There are some priceless scenes that had me rolling, and it's all due to the great script and lines delivered by great actors. The 2nd thing that won me over was something many thrillers overlook: HUMOR. Hyams frequently does a neat little trick where he establishes a shot and leaves the camera where it is but slowly, over the course of 2 minutes or more, moves the camera in or out of the action, creating a thick suspense. Many other shots are as powerful, whether they're outdoors or indoors. First is the careful, artistic approach to cinematography which is evident in the opening scene: a slow rusty sunrise behind the colossal silhouette of the Capricorn spacecraft. You have to ride it out to the very last scene. The director never telegraphs the ending, so you're never quite sure if things will turn out good or if it'll be a miserable tragedy. "Capricorn One" won't necessarily scare the pants off you like some of the other films, but the story will definitely keep you on the edge of your seat wondering what's going to happen. But this is not a sci-fi flick, it's closer to a political thriller. It's best if you know nothing about the story, so I won't say anything about the plot except that it centers around a mission to Mars. But if you're looking for a film that slowly reels you in without any gimmicks, carefully building momentum for the 1st hour leading to an explosive, roller-coaster finale, then look no further. If you get bored easily, then this isn't for you. No, the 70s classics, in particular "Capricorn One" and other films by Peter Hyams, instead give you long, deliberate shots from a distance, allowing you to absorb every bizarre detail that was meticulously laid out for you. This quiet yet bone-chilling style is the opposite of MTV-type filmmaking which made heavy use of flashy, closeup, disorienting camera shots cut together so quickly that you feel like someone slipped some magic pixie dust in your Kool-Aid. Stylistic examples include wide angle shots and slow, mechanical camera movements that give the viewer a disturbing feeling of voyeurism or disconnection from humanity (à la "Open the pod bay doors, Hal." "I'm sorry, Dave, I'm afraid can't do that."). Perhaps taking their cues from Stanley Kubrick (2001: A Space Odyssey, Clockwork Orange, etc), all of these classics are presented with an artistic, slightly off-kilter, brightly creepy vibe that encapsulated the end of 60s flower-power optimism and the beginning of 70s cold cynicism. Hyams went on to direct Sean Connery in 1981's OUTLAND and Jean-Claude Van-Damme in TIMECOP and SUDDEN DEATH."Capricorn One" is one of the last great 70s thrillers, alongside "The China Syndrome", "The Andromeda Strain", "Coma", heck maybe even "The Exorcist". Topped off by a great score by the late Jerry Goldsmith, with cinematography by Bill (JAWS, ROCKY) Butler, CAPRICORN ONE is a classic suspend your disbelief yarn, with plenty of great moments, with great performances from Elliott Gould and David (CHARLIES ANGELS) Doyle, plus two great supporting performances in Karen Black as Gould's reporter colleague and Telly Savalas as the cynical but determined crop pilot Albain. However, a real-life problem in the mission causes Kelloway to rethink the plan - and the trio of spacemen have to survive somehow. Kelloway proposes an alternative - to fake the landing on a soundstage at the base and get them to participate in the scam. James Kelloway (Hal Holbrook) that their life-support system has been subjected to budget compromises and that they would be dead three weeks after launch. Taken to a disused army based, they are told by Head of Space, Dr. Astronauts Charles Brubaker (James Brolin, father of Josh), Peter Willis (Sam Waterston, father of Katherine) and John Walker (OJ Simpson) are interrupted during the course of preparation for blast off and advised to leave the capsule. Produced by Lew Grade's ITC company, which went south due to the big-budget failure of RAISE THE TITANIC, prompting Lord Grade to comment 'It would have been easier to lower the Atlantic, the film told of the first manned mission to Mars. Hyams created his script in the shadow of Watergate, based on the principle that some people didn't believe the Moon Landings happened. 40 years on from it's original release, Peter Hyams' CAPRICORN ONE remains one of the most sterling examples of sci-fi thrillers - and one of the seminal offerings from the decade of the 1970s
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