Metacritic Film

In the Shadow of the Moon

Starring Buzz Aldrin, Alan Bean, Eugene Cernan, Michael Collins, Jim Lovell, Edgar D. Mitchell, and Harrison Schmitt

MPAA RATING: PG for mild language, brief violent images and incidental smoking

ThinkFilm
Documentary
100 minutes | Color
UK
Released In Theaters September 7, 2007

Between 1968 and 1972, nine American spacecrafts voyaged to the Moon, and 12 men walked upon its surface. They remain the only human beings to have stood on another world. In the Shadow of the Moon brings together for the first--and possibly the last--time the surviving crew members from every single Apollo mission that flew to the Moon, and allows them to tell their story in their own words. This riveting first-hand testimony is interwoven with visually stunning archival material that has been remastered from the original NASA film footage--much of it never used before. The result is an intimate epic that vividly communicates the daring, the danger, the pride, and the promise of this extraordinary era in history, when the whole world literally looked up at America. (THINKFilm)

DIRECTED BY
David Sington

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

84 / 100

Critic Reviews

100 Entertainment Weekly
In the Shadow of the Moon finds new resonance in the moment when America redefined progress -- but also when it heeded the siren song of a world so desolate it reminded you what a paradise ours truly is.
100 TV Guide
By turns awe-inspiring and deeply human.
100 Chicago Sun-Times
These astronauts are still alive, but as long as mankind survives, their journeys will be seen as the turning point -- to what, it is still to be seen.
100 Philadelphia Inquirer
Quite simply, a revelation.
100 Baltimore Sun
It's both irrefutably concrete and irresistibly uplifting.
91 Christian Science Monitor
After seeing this film, try reading Norman Mailer's "Of A Fire on the Moon," its perfect companion piece.
90 Wall Street Journal
This magnificent documentary, directed by David Sington and presented by Ron Howard, rises to the occasion by interspersing its interviews with NASA footage that evokes the grandeur of the whole Apollo adventure.
90 Los Angeles Times
The riveting documentary In the Shadow of the Moon, is an unexpected knockout.
90 The Hollywood Reporter
The value of this film, not just to moviegoers today but to future generations, is simply enormous.
90 Salon.com
May well be the most exciting documentary of the year so far. I guess it took a British director, David Sington, to capture the story of the dozen American men who walked on the moon -- the only human beings in our species history yet to visit another celestial body.
90 New York Magazine
I came out giddy, feeling lighter--by about five-sixths--than I did when I went in.
90 Washington Post Joel Achenbach
Now, finally, we know what it was like to walk on the moon: unbelievably cool. Amazing. Fantastic. Scary.
89 Austin Chronicle
The story (even more so if you weren't around in July of 1969) is gripping, eloquent, and powerful stuff, the right stuff right down to its pioneering heart, taking manifest destiny to the stars themselves.
88 Miami Herald
Seeing the Earth from the point of view these men saw it -- ''like a jewel hung in the blackness'' -- tends to put things in perspective.
88 New York Post
It's a stirring reminder of a time when anything seemed possible - these American heroes boosted morale eroded by the Vietnam War, as well as bringing the whole world together to celebrate their success.
88 USA Today
One small documentary for a filmmaker and one giant leap in inspiration for audiences.
83 Seattle Post-Intelligencer Gianni Truzzi
By 2020, when NASA's Orion lunar spacecraft is scheduled to launch, it's unlikely that any Apollo veterans will still be alive. Sington has done us a service in helping preserve their memories.
83 Portland Oregonian
It ends on a random note, making an awkward plea for better ecological stewardship of the Earth, which looked so small and frail to the astronauts regarding it from the moon. But otherwise it's a satisfying and heartening reminder of what a glorious thing a small group of men once contrived to do.
80 Empire Ross Bennett
This wonderful documentary succeeds as a reminder of human endeavour.
80 The New York Times
In the Shadow of the Moon is such a morale booster. The power of its archival images hasn’t diminished with familiarity.
80 The New Yorker
Bean, a lovely guy with a touch of Mickey Rooney, is one of the stars of Sington’s rousing show. There was something unearthly, in every sense, about the astronauts in their prime.
80 Chicago Reader
The astronaut interviews are fun and occasionally moving, but the real reason to see this is the remastered archival footage, some of it previously unseen and all of it spectacular.
80 Film Threat Jamie Tipps
A surprisingly fresh take on familiar material.
80 Newsweek
As we watch the astonishing NASA footage, they eloquently evoke the optimism, anxiety and excitement of those voyages.
80 Variety
The excitement, majesty and extraordinary human accomplishment of the American lunar program of the '60s and early '70s is rousingly captured in In the Shadow of the Moon.
80 Village Voice Jim Ridley
In the Shadow of the Moon recalls the wondrous moment when America had the entire world looking up, up, and not away.
75 Rolling Stone
Want to know what the “right stuff” really is? Take a look.
75 Chicago Tribune
It has the air of an officially sanctioned tribute rather than a probing study, but it's stirring all the same.
75 San Francisco Chronicle Leba Hertz
For those of us too young, this will give you an idea of what it meant to watch those baby steps that led to one giant leap.
75 The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
Sington's smartest decision was to let 10 of the astronauts speak for themselves. The film juxtaposes their personal stories, both their doubts and machismo, with the titanic achievement of the lunar landings.
75 ReelViews
There's more to the film than nostalgia; it also offers insight, and that's what makes it worth viewing on the big screen rather than waiting for its Discovery Channel premiere.
75 Boston Globe Mark Feeney
It's so simple, so obvious - and a revelation.
75 New York Daily News
And oh, what stories these heroes have to tell - and what incredible sights they brought back with them.
58 The Onion (A.V. Club)
There's none of the poetry of "For All Mankind," just visual support for a meat-and-potatoes recap of events that have already been chewed over plenty.

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