The Right Stuff Movie Review
The Right Stuff Review
"The Right Stuff" Overview

Rating: PG
1983
Cast and Crew
Director : Philip KaufmanProducer : Robert Chartoff,Irwin Winkler
Screenwiter : Philip Kaufman
Starring : Sam Shepard,Scott Glenn,Ed Harris,Dennis Quaid,Fred Ward,Barbara Hershey,Kim Stanley,Veronica Cartwright,Pamela Reed
Fortuitous time for The Right Stuff to hit DVD, when the American space program
is nearing rock bottom in the court of public opinion.
Based on Tom Wolfe's novel (though heavily inspired by the truth), The Right
Stuff follows the formative years of the space race, from 1947 to 1963, when it
was us vs. the Russians. The film begins as we first punch through Mach 1 in
experimental aircraft and ends with seventh and final Mercury astronaut
blasting off.
Introducing our heroes: There's John Glenn (Ed Harris), the Boy Scout
do-gooder; the inseperable, troublemaking, womanizers Gordon Cooper (Dennis
Quaid) and Gus Grissom (Fred Ward); and Alan Shepard (Scott Glenn), the
wisecracking loner. Behind the scenes is Chuck Yeager (Sam Shepard), the
greatest pilot of them all and forced to sit out the space program for lack of
a college degree. He's a strangely tragic hero here (though Yeager's mass
media celebrity that has endured for half a century after makes it hard to feel
much pity for him just because he didn't go to space).
The Right Stuff is a film about victory, glory, and triumph in the face of the
most disastrous of defeats. It is of course an invaluable history lesson about
the space program, buttressed in popular culture only by Apollo 13 and the HBO
miniseries From the Earth to the Moon. The Right Stuff takes us through the
lows of the Mercury program -- from countless disasters to Yuri Gagarin's
victory to Grissom's "accidental" sinking of his capsule on splashdown -- to
the highs -- truly capturing the conflicting emotions when we finally made it
into space (after all, in the end it would all lead to the escalation of the
Cold War). The film lacks the grace and polish of its contemporaries: Thus
director Philip Kaufman (Quills) is forced to make do with archival footage and
focus on his characters instead of lavish effects. At three hours long, it's
one of the fastest-paced epics ever made.
The new DVD is a two-disc affair with plenty of good extras onboard.
Scene-specific commentaries from the cast, crew, and Yeager himself pepper the
second disc, and featurette documentaries with all of them are also available
(even Tom Wolfe makes an appearance). There's also a 90-minute PBS documentary
about John Glenn and an interactive feature detailing America's history with
the space program from 1961 to Columbia's final flight in 2003 (and beyond!).
Finally, 13 additional scenes (lacking any commentary and lasting about 10
minutes) add a little randomness to the film.
Reviewer: Christopher Null



