All The Right Movies Profile picture
Jun 30 38 tweets 24 min read Read on X
APOLLO 13 was released 30 years ago today. One of the most popular films of Tom Hanks, and a huge hit on its release, the tale of how the film came to the screen is worthy of the extraordinary real life mission…

1/36 Image
Image
Image
Image
In 1994, “Lost Moon: The Perilous Voyage of Apollo 13” published, written by Jeffrey Kluger and astronaut Jim Lovell. It was an account of Lovell’s experiences aboard Apollo 13, a spaceflight that malfunctioned leaving the crew in a fight for survival to get back to Earth.

2/36 Image
Image
Image
A bidding war was sparked between Hollywood studios before the book was even published, and Ron Howard’s Imagine Entertainment won the rights. Howard took it to Universal and pre-production started, with Howard as director.

3/36 Image
Image
Jim Lovell had known of the potential of a movie adaptation and liked the idea of Kevin Costner playing him. As such, screenwriters William Broyles Jr and Al Reinert wrote the script with Costner in mind as Lovell.

4/36 Image
Image
Image
Image
Howard wasn’t interested in Costner. John Travolta asked if he could play Lovell, but Howard wasn’t interested in that, either. Knowing Tom Hanks was an Apollo space mission buff, he sent him the script. Hanks liked it and accepted the role.

5/36 Image
Image
When Hanks joined the cast, the real Lovell sent him a telegram saying “Welcome aboard Apollo 13.” And Lovell’s wife, Marilyn, has said Hanks’ mannerisms in the film are exactly like the real Jim.

6/36 Image
Image
Hanks wanted the film to be accurate to the smallest detail. One day, he dragged Howard and producer Brian Grazer out of bed so to watch an astronaut crew in action. Howard was not happy when he realised Hanks just wanted to watch walk across a parking lot.

7/36 Image
Image
Ron Howard wanted Gary Sinise in the film and said he had his pick of any of the astronauts aside from Lovell. He chose Ken Mattingly, the astronaut left behind due to German measles. Sinise said he chose that character as the crew wouldn’t have got home without him.

8/36 Image
Image
John Cusack, Charlie Sheen and Michael Keaton were all considered as astronaut Fred Halse before Howard screen tested Bill Paxton and decided to go with him.

9/36 Image
Image
Image
Image
In casting the youngest member of the crew Jack Swigert, Val Kilmer turned the part down. Brad Pitt turned the part down to make Se7en. Howard asked Kevin Bacon, and he accepted.

10/36 Image
Image
Image
Image
Ed Harris initially turned down the part of Flight Director Gene Kranz as he didn't see what he could bring to the part. Howard called him and passionately explained the importance of the character, and Harris accepted.

11/36 Image
Image
With the cast in place, Howard had John Sayles do rewrites based on his and Hanks’ feedback. Sayles brought in personal elements like the scenes with Lovell's mother in the nursing home.

12/36 Image
Image
The writers took some lines directly from mission transcripts. With the line “Houston, we have a problem” what happened was Swigert said “Okay Houston, we’ve had a problem here.” When control asked him to repeat Lovell said “Houston, we’ve had a problem.”

13/36 Image
Image
Howard later said some commenters had criticised the “hokey, Hollywood moment” when Marilyn Lovell loses her wedding ring. However, this actually happened, and Marilyn said she recovered the ring.

14/36 Image
Image
Image
It was a family affair for Ron Howard. His brother, Clint Howard, played the role of flight controller Seymour Liebergot. His father played a priest, his mother played Jim Lovell's mother, and his wife and daughter (Bryce Dallas Howard) were crowd members.

15/36 Image
Image
There some issues. The cost of the spacesuits went over budget to $30k each and 3 days of production were lost when the software which controlled the monitors in the Houston control room crashed and wouldn’t work properly.

16/36 Image
Image
In the film, Jim’s daughter Barbara is upset because of the breakup of the Beatles, which happened three days before the mission. Howard was refused the rights to The Beatles though, so Barbara listens to Jimi Hendrix instead.

17/36 Image
Image
Image
Another musical reference, the crew plays Spirit in the Sky after the launch. In real life they actually listened to Also Sprach Zarathustra from Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey. The film also inspired the name of their command module, Odyssey.

18/36 Image
Image
Image
At the Lovells' Apollo 11 landing party, Pete Conrad jokingly congratulates Lovell, Haise and Mattingly for their jobs as Apollo 11 backup crew. In real life, Lovell and Haise were the backups for Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin for the iconic moon landing.

19/36 Image
Image
The Time Magazine 'Men of The Year' cover we see is a real magazine, covering Apollo 8 orbiting the moon. However, it has been edited, replacing the original image of Lovell with one of Tom Hanks. The other astronauts are unchanged.

20/36 Image
Image
The Senator questioning Lovell about the cost of the space program is played by played famous producer Roger Corman. Corman gave Howard his break in films by producing Howard’s first feature as director, Grand Theft Auto.

21/36 Image
Image
The Mission Control set was a carbon copy of the original. Howard wanted to film in the original Mission Control room in Houston, now a historic landmark. Unfortunately, it was too small to be used for a film production.

22/36 Image
Image
Image
Production designer Michael Corenblith and his team took precise measurements of every part of the room and replicated it in Hollywood. One of the real flight controllers, Jerry Bostick, left the set one day looking for the elevator, forgetting it wasn’t real.

23/36 Image
Image
Image
To simulate weightlessness in the module, Howard thought about using wires and harnesses, until his pal Steven Spielberg suggested he look into the KC-135, a NASA-owned plane that creates zero gravity by manoeuvring 45 degrees up and then plummeting.

24/36 Image
Image
Filming in the zero-gravity plane could only happen in 25 second bursts. The plane performed 612 dives, giving filmmakers 54 minutes of footage in a weightless environment. For some scenes the actors sat on see-saws that created an illusion of no gravity.

25/36
The plane was given the nickname “The Vomit Comet.” Fred Haise really did throw up in space from the effects of a virus. They created this using Beef-a-Roni for vomit. And, after losing a bet with Hanks, Paxton ate what was left in the can.

26/36 Image
Image
There was some great miniature and models effects work done on the film too.

27/36
Astronaut Tom Jones was a consultant on the film. He told Howard the argument between Haise and Swigert would never happen, but Howard said "in showing a tense moment in a film, we can only show a sweaty forehead so many times".

28/36 Image
Image
Ron Howard says Apollo 13 is his favourite film of his, and the launch the sequence he’s most proud of: "I think as a filmmaker, that might be the most cinematic thing I've done." After seeing the film, Buzz Aldrin asked him Howard if NASA could use footage of the launch.

29/36 Image
Image
Image
In some scenes where Earth can be seen from the windows of Apollo 13, Howard used real photos taken by Lovell and Bill Anders on the Apollo 8 mission. When Lovell saw the film, he found it so convincing, he thought Howard had uncovered secret NASA footage.

30/36 Image
Image
Image
Image
Ed Harris said he based his portrayal of Gene Kranz's reaction to the astronauts' survival on an interview with the real Kranz who, even decades later, started to break down when he talked about it.

31/36 Image
Image
The Captain of the U.S.S. Iwo Jima who shakes hands with Lovell is played by the real Jim Lovell. Howard asked Lovell if he'd like to be in the film as the ship's Admiral and Lovell agreed but "I retired as a Captain; a Captain I will be" and wore his old uniform.

32/36 Image
Image
After a test screening, an audience member left a comment card which said the film treat the audience with "total disdain" with its "typical Hollywood" ending. “Terrible. More Hollywood BS. They would never survive” the card said.

33/36
On a budget of $52m, the film grossed a whopping $355m so was a huge success. It was the number one film in the United States for three weeks and nominated for 9 Oscars. Ron Howard’s most successful movie.

34/36 Image
Image
Image
Image
Things turned out okay for the two Jim Lovell’s too. Because it was shown in the film, the real Lovell’s checklist book sold for $388,375 in a 2011 auction. And in 1996, Tom Hanks had an asteroid named after him – the 12818 Tomhanks (1996 GU8).

35/36 Image
Image
To finish, some great behind the scenes pics from Apollo 13…

36/36 Image
Image
Image
Image
If you liked our story on the making of APOLLO 13, please share the opening post😀
Our latest podcast is on THE BRIDGE ON THE RIVER KWAI. Full of big laughs and opinions so please give it a listen😀
alltherightmovies.com/podcast/the-br…

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with All The Right Movies

All The Right Movies Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @ATRightMovies

Jul 1
NORTH BY NORTHWEST was released 66 years ago today. Acclaimed as one of the great thriller movies and among Alfred Hitchcock’s best, the making of story will have you doubting your own identity…

1/36 Image
Image
Image
Image
Following on from his huge success with psychological thriller Vertigo in 1958, Alfred Hitchcock said he wanted to do "something fun, light-hearted, and generally free of the symbolism permeating his other movies" for his next project.

2/36 Image
Image
At the same time, MGM had hired writer Ernest Lehman to adapt a novel called The Wreck of the Mary Deare, with Hitchcock as director. When Lehman got stuck with the screenplay, Hitchcock said to him "I have this other idea ..."

3/36 Image
Image
Read 38 tweets
Jun 30
WILLY WONKA & THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY was released 54 years ago today. One of the most beloved family films ever made and among the most popular works of Gene Wilder, the making of story is like entering a world of pure imagination…

1/57 Image
Image
Image
Image
In 1964, children’s author published what would be one of his most popular novels. Charlie And The Chocolate Factory is the story of a young boy’s adventures inside a magical chocolate factory with its eccentric owner, Willy Wonka. It was an instant hit.

2/57 Image
Image
In the late 1960s, director Mel Stuart’s ten-year-old daughter, Madeline, read the book, loved it, and told her father he should make a film of it. On reading the book, Stuart agreed, and took the idea to Hollywood producer David L. Wolper.

3/57 Image
Image
Read 59 tweets
Jun 27
LABYRINTH was released 39 years ago today. An 80s fantasy classic and childhood favourite of millions, the behind the scenes story is as outrageous as the Goblin King.

1/35 Image
Image
Image
Image
In the early 1980s, fantasy illustrator Brian Froud and Muppets creator Jim Henson talked about working together. Of the many ideas they had, the one that stuck was an image of “a baby surrounded by goblins" as Froud later put it.

2/35 Image
Image
Image
Henson and Froud hired children's author Dennis Lee to write a novella. They hired Monty Python member Terry Jones to write a script based on the novella as Henson’s daughter was a big fan of Jones’ Erik The Viking.

3/35 Image
Image
Image
Read 37 tweets
Jun 26
FULL METAL JACKET was released 38 years ago today. A classic Vietnam War film as well as one of Stanley Kubrick’s most popular works, the behind the scenes story is typically Kubrick…

1/39 Image
Image
Image
Image
Following The Shining, Stanley Kubrick was interested in making a war film. Looking for source material he read many novels and came across Gustav Hasford’s The Short-Timers. Kubrick called it "a unique, absolutely wonderful book" and decided to adapt it.

2/39 Image
Image
Image
Kubrick contacted author and Vietnam veteran Michael Herr. Herr wasn’t interested in revisiting his war experiences, and Kubrick spent three years persuading him. Kubrick said the discussions were "a single phone call lasting three years.”

3/39 Image
Image
Read 41 tweets
Jun 25
BLADE RUNNER was released 43 years ago today. Acclaimed as one of the greatest science fiction movies ever made, and among director Ridley Scott’s greatest films, the story behind the scenes might have you taking the Voight-Kampf test…

1/40 Image
Image
Image
Image
Philip K. Dick’s science fiction novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? was published in 1968. It attracted immediate interest from filmmakers. Martin Scorsese wanted to adapt it for the big screen but never optioned it.

2/40 Image
Image
Image
Producer Herb Jaffe did take out an option on it in 1972 and his son, Robert Jaffe, wrote a screenplay. Dick hated the script and said to Jaffe “Shall I beat you up here at the airport, or shall I beat you up back at my apartment?”

3/40 Image
Image
Read 42 tweets
Jun 25
THE THING was released 43 years ago today. Regarded as a pinnacle of science fiction-horror moviemaking as well as one of John Carpenter’s greatest films, the story of how it came to the screen is as outrageous as the creature from the title…

1/37 Image
Image
Image
Image
Development of the film began in the mid-70s when producers David Foster and Lawrence Turman wanted to adapt the novella Who Goes There? Which had been adapted in 1951’s The Thing from Another World. Universal bought the rights for Foster and Turman to produce.

2/37 Image
Image
Image
Turman and Foster’s choice as director was John Carpenter. The studio said no, though, as they already had Tobe Hooper under contract. Tobe Hooper had directed The Texas Chainsaw Massacre in 1974, so had previous success in horror.

3/37 Image
Image
Read 39 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(