Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Countdown

 
Movies:

Countdown

  • Director: Robert Altman
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Sci-Fi Action, Space Adventure
  • Themes: Space Travel
  • Main Cast: James Caan, Joanna Moore, Robert Duvall, Barbara Baxley, Charles Aidman
  • Release Year: 1968
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 102 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: NR

Plot

Improvisational director Robert Altman hadn't yet found his cinematic "voice" when he helmed the conformist, stick-to-the-script Countdown. James Caan is top-billed as a scientist who is chosen over astronaut Robert Duvall for the upcoming NASA moon shot. In their haste to beat the Russians to the moon, the NASA folks have tried to sidestep several safety measures, but doctor Charles Aidman sees to it that every possible precaution is taken. When Caan makes it to the lunar surface, he stumbles upon gruesome evidence that the Russians had sent up a secret expedition themselves--and had fatally ignored all those extra security precautions which he's been subject to. Ted Knight, who received some of his best pre-Mary Tyler Moore roles in Altman's TV work, co-stars in Countdown. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Cast

Steve Ihnat - Ross Duellan; Stephen Colt - Ehrman; Charles Irving - Seidel; Ted Knight - Larson; Robert Altman; Michael Murphy - Rick; Bobby Riha - Stevie; John Rayner - Dunc

Credit

John S. Poplin - Art Director, Jack Poplin - Art Director, Robert Altman - Director, Gene Milford - Editor, William Conrad - Executive Producer, Leonard Rosenman - Composer (Music Score), William W. Spencer - Cinematographer, William Conrad - Producer, Ralph S. Hurst - Set Designer, Jack Poplin - Set Designer, Loring Mandel - Screenwriter, Hank Searls - Book Author

Similar Movies

The Andromeda Strain; Fail-Safe; Solaris; Apollo 13; 2010; Mission to Mars; Marooned
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Countdown (1968 film)
Top

Countdown is a 1968 film directed by Robert Altman, based on the novel The Pilgrim Project by Hank Searls.

Contents

Synopsis

Set during the space race between the United States and the Soviet Union, the two nations are in a tight race to be the first to land men on the moon.

Within the United States effort there is another competition: whether the first American on the moon will be a former military officer or a civilian. Chiz (Duvall) doubts that Lee Stegler (Caan) can do the job, but grudgingly agrees to push Lee's training along.

NASA puts a habitat shelter onto the moon, with a bright light shining from it. Lee is to fly a modified Gemini space capsule, set up to support a single astronaut instead of two, to the moon, where he will spot the shelter from orbit, then activate an automated landing program. He will make his way across the lunar surface, enter the shelter and wait there for Apollo to land, then return to Earth with Apollo. If there'll be a further delay sending Apollo, another shelter will be sent for Lee to move to. In either case, it means a long, lonely stay, isolated from the rest of humanity by a distance greater than nine times the circumference of the Earth; Earth will be virtually motionless in the sky, and his only "light" during each two-week period of lunar night.

The Russians launch a manned landing mission, and Lee is rushed to the launch pad. As his craft nears the moon, engine problems cause a battery drain, affecting his radio, and he is very reluctant to shut off systems and sleep his way to the moon. Once there, through watering eyes, he is having difficulty spotting the habitat, and is to allow free-return trajectory if he can't positively spot it. He thinks he sees it and engages the landing sequence. Chiz has misgivings.

Lee's capsule lands safely, but he is unable to communicate with Earth because a tall rock outcrop is between him and Earth in the moon's sky. He disembarks and begins to cross the moon's surface, looking for the shelter. NASA will know he's made it when he enters and activates it, and Lee has approximately two hours.

Lee finds the Soviet spacecraft, half-buried in the surface, its cosmonauts dead, one with an open visor. He takes time to honor his fellow space travelers, burying them and laying out the flags of both their countries, then continues his trek in search of the shelter. With time running low, he takes out a rubber mouse his son Stevie lent him, and lets it twirl on its string for a random choice of which way to walk, then sets off in that direction.

He has less than four minutes before his oxygen pressure starts dropping. He is about to throw in the towel when a red light flashes across his visor and the rocks. He turns to look and finally sees the shelter, just as a NASA official tells the press that the two hours is nearly expired and the shelter has not yet been activated. As the closing credits roll, Lee makes his way toward the shelter that will be his home for an unknown length of time.

Cast

Other credits

External links


 
 
Learn More
Europe in America 1 (1988 Music Film)
recycle (aerospace engineering)
Forever 80s (2006 Album by The Countdown Singers)

How can I countdown until spring 2009? Read answer...
Who sings the final countdown? Read answer...
How long is a countdown for a rocket launch? Read answer...

Help us answer these
What is the setting in countdown?
What rhymes with countdown?
How countdown conundrums can there be?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Countdown (1968 film)" Read more