Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

October Sky

 
Movies:

October Sky

  • Director: Joe Johnston
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Coming-of-Age, Family Drama
  • Themes: Fathers and Sons, Obsessive Quests
  • Main Cast: Jake Gyllenhaal, Chris Cooper, Laura Dern, Chris Owen, William Lee Scott
  • Release Year: 1999
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 108 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG

Plot

NASA engineer Homer H. Hickam, Jr.'s autobiography provided the basis for this drama about a teenager coming of age at the dawn of the space race. In 1957, Homer Hickam (Jake Gyllenhaal) is a high school student in Coalwood, West Virginia when the Soviet Union launches Sputnik, the first man-made satellite. While most of his friends and neighbors react with fear or distrust, Homer is instantly fascinated and begins studying everything he can find on jet and rocket design. While many of Homer's friends are puzzled by his new obsession, several new friends share his enthusiasm, and with the encouragement of his teacher (Laura Dern), Homer and his fellow "Rocket Boys" begin designing and launching their own homemade missiles. However, Homer's father (Chris Cooper) takes a dim view of his son's interest in rockets and is convinced Homer's future should be the same as his own, working in the local coal mines. October Sky mixes the drama of traditional family conflicts with a nostalgic glimpse of life in the mid-50's and a look at the earliest days of our journey into space. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Review

Joe Johnston's sentimental film, based on NASA engineer Homer Hickam's autobiographical The Rocket Boys, is a largely breezy, uplifting picture. A Stand By Me for space and science enthusiasts, the film features an excellent young cast, with Jacob Gyllenhaal, Chris Owen, and Chad Lindberg sharing the screen with veterans Laura Dern and Chris Cooper, the latter playing Homer's old-fashioned father with grit and feeling. The tear-jerking plot gathers strength by playing upon the viewer's emotions, and also benefits from its setting in a dim West Virginia mining town, which starkly contrasts with the film's lilting tone. The dark, coal-like tint suggests that the mining town is a virtually inescapable biosphere, a seemingly desolate reality that makes the film's conclusion all the more effective. Johnston's adaptation shores up the details of the book magnificently, moving from one plot point to the next in a free and easy fashion, making for a full-blooded and well-executed film. ~ Mike DiBella, All Movie Guide

Cast

Chad Lindberg - O'Dell; Natalie Canerday - Elsie Hickam; Scott Miles - Jim Hickam; Randy Stripling - Leon Bolden; Chris Ellis - Principal Turner; Elya Baskin - Ike Bykovsky; Terry Loughlin - Mr. Dantzler

Credit

Tony Fanning - Art Director, Nancy Foy - Casting, Betsy Cox - Costume Designer, Betsy Magruder - First Assistant Director, Joe Johnston - Director, Robert Dalva - Editor, Peter Cramer - Executive Producer, Marc Sternberg - Executive Producer, Mark Isham - Composer (Music Score), Barry Robison - Production Designer, Fred Murphy - Cinematographer, Charles Gordon - Producer, Larry Franco - Producer, Gary Pilkinton - Special Effects, Mary H. Ellis - Sound/Sound Designer, Joey DiGaetano - Special Effects Supervisor, Lewis Colick - Screenwriter, Jim Mitchell - Visual Effects Supervisor, Homer H. Hickam Jr. - Book Author

Similar Movies

Breaking Away; Dead Poets Society; Desert Bloom; Jack the Bear; Lucas; Radio Flyer; The Rocketeer; Stand by Me; This Boy's Life; Rudy; My Dog Skip; Race To Space; The Astronaut Farmer
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Album Review: October Sky
Top

  • Artist: Mark Isham
  • Rating: StarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: February 16, 1999
  • Total Time: 52:27
  • Type: Soundtrack
  • Genre: Soundtrack

Review

Sprinkled with period hits from Buddy Holly ("That'll Be the Day"), Fats Domino ("Ain't That a Shame"), and the Platters ("My Prayer"), the primary focus of the soundtrack to the space exploration-themed drama October Sky is Mark Isham's exquisite original score, which captures the cosmic wonder of the film's story without resorting to schmaltz. ~ Raymond McKinney, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Coalwood Mark Isham (2:02)
Sputnik! Mark Isham (1:09)
The Rocket Book Mark Isham (:55)
Ain't That a Shame (Lyrics) Dave Bartholomew, Fats Domino Fats Domino (2:24)
The Search for Auk 13 Mark Isham (3:28)
I Was Lucky to Know Him Mark Isham (2:34)
My Prayer (Lyrics) Jimmy Kennedy, Georges Boulanger The Platters (2:46)
That'll Be the Day (Lyrics) Buddy Holly, Norman Petty, Jerry Allison Buddy Holly (2:16)
It's a Thing of Glory Mark Isham (1:32)
I Won't Shed a Tear Mark Isham (3:14)
The Black Phone Mark Isham (:45)
The Dreams of Boys Mark Isham (2:34)
Searchin' (Lyrics) Jerry Leiber, Mike Stoller The Coasters (2:40)
Yakety Yak (Lyrics) Jerry Leiber, Mike Stoller The Coasters (1:50)
Cape Coalwood Mark Isham (:55)
Miss Riley Mark Isham (2:23)
Splitting the Sky Mark Isham (1:21)
Speedo Esther Navarro The Cadillacs (2:19)
I'll Be Gone Forever Mark Isham (:57)
Range and Altitude Mark Isham (1:38)
Rocket Boys Mark Isham (3:52)
This One's Yours Mark Isham (1:47)
October Sky Mark Isham (4:29)
It's All in the Game Carl Sigman, Charles Dawes Tommy Edwards (2:37)

Credits

Mark Isham (Producer), The Cadillacs (Performer), The Coasters (Performer), Buddy Holly (Performer), The Platters (Performer), Tommy Edwards (Performer), Fats Domino (Performer), Stephen Krause (Engineer), Stephen Krause (Mixing), Ken Kugler (Conductor), Charles Gordon (Executive Producer), Joe Johnston (Executive Producer), Lisa Sparagano (Design), Janice Hayen (Music Preparation)
Wikipedia: October Sky
Top
October Sky

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Joe Johnston
Produced by Larry J. Franco
Charles Gordon
Marc Sternberg
Written by Screenplay:
Lewis Colick
Book:
Homer Hickam
Starring Jake Gyllenhaal
Chris Cooper
Laura Dern
Music by Mark Isham
Cinematography Fred Murphy
Editing by Robert Dalva
Distributed by Universal Studios
Release date(s) February 19, 1999
Running time 108 min.
Country United States
Language English

October Sky is a 1999 film produced by directed by Joe Johnston, starring Jake Gyllenhaal, Chris Cooper and Laura Dern. It is based on the true story of Homer Hickam, a coal miner's son who was inspired by the first Sputnik launch to take up rocketry against his father's wishes, and eventually became a NASA scientist.

Contents

Title

"October Sky" is an anagram of "Rocket Boys", the title of the book on which the movie is based. It is also used in a period radio broadcast describing Sputnik as it crossed the "October sky". Homer Hickam' 'stated that women over 30 would not go to see a movie titled "Rocket Boys",[1] so Universal Pictures changed the title to be more inviting to a wider audience. The book was later re-released with the name October Sky in order to capitalize on interest in the movie. The movie takes place in the late 1950's after Sputnik is launched.

Plot

The film is set in Coalwood, West Virginia. The coal mine is the town's largest employer and almost every man living in the town works in the mines. John Hickam (Chris Cooper), the mine superintendent, loves his job and hopes that his boys, Jim (Scott Miles Ⅱ) and Homer (Jake Gyllenhaal), will one day join him in his mine. When it appears that Jim will receive a football scholarship to attend college, this leaves Homer to fulfill his father's dream, although his mother, Elsie (Natalie Canerday), hopes for more for her son.

As the townspeople gather outside one October night, they see the Soviet satellite Sputnik orbit across the sky. Filled with awe and a belief that this may be his chance out of Coalwood, Homer sets out to build rockets of his own and enter the science fair. Initially, his family and later his classmates think he has gone crazy, especially when he teams up with Quentin (Chris Owen), the school's math geek who has an interest in rocket science. With the help of his friends, Roy Lee (William Lee Scott) and O'Dell (Chad Lindberg), and support from their science teacher, Miss Riley (Laura Dern), the four try out their new passion. While their first launches are failures, they begin experimenting with new fuels and rocket designs. After several successful launches, they run into trouble with local authorities when they are accused of having started a forest fire several miles away with a rocket that had gone astray. That, along with Homer's father's lack of support or appreciation crushes the Rocket Boys' dreams.

After Homer's father emerges from the school, Roy Lee is seen getting beat up by his stepfather. John intervenes and rescues Roy Lee, warning the drunken stepfather that, even though Roy Lee's father is dead, he will beat him up as he would have for attacking Roy Lee. In a rare display of emotion, he tells Roy Lee that his father was one of the best men John ever knew, and was lucky to know him.

Meanwhile, after a disaster in the mine, Ike Bykofsky is killed and John is injured. Homer must drop out of High School and work the mine while his dad recovers.

Later, Homer is inspired to look at a rocket science book Miss Riley had given him, and learns how to calculate rockets' trajectories. This shows him that their lost rocket could not have caused the fire, as it was unable to travel as far as the site of the fire. Homer and Quentin recover the rocket in a stream just about where it should have landed. The boys visit the police station, and find that the offending projectile was not theirs at all, but a flare that must have come from a nearby airfield.

The Rocket Boys enter their rockets into school science fair and win. The school sends Homer to the national science fair in Indianapolis. Homer gets into a fight with his father that night, arguing what is happening to the town is not his fault at all. He later says that if he wins the science fair he will be able to go to college and pursue his dream of working at Cape Canaveral.

Homer goes to Indianapolis and enters the fair. His display goes over very well, but when he steps away for a moment, someone steals his display. Homer makes an urgent phone call home for help. His mother convinces Homer's father to end the ongoing strike so that Mr. Bolden could build a replica of the stolen display. Homer wins the top prize and is besieged with scholarship offers from colleges. He is also greeted, and congratulated, by his inspiration Wernher von Braun, but does not learn the scientist's identity until after von Braun is gone.

Homer returns to Coalwood a hero, and visits Miss Riley, who is now ill with Hodgkin's disease, in the hospital. He shows her the medal he has won, and she responds touchingly. A launch of the largest rocket yet is the last scene of the film. Homer's father finally shows up for a launch, and is given the honor of pushing the firing button. As the rocket streams upward, the film shows the view from the perspectives of many characters. In the end, a space shuttle is shown being launched.

A series of vignettes tells the later lives of the real characters upon which the movie was based.

Cast

Actor Role
Jake Gyllenhaal Homer Hickam
Chris Cooper John Hickham
Laura Dern Miss Frieda Riley
Chris Owen Quentin
William Lee Scott Roy Lee Cooke
Chad Lindberg Scalvin
Natalie Canerday Elsie Hickam
Randy Stripling Leon Bolden
Chris Ellis John Turner
Elya Baskin Ike Bykovsky
O. Winston Link Railroad engineer
Andy Stahl Jack Palmer

Differences from the movie and the book

  • In the book, Homer gets the autograph picture of Von Braun for Christmas. In the movie, he gets the picture for his birthday along with a chocolate bar.
  • In the book, Homer is 14. In the movie, he is 17.
  • Some of the characters in the book do not appear in the movie. For example, Sherman Siers from the book does not appear in the film.
  • Jimmie O'Dell Caroll and Sherman Siers from the actual story are combined into one character: Sherman O'Dell.
  • In the book, Homer's father's name is Homer Hickam Sr. In the film, it is John Hickam. It is also not mentioned in the film that Homer's name is Homer Hickam Jr.
  • In the book, Homer's nickname is Sonny. He is not called this in the movie.
  • Daisy Mae, the cat, does not appear in the movie.
  • In the movie, Homer drops out of school to work in the mine. In reality, Homer never dropped out of school.
  • In the book Jim has blond hair; in the movie, he has brownish hair.

Reception

The film was very well received by critics, with Roger Ebert giving it 3 1/2 out of 4 stars; and it has a 93% "Fresh" rating on review site Rotten Tomatoes based on 59 reviews[2].

References

External links



 
 
Learn More
The Fever of '57 (2007 Film)
Bubble Boy (2001 Comedy Film)
Jake Gyllenhaal (Actor)

When was the book October Sky published? Read answer...
Where is setting in October Sky? Read answer...
When is october sky taken place? Read answer...

Help us answer these
Symbols in October Sky?
What was true about the movie october sky?
What was the cost to make october sky?

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
Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music 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 "October Sky" Read more