even imagine being in the position these guys were in?? their ability to stay (mostly) calm is so admirable
They were very calm during the entire thing, the movie director had to dramatize it a bit.
They were all very experienced, trained a lot and were the finest test pilots in the country before being recruited by NASA. Would be surprised if some of them got in a worst life threatening situation before.
Astronauts are made of something else.
Love the look Gene gives at 00:52... "how dare you even contemplate doubting this"
Chris kraft got told
Gene Kranz virtually carried Apollo 13 to the moon and back by refusing to fail. Mega-Hero.
When I saw this in the theater I nearly exploded from the incredible tension. But it wasn't just the scene that nearly ripped my heart out, it was this incredible music by James Horner that added so much to it!
Maestro James Horner, it has been a privilege listening to your work.
gcHK47 I see what you did there...
RIP James Horner
He’s channeling Maurice Jarre in this scene.
My favorite film composer
1:01 - Always loved this shot of the Command Module Odyssey heading toward the hurricane area, along with the entirety of the reentry process, beautifully done. The CGI on this film is top-notch, better than the 2010s movies (which is a paradox to me, since today's technology is more advanced).
Michael Nascimento hem... Go watch the background of the rocket in the launch scene... You will have the feeling of being on google earth
wow I never noticed the actual shot of the typhoon
That is a massive hurricane. Is that historically accurate?
yes Apollo 13 headed right into the eye of Hurricane Helen while the sea was choppy around the hurricane inside the eye the NASA amphibious recovery ships were waiting and when Apollo 13 splashed down they came down at a gentle 30 knots but rough seas hampered recovery but they managed to recover the crew and the capsule. today the capsule is at Denver International Airport in the terminal.
Well no actually we only say CGI is bad because we've only seen bad CGI, the majority of movies have amazing CGI which many people don't notice
Classy movie about a classy group of people. America's finest hour.
I say our finest hour was Apollo 11, when we actually landed on the Moon. But Apollo 13 is definitely a testament to the versatility and Fortitude of NASA during the pre-Challenger era!
I always get goosebumps from watching the re-entry scene. And the launch scene.
AlexandruSD I
And the explosion
ESPECIALLY the launch scene
I remember seeing this in theaters. It was in the sort of days when the audience cheered when the good guys won.
Theaters? What are those?
... One of the most emotional scenes in this or any other movie. Everything was perfect.
Yup this is right up there with the "Smile you SOB!" at the end of the Jaws as far as movie endings go.
Kevin Bacon has done so well going from a frat boy to a bicycle delivery boy to an astronaut.
He was also a lawyer in the Marines.
1:50 That moment in Kerbal Space Program when you realise you didnt put any parachutes on your capsule.
No that’s 1:12
So...
Basically what NASA did with the shuttle.
Jeb, new procedure. Pop the hatch and prepare for emergency EVA. Remember your training, good luck!
That's usually the point when I make them all EVA and parachute down.
Ron Howard...it was a privilege watching your movie.
Hell of a scene
MOVIE MORE OF BULL SHIT THAT ALLEGED THE REAL THING. WELL, I'LL TELL YOU SOMETHING STRANGE ABOUT APOLLO 13. THEY HAD OXYGEN IN PLSS SUITS AND THEY DID NOT USE THEM WHEN THEY WERE SUFFOCATING FROM CO2. AND THEY DID NOT USE THE TWO MOON SUITS TO WARM THEMESELVES UP. WELL ? DO YOU SEE THAT IN THE MOVIE ? ephemetherson
@@erickaminski1472 I take it you aren't a fan of the movie then?
@@drrandom429 I WAS UNTIL I FOUND OUT THAT NO ONE HAS LANDED ON THE MOON. ephemetherson
@@erickaminski1472 Oh no, you're one of those people huh?
@@oggeenock NO. I AM NOT ONE OF THOSE PEOPLE. I AM AN ALIEN !
No movie ever gives me chills the same way Apollo 13 does
This happened 50 years ago to this day! Still amazing
0:37 “With all due respect sir, I believe this will be our finest hour.” Am I the only one who noticed how much Gene Kranz (Ed Harris) was blinking when he said that? I like to think that even Kranz couldn’t hide his own nervousness when he said that line. Yet he still said it so convincingly.
still get goosebumps every time i watch this scene and i watched the movie so many times
I love this movie, Gary Sinise is my favorite, with all the great actors. Rip to Bill Paxton
The astronaut portrayed by Gary Sinise - Thomas K. 'Ken' Mattingly II - died 10.31.23 age 87. He became the command module pilot (CMP) on Apollo 16 in 1972 and commanded two space shuttle missions in the 1980s.
My Grandpa worked on 11 and 12. He joked that he got out just in time. All joking aside, getting those guys home was a true marvel of engineering and persistence.
Just absolutely incredible! Human beings are amazing!! TY to all who ventured out to the great unknown and TY for all those who helped them get there!
What a cast!
Best space movie of all time
1:41 i just love that part of this scene ❤
I agree
my favorite part is at 2:22 where the capsule is trailing a long 5000 degree fireball behind it as it burns through the atmosphere at over 24,000 mph
mine too #Orion just went through that
MOVIE MORE OF BULL SHIT THAT ALLEGED THE REAL THING. WELL, I'LL TELL YOU SOMETHING STRANGE ABOUT APOLLO 13. THEY HAD OXYGEN IN PLSS SUITS AND THEY DID NOT USE THEM WHEN THEY WERE SUFFOCATING FROM CO2. AND THEY DID NOT USE THE TWO MOON SUITS TO WARM THEMESELVES UP. WELL ? DO YOU SEE THAT IN THE MOVIE ? ephemetherson
@ Eric Kaminski - The EVA suits and PLSS units used the same round lithium hydroxide canisters as the LM's life support system did. So once the round canisters were all used up neither the PLSS's or the LM's life support system would work anymore. Fortunately the CM's square cartridges could be adapted to the LM's life support systems and that worked. Further, the PLSS's could only support life on the lunar surface for just a few hours during an EVA and the trip back was going to take days. With regards to the cold, one of the astronauts did try putting on his suit to stay warm. But without the cooling loop in the suit he actually overheated and started to sweat. Once his clothes started to get soaked he got even more uncomfortable because of that so they gave up on the whole idea of wearing the suits to stay warm.
@@erickaminski1472 And you copy pasted your comment all over the everywhere.
@@erickaminski1472 Go eat your flat earth cake. This is just a movie. If you want facts watch a documentary. Movies have 'bullshit' to make entertain. Not to educate that much. Is the science in star trek real? Sure the transporter could theoretically exist and so is the warp drive but why do you hear phasers and photon torpedoes? Would you like to watch 3 minutes of silence as you watch ships fight? I don't.
Goosebumps at 1:38.
Dirty Harry I agree. It happens everytime.
Me too I love that music at that moment
MOVIE MORE OF BULL SHIT THAT ALLEGED THE REAL THING. WELL, I'LL TELL YOU SOMETHING STRANGE ABOUT APOLLO 13. THEY HAD OXYGEN IN PLSS SUITS AND THEY DID NOT USE THEM WHEN THEY WERE SUFFOCATING FROM CO2. AND THEY DID NOT USE THE TWO MOON SUITS TO WARM THEMESELVES UP. WELL ? DO YOU SEE THAT IN THE MOVIE ? ephemetherson
These men (regardless of color, religion, etc) were real men. Explorers, Discoverers, Pioneers. The world desperately needs people of this character again.
Oh yes certainly but there is some of us who are fascinated by the things that were developed to make the real thing possible, it literally fascinates me to no end, what a group of amazing engineers can truly create is utterly remarkable!
They were white.....that used to be a good thing you know. They were the builders, the scientists, the explorers, the pioneers.
Some were.
@@jsmithmultimediatech That is the reason I took engineering!!
Outstanding Mr Miller 😊
The final shallowing was caused by a helium vent that was slowly pushing Aquarius off course. MC could not get a fix on a what was causing the trajectory to alter. Helium is used to pressurize the fuel system in zero g, as mechanical pumps do not work as well.
yes and while you do have a point, the heating was overdramaticized but it was OK
That's actually incorrect. The helium did vent when the tank pressure rose and blew the burst disc but the outside vent is non-propulsive and the venting was over in just a few seconds. The drifting was caused by water vapor being expelled by the LM's vacuum sublimator. During the coast periods the LM was usually shut down so sublimator emissions were not an issue and the CM doesn't use a sublimator. However on Apollo 13 the LM was powered up during coasting so the sublimator had to be on to cool its systems, which is what caused the drift.
Yes, and although they did not know exactly what was causing the shallowing or drift in the calculated return trajectory, fortunately the Engineer in charge of that area decided to over-correct for the drift in the final course correction burn. Without that over-correction they may have entered the atmosphere in an even more shallow RT and skipped off the atmosphere and back into space!
While they make it sound like the corridor is really narrow.. in reality you can very precisely control the entry angle and even more so at a later time. Look how long they did that LEM burn to change the angle less than a quarter of a degree. Some tiny venting would push it a little off but not that much.
@@Bartonovich52 ehh a little vent over a long time has the same effect
Always loved that reentry music piece.
"THIS WILL BE OUR FINEST HOUR" Spoken like a true leader who wasn't going to give up. ✌
1:37 is a cinematic masterpiece
A total classic great actors im glad i own this movie in blue ray RIP Bill Paxton 🙏🙏
This is my favourite movie. The documentary called the Lost Moon is definitely worth watching too. It’s about how they made the movie and Jim Lovell is interviewed along with his wife Marilyn. Just brilliant.
My grandpa served on the USS Iwo Jima when the picked up Apollo 13
Thanks to movie clips I remember how good these shows really are
Too bad Movieclips split this scene into two, but this is one of my favorite movie scenes of all time. Perfection by Ron Howard.
When you think about it that was always a crazy way of getting people back to earth ... and yet it worked time after time.
It still does.
Ron Howard, James Horner - It's Been a Privilege to see this movie
1:05 that hurricane scene is the crazy good cgi for 95
Hollow man, lt Dan, forrest gump, Hudson from alien - great cast :)
So THAT'S where they MESSED up!
...they let Forrest drive the spaceship!
Ron Howard, director
Clint Howard (Ron's brother), actor, as "Sy Liebergot", EECOM Mission Controller
Rance Howard (Ron's father), actor, as "Reverend" (unnamed), seen in Lovell home during reentry sequence
Jean Speegle Howard (Ron's mother), actor, as "Blanch Lovell", Jim Lovell's mother
Quite the family affair there!
You ever seen Excalibur? The John Boorman clan is all over that picture.
@@jkorshak Didn't know that, cheers!
Yes, Bill Paxton, it has been an honor. RIP
In the future, these expiditions will feel small as space technology advances...but these pioneers will never be forgotten, they have been immortalized in hsitory.
Hold the phone.
Titanic 1997
"Gentlemen it's been a privilege playing with you tonight"
Bill Paxton
James Horner
Jack
Apollo 13 1995
"Gentlemen it's been a privilege flying with you"
Bill Paxton
James Horner
Jack
Yeah, the only difference is the outcome
@@michaelj.r457 It's true. The Titanic men never made it out of the water. The Apollo 13 men made it out of the air.
1:29 You can see it in his eyes: he's just thinking, "This is it, man! It's game over, man, game over! What're we gonna do now?!"
Fawzie Kefli I often wondered if when filming this scene Bill Paxton was saying to himself "one express elevator to hell - goin' down"
“Odyssey, This is Houston, do you read me?”
Silence........
“Odyssey, This is Houston, do you read me?”
Silence........
Olajide Lucas **Radio Noises**
What an amazing thing they were all able to do in getting 13 home. 50 years ago.
Balls of brass, those lads.
Taco Bell Pretty much. All of the astronauts in the Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo program were test pilots, who flew aircraft and rockets that were inherently unsafe.
Did you know they had to have special cut outs in their seats to hold their gigantic balls?
Technically not all of them were test pilots but the vast majority of them were I think Haise wasn't, all of Apollo 11 were though :)
THAT'S why they were limping when they got out of the re-entry capsule!
Their return to Earth alive will be remembered far longer than their expected land ing on the moon...
This movie was f'king amazing! They dont make movies like this anymore!
If they did everyone would be bitter and angry about "remaking a classic."
And Ron Howard even got a cameo for his father, Rance Howard, in this movie (The Priest with the family0
His daughter has a cameo appearance. His brother, Clint, played Sy Liebergot and his mother played Blanche. A family affair! Someone observed elsewhere that Rance was wearing a wedding ring while playing a priest. The Lovells are Episcopalian, as is the priest played by Rance. Episcopal priests wear a Roman collar the way Catholic priests do, but unlike Catholic priests, Episcopal priests can and do marry.
I really don't know why.Tears at 1:39,EVERYTIME.
I'll bet the ladies on "hidden figures" did the math check on their re-entry calculations !
Why can't we have amazing movies with simple plots like this in 2018. I'm tired of mediocre movies and mediocre actors.
Literally First Man came out in 2018
Because this is based on real life...
Joseph McDermott it would be terrible
It's 2019, and it's has gone to even lower depths...
@@rebelred4589 BASED on real life doesn't mean the plot will be simple. And that doesn't answer his questions. Movies are still made that are based on real life. "..."
"With all due respect sir, I believe this will be our finest hour"
You can see in Kevin Bacon's eyes he's done with all this, as soon as they landed he quit and took a job as a corrections officer in a boys juvenile facility.
Way better than his early days when he quit dancing and later quit cleaning toilets to quit killing tremors 😲
I watched that when I was 10 and I'm a space nerd since then
Same
Edd Harris killed it in 1995 first Apollo 13 the The Rock both performances were top notch
The greatest Cast of all times, if you ask me...
6.7 miles per SECOND
Great music.
and acting
and direction
story
true story
This probably the most chilling scene ever
0:51 the look Ed Harris gives.
Reentry interface clocks a speed of 24,000 miles per hour.
"With all due respect, sir, I believe this is going to be our finest hour." If looks could kill, that guy would be dead.
"Horrible. Hollywood bullshit. They would never have survived."
An actual quote from a test screening review of Apollo 13.
Best movie what i ever see and True story behind movie
"Gentlemen, it's been a privilege flying with you."
Gives me a shiver because he said that, knowing they could be dead in the next 60 seconds. 😲
Any time I show this movie to someone for the first time, I always mention how it really reminds me of _The Perfect Storm_ so they'll think the astronauts die at the end . . . . And this is the scene where all that deception pays off.
You know this is based on a true story right?
Bill Paxton... R.I.P
RIP Bill Paxton! 💔😭😥
Looks like I picked the wrong day to quit sniffin' glue.
I've always felt so bad for the grandmother. She was such a sweet old lady.
That is why you need to listen to Metal. To prepare yourself for such an eventuality. Engulfed in flames at 9km/second with the world shaking around you. RRRRRAAAAAAAAAAHHHH!!!!
Gentlemen it has been a priviledge flying with you 'proceeds to pull out a violin'
I was there. It was glorious.
That whole scene was basically “welp..... hope all this bullshit we did works”
0:17 Is that older gentleman in the back (not the flight surgeon, the one behind Ed Harris's left shoulder) another cameo from those that actually did this? Maybe a Chris Kraft? I didn't think Gene wore glasses...
The Right Stuff was full of cameos from the astronauts and Chuck Yeager.
Apollo 13 had Marilyn Lovell in the crowd for the launch, and obviously Jim Lovell was the captain (at his insistence despite them wanting him to play an admiral) on the ship at the end. I heard Gene Kranz also had a cameo; not finding him, though...
This was all done without Internet or WiFi, radio waves and straight up luck!
The computer uplink was clearly some kind of early radio or microwave data channel, so early Wifi of a sort.
Moc povedeni několik 100 příčin nehody nacvicene situace až na jednu exeletni ukázka ingeniru musíte počítat ze situaci která nemá řešení na první pohled ale vždycky je možnost
Gentlemen it's been a privilege flying with you 😊
Gentlemen it's been a privilege playing with you tonight
@@cm2449 I know where that comment came from.;)
@@lasvegassnowman5505 👍
I finally understand Ray Gillette's crisis vest
These three have chemistry smart cast choice
2:16 capsule: "Oh Lawd! Don't let this be the end of me! I'm a faaaather!"
If we could have just had one of those famous Tom Hanks yells as they fall into atmosphere it would have been great......
"The Privilege was ours."
2:55 Ron Howard: "Now in this scene you're going to give the most iconic line in the film: 'Mommy, you're squishing me!'" Folks he's another Orson Welles!
It kind of made me uncomfortable when the priest put his hand on the little boy's head. Creepy.
@@joevignolor4u949 thats modern cynicism.