Showing posts with label The Right Stuff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Right Stuff. Show all posts

Saturday, January 31, 2026

The right stuff for a snowstorm binge

A recent pre-snowmageddon visit to the Smithsonian's National Air & Space Museum included the Imax 3D film about the Blue Angels and a planetarium show about asteroids, planetoids, comets, and the technology exploring them.

At the museum, I was most inspired by the films and banners paying tribute to women pioneers of air and space, from Bessie Coleman, Amelia Earhart, and Jackie Cochran to Katherine Johnson, Sally Ride, and Amanda Lee (first female Blue Angel demonstration pilot).

Glamorous Glennis, Chuck Yeager's sound-barrier-breaking craft

All this inspired me to compile a playlist for the upcoming hibernation. I didn't realize I had so many air-and-space and problem-solving women DVDs in my collection, but there it is. 
  • The Right Stuff, which is, as everyone should know, the best movie ever made. (Right, I'm just supposed to say whether I liked it, leaving out "good" or "bad." What do I know?) You think it's about competition: test pilots competing with each other, Americans competing with Soviets, astronauts competing with each other to be the leader of the group and/or the first to ride the rocket. But really, it's about relationships--among men and among women and among men and women. Anyway, as they all figured out, "we've got to stick together on this." The cooperative model wins.
  • Hidden Figures, the story of the brilliant women working behind the scenes for NASA's missions, including Mercury (as in The Right Stuff) and Apollo (as in Apollo 13 and TV's Timeless episode on the attempted sabotage of the Moon landing).
  • Apollo 13, which should have been a logical sequel to The Right Stuff, but for various reasons I was a bit disappointed. Great story telling (working the problem of a crippled craft), but the soundtrack full of angel choirs and soaring emotional crescendos annoys me. But: Tom Hanks, Ed Harris, Gary Sinise, Kevin Bacon. You know.
  • Forever Young, just to jump back in time for more test pilot stuff, plus work toward future space missions via the cryogenics experiment that catapults Mel Gibson 50 years into the future. Also about relationships, Elijah Wood's need to replace his missing father, and some pretty good aerial cinematography. More, please!
  • Deep Impact, launching us into a planet-rescuing space mission to thwart an extinction-level event--a comet discovered by Elijah Wood. Téa Leoni stars as an ambitious cable-news reporter who inadvertently discovers the meaning of E.L.E. Great cast in this film, led by Morgan Freeman as a pre-Barack Obama president and Robert Duvall as the aging astronaut bringing his real-world experience to bear on a younger crew trained on video games. (Competition, again, before cooperation takes over.)
  • An Officer and a Gentleman, again a film about manly competition giving way to the cooperative/supportive leadership model. Great training sequences, including the female officer candidate struggling with physical inadequacy (vis-a-vis the males) but asserting her mental resilience. Really more of a relationship movie (men and men, women and women, men and women). The Cinderella ending bothered me for a long time, but it's iconic now and gets me every time.
  • Top Gun, the original. I should include Top Gun: Maverick for the essential air-and-space training and relationship storytelling, but I don't happen to have it in my DVD library yet. Anyway, I only watch the original because the DVD has a commentary track featuring real flight instructors like my high-school classmate, Michael "Flex" Galpin. Mike's the one telling all the "that's accurate" or "that's not how it works" stories. I especially liked his description of one officer's home decor, which featured an "I love me" wall of photographs. 
  • Contact, so let's get back to women as problem solvers dealing with male competitiveness. Jodie Foster discovers a message from another star system, and Tom Skerritt, whose character tried to thwart her SETI research, steals her thunder and takes her place on the mysterious transport through wormholes. Again, one of the best cast of actors among all these films, including Matthew McConaughey, James Wood, John Hurt, David Morse, Rob Lowe, and Angela Bassett.
  • Courage Under Fire, and I don't care if everyone else thinks Meg Ryan was miscast as a helicopter pilot in the Gulf War. She pulled it off, and with an incredible array of male crew and castmates, notably Lou Diamond Phillips and Matt Damon. Her part of the story is told in flashbacks from different points of view, while the other part of the story is Denzel Washington's investigation of the incident that may or may not earn her a Medal of Honor. Scott Glenn, not incidentally, pitches in as a Washington Post reporter.
  • Proof of Life, returning to the miscast (NOT!) Meg Ryan as a woman whose husband (David Morse) is kidnapped by narco-terrorists in a fictional South American country. She works with a specialist in the kidnap-and-ransom (K&R) business, trained in military intelligence, special ops, and hard-core military machismo. That would be Russell Crowe.
Technically, I could have ended my binge here, but it's still too cold outside. Besides, I noticed something about my playlist: a lot of crossovers in both the cast and characters. This made it essential for me to watch that Timeless episode featuring Katherine Johnson and Silence of the Lambs featuring Jodie Foster, Scott Glenn, Diane Baker, and Anthony Heald.

Here are some of the obvious cross-overs:
  • The Right Stuff - Ed Harris (Apollo 13), Scott Glenn (Courage Under Fire, Silence of the Lambs), Pamela Reed (Proof of Life).
  • Hidden Figures - Katherine Johnson (character, Timeless), John Glenn (character, The Right Stuff).
  • Apollo 13 - Ed Harris (The Right Stuff), Gene Kranz (character, Timeless)
  • Forever Young and Deep Impact - Elijah Wood.
  • An Officer and a Gentleman - Taylor Hackford (director) and David Caruso (Proof of Life).
  • Contact - Jodie Foster (Silence of the Lambs), David Morse (Proof of Life), Tom Skerritt (Top Gun).
  • Courage Under Fire - Scott Glenn and Diane Baker (Silence of the Lambs), Meg Ryan (Proof of Life).
  • Proof of Life - Meg Ryan (Courage Under Fire), Taylor Hackford and David Caruso (An Officer and a Gentleman), David Morse  (Contact), Pamela Reed (The Right Stuff), Anthony Heald (Silence of the Lambs).
  • Silence of the Lambs - Jodie Foster (Contact), Scott Glenn (The Right Stuff and Courage Under Fire), Diane Baker (Courage Under Fire), Anthony Heald (Proof of Life).

Now I might go back to all my Jane Austen productions and other British dramas. Lots of cross-over casting there, notably with Downton Abbey.

Love, hosaa
hibernating

3D ready at A&S


Saturday, November 9, 2013

The Right Planets, and Stuff

Back from last night's "Off the Cuff" program at the Strathmore, wherein Baltimore Symphony Orchestra conductor Marin Alsop was joined by astrophysicist Mario Livio (her good buddy, she delighted to inform us!) to reflect on Gustav Holst's masterpiece, The Planets. The chat and slideshow went on about 20 minutes, followed by the BSO's thrilling execution of the work. The program repeats tonight at the Meyerhoff in Baltimore.

Marin Alsop. Credit: Grant Leighton, via WGBH
Mario Livio. Courtesy of MarioLivio.com

This was my first experience with the "Off the Cuff" program, which is designed to educate audiences a bit before immersing them into the music. It speaks to the interdisciplinarians among us, the liberal-arts majors who like to know everything about everything. Marin took us on a tour of the musical and mythical stories that Holst told through his seven planetary movements; Mario tutored us on the physical matters of planetary fact, including that one of the planets (Neptune, "the Mystic") was discovered purely through mathematics.

The performance was followed by a question and answer period, but we didn't stay for that. I did have a great question all prepared, but it turned out that the performance itself answered my question:

Why was the grandest, most awesomely stirring movement, "Jupiter, the Bringer of Jollity," stuck in the fourth position and not used as the ending of the suite? The very natural impulse of anyone experiencing this music (especially performed live in person by real human musicians) is to burst into loud, prolonged joyful cheers. Instead, Holst ends the suite with faint murmurings from the farthest rock from our Sun, "Neptune, the Mystic." The suite thus quietly fades out in the echoes of a celestial chorus (in this instance, the Women of the Baltimore Choral Arts Society).

Mario Livio contributed high-def images of our dramatis planetae, projected on a screen above the orchestra during the program. These included a caption shown toward the end of the "Neptune" movement reminding us that our own messenger to the cosmos, Voyager 1, has left our solar neighborhood. It carries our humanity with it into the unknown. Its next "stop," the nearest star system, is 10,000 years away.

Now the music makes sense: We are left with our innate wonder, awe, and imagination. Holst is a genius.

Prescient, too, Mario reminded the audience. Pluto was discovered some four years before Holst died, and he was asked if he would like to add a Pluto movement to the suite. He refused, and Pluto was later demoted anyway.

Another interesting point that Marin made about Holst's work was how evocative it was to later movie music makers like John Williams. She had her orchestra pull comparative samples from the opening of "Mars, the Bringer of War" and from the soundtrack of the original Star Wars. 

And of course, anyone who knows me knows my favorite movie in life is The Right Stuff, which captured my imagination aurally through the Academy Award winning soundtrack composed by Bill Conti. So here's my story:

About thirty years ago, my favorite movie in life became The Right Stuff, largely because of the glorious and inspiring music in the soundtrack. (Of course, Sam Shepard as Chuck Yeager was sexy as hell, so that didn't hurt, either.)

Sam Shepard, Barbara Hershey in The Right Stuff. Courtesy of PhilipKaufman.com
After the movie ran an abbreviated course in theaters, largely considered a failure (whether the movie killed John Glenn's presidential hopes or Glenn's politics killed audience interest in the movie can be debated by others), I went on a mission to find the soundtrack. It won an Oscar, demmit! It should be out there for me to buy!! No dice. I heard or read somewhere that Bill Conti was not satisfied with the score. Color me mystified.

Then one night, while falling asleep with the radio still tuned to my favorite classical music station, I sat bolt upright in bed when the theme from The Right Stuff started playing! OMG, Conti's soundtrack on classical music radio!

The rousing finish of the movement came and, yes, I probably did jump up and burst into a loud, prolonged, joyful cheer. That's what Bringers of Jollity do to you. The announcer then informed me that I'd been listening to a selection from Holst's The Planets.

Now, I always smile when, in the opening credits of Casablanca, Max Steiner's composer credential is accompanied by a quick theme from "La Marseillaise" in the soundtrack. We know Max Steiner is a movie musical genius, but he did not compose the French national anthem. Nor did Bill Conti compose any of the Holst themes--Jupiter, Venus, Mars--that were so seamlessly integrated into his Right Stuff score (rumor has it that this was not Conti's decision, but the producers'--probably explaining his dissatisfaction). 

Several years later, I did come across a symphonic rendition of themes from The Right Stuff paired with music from Conti's work for the TV miniseries North and South. I do recommend this 1990 disc. But I now learn that, just this year, a limited edition CD was released without the N/S tether, but with an exceptionally odd and disconcerting addition--a dance mix of the "Right Stuff" theme (see track 12). A single? Seriously? They were releasing this to radio? Pardon my WTF moment here.

Now back to Holst. You may notice that I didn't include a link to a recording of The Planets. This is where I pitch the live human musical experience as the only way it all makes sense. If you want to listen to it on your own, find some nice pictures of real live planets to look at. Enjoy, with awe and wonder, what your fellow humans create with their awe and wonder.

Courtesy of NASA.
Love, hosaa
awed, wondering

eta (Nov. 10): I couldn't resist - I purchased the digital album of Conti's The Right Stuff. It has more tracks than the version with North and South. I'm listening now. It's interesting how little there is on Conti's version of the score that is recognizable to someone who has seen the movie well over 25 times (probably closer to 50). This is like a "director's cut" of a movie--it's the artist's original conception.

Even the "Tango" cut on this was replaced in the movie. I didn't remember where it was used until I watched the movie again. It's in the last scene at the clinic where the astronaut prospects are undergoing medical tests. Tough Navy aviator Alan Shepard has just had some balloon inserted in his bladder and needs to get to the john before it is released and makes a mess. Very funny scene, because he's at the mercy of nursing aide Gonzales, whom Shepard had offended with his Jose Jimenez imitations.

Anyway, I think it would be fun to montage the scenes from the movie with Conti's music. (What, another non-Clay, non-futurist video project??? Can I have more hours, Madame Clock?) ~h

etaa - The "single" is still bizarre. I guess Conti thought they needed something to sell the album to MTV in 1983. Without liner notes, though, it's hard to tell.

Friday, July 24, 2009

The Right Sh- Stuff

or, A Clay Aiken Mashup!



The search for an American Idol was not unlike the search for astronauts a generation ago. A "mashup" featuring Clay Aiken and the casts of "The Right Stuff" and American Idol Season 2.

Academy Award winning music by Bill Conti; original film written for the screen and directed by Philip Kaufman. Montage by hosaa. Download more polished version from Megaupload.

love, hosaa
stargazing