Capricorn One
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| Capricorn One | |
|---|---|
| Image:Capricorn one.jpg Theatrical release poster | |
| Directed by | Peter Hyams |
| Produced by | Paul N. Lazarus III |
| Written by | Peter Hyams |
| Starring | Elliott Gould James Brolin Brenda Vaccaro Sam Waterston O. J. Simpson Hal Holbrook Karen Black Telly Savalas David Huddleston David Doyle James Karen |
| Music by | Jerry Goldsmith |
| Cinematography | Bill Butler |
| Editing by | James Mitchell |
| Distributed by | Warner Bros. |
| Release date(s) | June 2, 1978 (USA) |
| Running time | 123 min. |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $5,000,000 (estimated) |
| IMDb profile | |
Capricorn One is a 1978 thriller movie about a Mars landing hoax. It was written and directed by Peter Hyams and produced by Lew Grade's ITC Entertainment production company for Warner Bros.
Although thematically Capricorn One is a typical 1970s government-conspiracy thriller with similarities to Hyams's subsequent film Outland, the story was inspired by allegations that the Apollo Moon landings were a hoax.[1] A re-make is currently being planned called Capricorn Two.
Contents |
[edit] Plot
The setting is the late 1970s, and the first manned mission to Mars is on the pad ready to launch. NASA authorities (Holbrook) realize that a faulty life support system has doomed any chance of a successful flight, so for political and financial purposes they decide to fake the landing rather than scrub the mission.
Minutes before launch, the bewildered crew (Brolin, Waterston, and Simpson) is removed from the ship and flown to an old United States Army base deep within the desert. The televised launch proceeds on schedule, but the public is unaware that the spacecraft (Capricorn One) is unmanned.
At the remote Army base, the astronauts are informed they will fake the television footage from Mars and it is their patriotic duty to participate. Initially they refuse, but authorities imply their careers and the lives of their families are at stake if they do not cooperate.
The astronauts remain in captivity for a period of several months and are filmed "landing on Mars" within a studio located at the base. The conspiracy is known to only a select few NASA officials, but alert technician Elliot Whittier (Walden) stumbles across something absurdly impossible. The television transmissions are arriving ahead of the spacecraft telemetry. He speaks to a journalist friend Robert Caulfield (Gould) about his concerns.
When Whittier mysteriously disappears, Caulfield becomes suspicious and begins investigating the Mars mission, resulting in several attempts upon his life.
At the military base, the astronauts begin to realize that if the conspiracy is to remain intact, they will eventually have to be eliminated. The astronauts' suspicions become reality when their empty capsule burns in space during reentry. The captive astronauts immediately stage a daring escape and attempt to evade military forces in order to expose the conspiracy. Stranded in the desert, they try to make their way back to civilization while being pursued by a pair of helicopters.
In the end, Commander Brubaker (Brolin) is the only crew member to avoid capture. Caulfield's investigation leads him to the desert, where he finds the military base and the set, and with the help of a crop duster pilot (Savalas), he manages to save Brubaker. The film ends with Caulfield and Brubaker arriving at the astronauts' memorial service, exposing the conspiracy in dramatic fashion.
[edit] Cast
- Elliott Gould ... Robert Caulfield
- James Brolin ... Commander Charles Brubaker
- Sam Waterston ... Lieutenant Colonel Peter Willis
- O. J. Simpson ... Commander John Walker
- Hal Holbrook ... Dr. James Kelloway
- Brenda Vaccaro ... Mrs. Brubaker
- Karen Black ... Julie Drinkwater
- David Doyle ... Walter Loughlin
- Robert Walden ... Elliot Whittier
[edit] Trivia
- The cast is headed by Barbra Streisand's ex-husband Elliott Gould and her future husband James Brolin.
- The helicopters in the film were OH-6 Cayuse.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Colette Bancroft. "Lunar lunacy", St. Petersburg Times, September 29 2002. Retrieved on 2007-05-13.
[edit] External links
- Capricorn One at the Internet Movie Database
- Capricorn One memorable quotes
- Article comparing the film with its novelizations
- Dark Horizons, "Capricorn One gets a remake," February 9, 2007
- Film Junk, "Peter Hyams to remake Capricorn One", February 9, 2007
- Clint Morris, Movie Hole, "Capricorn TWO?" February 9, 2007
- Dwayne A. Day, The Space Review, "Little red lies", February 19, 2007
- CapricornTwo.comde:Unternehmen Capricorn
es:Capricornio Uno fr:Capricorn One he:קפריקורן 1 ja:カプリコン・1 ru:Козерог-1 (фильм) sv:Capricorn One th:แคปริคอร์นวัน

