The Right Stuff (1983)
| Director: | Philip Kaufman |
|---|---|
| Starring: | Sam Shepard Scott Glenn Ed Harris Dennis Quaid Fred Ward |
| Year of release: | 1983 |
| Running time: | 185 Min. |
| Age restriction: | ALL |
| Category: | Adventure Drama History Recommended |
Philip Kaufman’s intimate epic about the Mercury astronauts (based on Tom Wolfe’s book) was one of the most ambitious and spectacularly exciting movies of the 1980s. It surprised almost everybody by not becoming a smash hit. By all rights, the film should have
The Right Stuff chronicles NASA’s efforts to put a man in orbit. Such an achievement would be the first step toward President Kennedy’s goal of reaching the moon, and, perhaps most important of all, would win a crucial public relations/morale victory over the Soviets, who had delivered a stunning blow to American pride by launching Sputnik, the first satellite. The movie contrasts the daring feats of the unsung test pilots–one of whom, Chuck Yeager, embodied more than anyone else the skill and spirit of Wolfe’s title–against the heavily publicised (and sanitised) accomplishments of the Mercury astronauts. Through no fault of their own, the spacemen became prisoners of the heroic images the government created for them in order to capture the public’s imagination. The casting is inspired; the film features Sam Shepard as the legendary Yeager, Ed Harris as John Glenn, Dennis Quaid as “Gordo” Cooper, Scott Glenn as Alan Shepard, Fred Ward as Gus Grissom, Scott Wilson as Scott Crossfield, and Pamela Reed and Veronica Cartwright are superb in their thankless roles as astronauts’ wives.
Awards: Won 4 Oscars. Another 5 wins & 11 nominations


