For All Mankind (1989) [The Criterion Collection #54 Reissue] [DVD + BluRay]

Posted By: Someonelse

For All Mankind (1989) [The Criterion Collection #54 Reissue]
Full BluRay 1:1 | 1080p MPEG-4 AVC @ 34799 Kbps | 01:20:06 | 41,37 Gb
Audio: English DTS-HD MA 5.1 @ 2859 Kbps + Commentary track | Subs: English
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DVD9 (VIDEO_TS) | NTSC 4:3 (720x480) | 01:19:59 | 7,39 Gb
Audio: English AC3 5.1 @ 448 Kbps + Commentary track | Subs: English
Genre: Documentary, History | USA

In July 1969, the space race ended when Apollo 11 fulfilled President Kennedy’s challenge of “landing a man on the Moon and returning him safely to the Earth.” No one who witnessed the lunar landing will ever forget it. Al Reinert’s documentary For All Mankind is the story of the twenty-four men who traveled to the moon, told in their words, in their voices, using the images of their experiences. Forty years after the first moon landing, it remains the most radical, visually dazzling work of cinema yet made about this earthshaking event.

IMDB
Criterion
DVDBeaver

Note! First five screenshots made from DVD; next five - from BluRay. All screenshots are enlargeable.

The heroic, historic Apollo moon missions that put human beings on the moon are boiled down, expertly capsulated, and presented as one in Al Reinert’s For All Mankind. It’s a stirring and ultimately poignant saga of passion, perseverance, and power and remains one of the most engrossing documentaries of human endeavor and achievement ever committed to film. Criterion released the film years ago (it’s #54 in their series), but this is a brand new high definition transfer with some appealing new bonus material giving the package added value. It is not to be missed.


Human history was changed forever when Neil Armstrong made those first steps on the lunar surface in July 1969, but there were many Apollo missions before Apollo 11 when he took that famous moonwalk, and this documentary gives equal time to other five missions which featured moon landings and exploration as well as other Apollo missions that involved testing various phases of the mission before the actual moon landing occurred. Director Al Reinert has elected to combine footage from all of the various Apollo flights and fashion a seamless moon trip from pre-flight to splashdown but using NASA footage from all of the missions in compiling his story.


Much of the footage in this compelling documentary has never before been seen, previous network television and film documentary seeming to dwell on the same few pieces of historic footage only. Thus, from the very start there is a freshness and vivacity to the imagery that’s immediately captivating. To keep concentration fully focused on the images, there are no subtitles identifying the various astronauts or missions (though the Criterion disc does has a switch that the viewer can turn on to identify the persons on-screen if he wishes). And thus, the mission with its breathtakingly powerful launch, the fun in space, the snafus, the moon escapades (including some mishaps there as well which could have been life threatening), and the return trip are all captured in a variety of color and black and white footage that is simply amazing.


Reinert also doesn’t use the talking heads approach to documentary filmmaking. The astronaut’s voices are heard on the soundtrack describing their movements, their memories, their joys and fears during the flight, but there is never anything inserted to draw attention away from the film footage which, in the director’s opinion, deserves to be seen without interruption. His decisions were certainly right on the money, too, because the film is as moving and impressive as it’s possible for such a short, concise film to be. The achievement of reaching the moon in less than a decade after President Kennedy threw down the gauntlet in 1961 still seems unbelievable, and when one remembers all of the civil unrest that our country went through in the years leading up to Armstrong’s unforgettable “one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind” declaration, the accomplishment today seems even more fantastic.
Matt Hough, Home Theater

Culled from thousands of hours of footage shot by NASA astronauts, almost all of which had never been seen before, For All Mankind returns the magic and wonderment to space travel, which has become all but mundane in the popular imaginary. By editing together bits and pieces from the nine Apollo missions that were launched between 1968 and 1972 (as well as a few shots from later Gemini missions), director Al Reinert has fabricated a seamless trip from the earth to the moon and back, a genuinely magisterial accomplishment that is presented as something both abstractly poetic and remarkably technical. Narrated with grace and heartfelt emotion by more than a dozen of the men who made the trip, the documentary is both exceedingly personal and decidedly epic, especially in the jaw-dropping footage of lift-off, which turns the fiery engines into a lyrical vision of raw, harnessed power.


In many ways, For All Mankind is the essence of a pure documentary in the way it presents a unique experience with as little overt and attention-grabbing manipulation as possible. All of the footage (with the exception of one fabricated shot of the moon seen through the portal of a rocket about to launch) was taken from the NASA film archives, making For All Mankind an assembly of found footage, albeit found footage of the highest order (as Reinert put it, space is the biggest location in cinema history). The images in the spacecraft and on the moon were shot by astronauts using 16mm data-acquisition cameras, and they provide a level of detail and clarity that is often missing from the clips we have seen on television over and over again (Reinert insisted on going back to the original camera magazines that NASA held in cold storage to ensure the best possible quality for 35mm blowup).


Various shots of the ground personnel, mostly chain-smoking, crew-cut men in bad ties, remind us that a trip to the moon is not just the realization of an ancient impulse, but also a technical triumph that represents a peak of human accomplishment that, despite its now familiar nature, is still outside most of our reaches. Footage of late-1960s and early-’70s command consoles and video monitors and large headsets have a certain archaic quality to them, yet their sheer girth and ingenuity still demand an impressed response. There are also astounding shots from inside the spacecraft that were captured automatically, and the fact that they are among the most beautiful in the film is ironic given that they were created for the purely practical purpose of ensuring that the engineers had a visual record of what happened in case anything went wrong. In this sense, For All Mankind is one of the great works of modern art in that it transforms the practical and the mechanical into something sensual and arresting.


Reinert avoids manipulating his found footage as much as possible. When there is extradiegetic music by ambient-synth pioneer Brian Eno laid over the images, it is subtly atmospheric in underscoring the mesmerizing nature of leaving earth’s orbit and entering a completely alien world, an experience that can be claimed by only a handful of human beings in the entire history of humankind. Mostly, though, the soundtrack is composed of a seamless interweaving of sounds recorded during the actual missions (the astronauts breathing, ground control going through various checklists, the often humorously casual give-and-take between those on earth and those in space) and the reminiscences of the two-dozen astronauts who have traveled to the moon and back. With the exception of a few opening title cards, there is no text on the screen during the film, not even names to identify the various astronauts and ground personnel. On the one hand, this denies us direct knowledge of who we are seeing at any given point (unless you can identify famous astronauts on sight or by the sound of their voices), but it also functions to shift us away from an informative focus on who’s who and instead concentrate our attention on both the collective nature of the accomplishment and the experience of space travel itself.


And what an experience it is. While there were films about space travel before Reinert’s film and many, many more since (including both documentaries like HBO’s From the Earth to the Moon and fictionalized docudramas like Ron Howard’s Apollo 13, both of which Reinert helped write), none have quite managed to capture the pure essence of what the experience must have been like. For Reinert, who began his career as a magazine journalist before stumbling into the NASA archives and becoming captivated by all the footage of space travel that no one had ever seen, the film is first and foremost about a journey, and it encapsulates with great power the wonderment of something that too many of us now take for granted.
James Kendrick, QNetwork

Disc Features:
- New, restored high-definition digital transfer, supervised and approved by producer-director Al Reinert (with DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 soundtrack on the Blu-ray edition)
- Audio commentary featuring Reinert and Apollo 17 commander Eugene A. Cernan, the last man to set foot on the moon
- An Accidental Gift: The Making of “For All Mankind,” a new documentary featuring interviews with Reinert, Apollo 12 and Skylab astronaut Alan Bean, and NASA archive specialists
- On Camera, a collection of excerpted on-screen interviews with fifteen of the Apollo astronauts
- New video program about Bean’s artwork, accompanied by a gallery of his paintings
- NASA audio highlights and liftoff footage
- Optional on-screen identification of astronauts and mission control specialists
- PLUS: A booklet featuring essays by film critic Terrence Rafferty and Reinert


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