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Première
Moonshot. The Flight of Apollo 11
Moonshot: l’uomo sulla luna
  • Synopsis
  • Executive Producer / Director
  • Guest Star

The Apollo 11 crew come together by chance. As one of the three, Michael Collins, later remarked the Apollo 11 crew were “amiable strangers”. Neil Armstrong, as commander, will fly the lunar module down to the surface of the Moon. The descent does not go smoothly. Armstrong spends about 15 minutes alone before Buzz Aldrin emerges to join him. But when they try to lift off to return to the command module, a circuit breaker connected to the ascent engine breaks. With everyone on tenterhooks (President Nixon has a speech prepared in case the mission goes fatally wrong), the astronauts manage to throw the switch by jamming the nib of a pen in it. Joyfully reunited – Collins even kisses them – the ‘amiable strangers’ make the long journey home. The world has watched their mission in awe. Appreciating the story for the first time from the perspective of a TV audience, Buzz Aldrin remarks poignantly to Neil Armstrong, “We missed the whole thing”.

Richard is a Director and co-founder of Dangerous Films. He has won and been nominated for several awards: "The Human Body" (BAFTA for Originality; San Francisco International Film Festival Silver Spire for Best Science and Nature Television; IDA nomination for Best Limited Series), "D-Day" (BAFTA nomination for Specialist Factual), "9/11: The Twin Towers" (EMMY nomination for Outstanding Made for Television Movie), "Rx for Survival: A Global Health Challenge" (News & Documentary EMMY: Outstanding Informational Programming), "Teachers" (BAFTA nomination for Best New Director). His other credits include "Walking with Cavemen", "The Iceman Murder", "Blackbeard", "D-Day" and "Diana: The Last Days of a Princess". His recent projects include "When We Left Earth: The NASA Missions" (Discovery Channel US), "Medical Frontiers" (BBC1) and "Rocket Men" (Sony International Pictures).

TV Filmography

2001
Teachers (1 ep.)
2003
Walking with Cavemen (4 ep.)
2004
D-Day 6.6.1944
2005
Rx for Survival: A Global Health
Challenge (mini-series)
2005
The Iceman Murder
2006
Blackbeard: Terror at Sea
9/11: The Twin Towers
2007
Diana: Last Days of a Princess
2008
When We Left Earth: The NASA Missions (1 ep.)
2009
Moonshot

Buzz Aldrin was born in Montclair, New Jersey on January 20, 1930. His mother, Marion Moon, was the daughter of an Army Chaplain. His father, Edwin Eugene Aldrin, was a Colonel in the Air Force, a ScD from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), and an aviation pioneer. Buzz was educated at the US Military Academy at West Point, graduating third in his class with a BS in mechanical engineering. He then joined the Air Force where he flew F86 Sabre Jets in 66 combat missions in Korea, shot down two MIG-15's, and was decorated with the Distinguished Flying Cross. After a tour of duty in Germany flying F100’s, he went on to earn his Doctorate of Science in Astronautics at MIT and wrote his thesis on Manned Orbital Rendezvous.
Selected by NASA in 1963 into the third group of astronauts, Aldrin was the first with a doctorate and became known as “Dr. Rendezvous.” The docking and rendezvous techniques he devised for spacecraft in Earth and lunar orbit became critical to the success of the Gemini and Apollo programs, and are still used today. He also pioneered underwater training techniques, as a substitute for zero gravity flights, to simulate spacewalking. In 1966 on the Gemini 12 orbital mission, Buzz performed the world’s first successful spacewalk, overcoming prior difficulties experienced by Americans and Russians during extra-vehicular activity (EVA), and setting a new EVA record of 5 ½ hours. On July 20, 1969, Buzz and Neil Armstrong made their historic Apollo 11 moonwalk, becoming the first two humans to set foot on another world. They spent 21 hours on the lunar surface and returned with 46 pounds of moon rocks. An estimated 600 million people – the world’s largest television audience in history – witnessed this unprecedented heroic endeavor.
Upon returning from the moon, Buzz was decorated with the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest American peacetime award. A 45-day international goodwill tour followed, where he received numerous distinguished awards and medals from 23 other countries. Named after Buzz are Asteroid “6470 Aldrin” and the “Aldrin Crater” on the moon. Buzz and his Apollo 11 crew have four “stars” on each corner of Hollywood and Vine streets on the renowned Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Since retiring from NASA and the Air Force, Col. Aldrin has remained at the forefront of efforts to ensure America’s continued leadership in human space exploration. He devised a master plan for missions to Mars known as the “Aldrin Mars Cycler” – a spacecraft system with perpetual cycling orbits between Earth and Mars. Dr. Aldrin has received three US patents for his schematics of a modular space station, Starbooster reusable rockets, and multi-crew modules for space flight. He founded Starcraft Boosters, Inc., a rocket design company, and the ShareSpace Foundation, a nonprofit devoted to advancing space education, exploration and affordable space flight experiences for all. Buzz also promotes his Rocket Hero brand launched in 2008 through his newest entity, StarBuzz LLC.
Dr. Aldrin has penned his dramatic memoirs in a new autobiography, "Magnificent Desolation", to be published by Harmony Books, a division of Crown Publishing, in July, 2009. He continues to inspire today’s youth with his illustrated children’s books: "Reaching for the Moon", a New York Times best-seller, and his latest, "Look to the Stars", a 2009 release. He has also authored two space science-fact-fiction novels: "The Return" and "Encounter with Tiber". His non-fiction works include the best-seller historical documentary, "Men from Earth", and an early 1970’s autobiography, "Return to Earth".
On Valentine's Day 1988, Buzz married Lois Driggs of Phoenix, Arizona. She is a Stanford University graduate, an active community leader in Southern California and Co-Chairman of StarBuzz Enterprises. Their combined family includes six adult children from previous marriages and one grandson. Sharing a similar passion for adventure, their worldwide business travels include leisure time ocean scuba diving and winter mountain skiing. As one of the leading space exploration advocates, Buzz continues to chart a course for future space travel from Planet Earth to the moon and on to the stars.

Synopsis

The Apollo 11 crew come together by chance. As one of the three, Michael Collins, later remarked the Apollo 11 crew were “amiable strangers”. Neil Armstrong, as commander, will fly the lunar module down to the surface of the Moon. The descent does not go smoothly. Armstrong spends about 15 minutes alone before Buzz Aldrin emerges to join him. But when they try to lift off to return to the command module, a circuit breaker connected to the ascent engine breaks. With everyone on tenterhooks (President Nixon has a speech prepared in case the mission goes fatally wrong), the astronauts manage to throw the switch by jamming the nib of a pen in it. Joyfully reunited – Collins even kisses them – the ‘amiable strangers’ make the long journey home. The world has watched their mission in awe. Appreciating the story for the first time from the perspective of a TV audience, Buzz Aldrin remarks poignantly to Neil Armstrong, “We missed the whole thing”.

Executive Producer / Director

Richard is a Director and co-founder of Dangerous Films. He has won and been nominated for several awards: "The Human Body" (BAFTA for Originality; San Francisco International Film Festival Silver Spire for Best Science and Nature Television; IDA nomination for Best Limited Series), "D-Day" (BAFTA nomination for Specialist Factual), "9/11: The Twin Towers" (EMMY nomination for Outstanding Made for Television Movie), "Rx for Survival: A Global Health Challenge" (News & Documentary EMMY: Outstanding Informational Programming), "Teachers" (BAFTA nomination for Best New Director). His other credits include "Walking with Cavemen", "The Iceman Murder", "Blackbeard", "D-Day" and "Diana: The Last Days of a Princess". His recent projects include "When We Left Earth: The NASA Missions" (Discovery Channel US), "Medical Frontiers" (BBC1) and "Rocket Men" (Sony International Pictures).

TV Filmography

2001
Teachers (1 ep.)
2003
Walking with Cavemen (4 ep.)
2004
D-Day 6.6.1944
2005
Rx for Survival: A Global Health
Challenge (mini-series)
2005
The Iceman Murder
2006
Blackbeard: Terror at Sea
9/11: The Twin Towers
2007
Diana: Last Days of a Princess
2008
When We Left Earth: The NASA Missions (1 ep.)
2009
Moonshot

Guest Star

Buzz Aldrin was born in Montclair, New Jersey on January 20, 1930. His mother, Marion Moon, was the daughter of an Army Chaplain. His father, Edwin Eugene Aldrin, was a Colonel in the Air Force, a ScD from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), and an aviation pioneer. Buzz was educated at the US Military Academy at West Point, graduating third in his class with a BS in mechanical engineering. He then joined the Air Force where he flew F86 Sabre Jets in 66 combat missions in Korea, shot down two MIG-15's, and was decorated with the Distinguished Flying Cross. After a tour of duty in Germany flying F100’s, he went on to earn his Doctorate of Science in Astronautics at MIT and wrote his thesis on Manned Orbital Rendezvous.
Selected by NASA in 1963 into the third group of astronauts, Aldrin was the first with a doctorate and became known as “Dr. Rendezvous.” The docking and rendezvous techniques he devised for spacecraft in Earth and lunar orbit became critical to the success of the Gemini and Apollo programs, and are still used today. He also pioneered underwater training techniques, as a substitute for zero gravity flights, to simulate spacewalking. In 1966 on the Gemini 12 orbital mission, Buzz performed the world’s first successful spacewalk, overcoming prior difficulties experienced by Americans and Russians during extra-vehicular activity (EVA), and setting a new EVA record of 5 ½ hours. On July 20, 1969, Buzz and Neil Armstrong made their historic Apollo 11 moonwalk, becoming the first two humans to set foot on another world. They spent 21 hours on the lunar surface and returned with 46 pounds of moon rocks. An estimated 600 million people – the world’s largest television audience in history – witnessed this unprecedented heroic endeavor.
Upon returning from the moon, Buzz was decorated with the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest American peacetime award. A 45-day international goodwill tour followed, where he received numerous distinguished awards and medals from 23 other countries. Named after Buzz are Asteroid “6470 Aldrin” and the “Aldrin Crater” on the moon. Buzz and his Apollo 11 crew have four “stars” on each corner of Hollywood and Vine streets on the renowned Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Since retiring from NASA and the Air Force, Col. Aldrin has remained at the forefront of efforts to ensure America’s continued leadership in human space exploration. He devised a master plan for missions to Mars known as the “Aldrin Mars Cycler” – a spacecraft system with perpetual cycling orbits between Earth and Mars. Dr. Aldrin has received three US patents for his schematics of a modular space station, Starbooster reusable rockets, and multi-crew modules for space flight. He founded Starcraft Boosters, Inc., a rocket design company, and the ShareSpace Foundation, a nonprofit devoted to advancing space education, exploration and affordable space flight experiences for all. Buzz also promotes his Rocket Hero brand launched in 2008 through his newest entity, StarBuzz LLC.
Dr. Aldrin has penned his dramatic memoirs in a new autobiography, "Magnificent Desolation", to be published by Harmony Books, a division of Crown Publishing, in July, 2009. He continues to inspire today’s youth with his illustrated children’s books: "Reaching for the Moon", a New York Times best-seller, and his latest, "Look to the Stars", a 2009 release. He has also authored two space science-fact-fiction novels: "The Return" and "Encounter with Tiber". His non-fiction works include the best-seller historical documentary, "Men from Earth", and an early 1970’s autobiography, "Return to Earth".
On Valentine's Day 1988, Buzz married Lois Driggs of Phoenix, Arizona. She is a Stanford University graduate, an active community leader in Southern California and Co-Chairman of StarBuzz Enterprises. Their combined family includes six adult children from previous marriages and one grandson. Sharing a similar passion for adventure, their worldwide business travels include leisure time ocean scuba diving and winter mountain skiing. As one of the leading space exploration advocates, Buzz continues to chart a course for future space travel from Planet Earth to the moon and on to the stars.

Locandina

International Title: Moonshot: l’uomo sulla luna
Title: Moonshot. The Flight of Apollo 11
Origin: UK, 2009
Producer: Dangerous Films Production for ITV, The History Channel, TF1, Prosieben & BBC Worldwide
Format: TV Movie
Runtime: 90'
Broadcast: Summer 2009
Network: ITV1, The History Channel, TF1, Prosieben, NTV Japan, The History Channel Italy - Italian Broadcaster: The History Channel, La7
Director: Richard Dale
Editorial supervision: Jovita Groblyte
Photography: Paul Jenkins, Richard Ganniclifft (additional)
Art director: Tim Goodchild
Costume: Rasa Taujanskiene
Editing: Peter Parnham
Music: Richard Blair Oliphant
Special Effects: Allen Zepp
Website: www.bbc.co.uk

Cast:

Daniel Lapaine Neil Armstrong
James Marsters Edwin ‘Buzz’ Aldrin
Andrew Lincoln Michael Collins
Edwin ‘Buzz’ Aldrin Himself


Research: Dan Parry