| Database of Movie Dialogs |
Full transcript in English language[John F. Kennedy] We choose to go to the moon. We choose to go to the moon... We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard. We set sail on this new sea... because there is new knowledge to be gained... and new rights to be won, and they must be won and used... for the progress of all mankind. We shall send to the moon, 240,000 miles away... from the control station in Houston, a giant rocket... more than 300 feet tall, made of new metal alloys, some of which have not yet been invented, capable of standing heat and stresses... several times more than have ever been experienced, fitted together with a precision better than the finest watch, carrying all the equipment needed for propulsion, guidance, control, communications, food and survival, on an untried mission... to an unknown celestial body. And, therefore, as we set sail, we ask God's blessing on the most hazardous... and dangerous and greatest adventure on which man has ever embarked. Thank you. [Alan L. Bean] Just like a person waiting in the wings to go on stage, they probably have less time to daydream... because they're trying to remember what they've gotta do. You know, I had the feeling I really ought to concentrate on remembering... the things that I had to do at the moon and all that. [Charles M. Duke, Jr.] Gosh, here we are, and we're gettir down close. I hope the suit checks out okay. You get sweaty palms... and heart starts pounding. It's like the big game about to start. [Richard F. Gordon, Jr.] You're in your work clothes, ready to go to work. But you still have to stay there. You have to schedule it in conjunction with the booster schedule itself. You're plugged into a console that's supplying 100% oxygen. There's kind of a catch-up time... if there's a problem with the booster or something, we're there at the pad until the count gets to a certain point, and then we're called to proceed to the spacecraft. [Woman] Y'all take care, now. Godspeed, men. [T. Kenneth Mattingly, II] At the last minute, there was a psychological block there... that said, "Don't count on this so heavily. It might not happen." This is such a big thing. I frankly don't see how you can do it. Even when participating in it, I think it's audacious that you would try. I clearly could never understand, as a crewman, how to make it work. I could only learn how to operate my share of it. Beir command pilot, I was sittir in the center seat, so that meant I climbed in last. I just stood around and waited till they strapped in. And here was kind of a strange quiet. You can look out and you can see a large part of the state... and the ocean and this thing out here. You have the feeling that it's alive. That's the kind of thing that sort of, for the first time, begins to bring home the fact... that today is not the game we've been playing in training for years. This is reality. I had the only window at this point, and I looked out, and doggone if the moon wasrt visible in the daylight... right straight out the top of the window. I know they're doir their job, because the moors right ahead... and that's where we're pointed. They're just gonna launch us right straight to this thing. [Public Affairs Officer] This is Apollo Saturn Launch Control. All still go on the Apollo mission... the flight to land the first men on the moon. The spacecraft also now is on full internal power. Up to this time, it had been sharing the load with an external power source. Once we get down to the three minute and ten second mark in the countdown, we'll go on an automatic sequence. All aspects from there on down will be automatic, run by the ground master computer here in the firing room. We have some 7.6 million pounds of thrust pushing the vehicle upward, a vehicle that weighs close to six and a half million pounds. [Mattingly] We all are in this together as a team effort. We're gonna make it work. And I don't know how to make it work. I don't know how to do most of this mission. But I do know that I can assure you that my piece of it is gonna work, and it won't fail because of me. [PAO] The members of the launch team here in the control center... are monitoring a number of what we call red line values. These are tolerances we don't want to go above or below... in temperatures and pressures. They are standing by to call out any deviations from our plans. The supervisor has informed launch vehicle testing you are go for launch. Three minutes, 25 seconds and counting. We are still go at this time. [Mattingly] There's a long period of time... when you've done all the things you can, and there are few things left to say. You don't know any new jokes to tell. There's just not much left to say except just sit there and wait. [Air To Ground/ Mission Control] And it feels good. [PAO] Astronauts report it feels good. One minute, 25 seconds and counting. Our status board indicates the third stage completely pressurized. Guidance system goes on internal at 17 seconds, leading up to the ignition sequence at 8.9 seconds. Power transfer is complete. Firing command coming in now. We are on the automatic sequence. T minus 60 seconds and counting. We're on internal power with the launch vehicle at this time. All the second stage tanks now pressurizing. Thirty-five seconds and counting. [Mattingly] It won't fail because of me. [PAO] T minus 20 seconds and counting. Guidance internal. 15, 14, 13, 12, 11, 10, 9, engines on, five, four, three, in two, launch commit. [Air To Ground/ Lunar Module Pilot] Yahoo! [Mattingly] It feels just like it sounds. [AG/MC] I got a pitch and a roll program and this baby is really goir. Roger that. Stand by for mode one bravo. Mark one bravo. That's a lovely liftoff. That's not bad at all. [James R. Irwin] There's a moment there just of supreme elation, a complete release of tensions. To feel all that power precisely directed, to know that we're on course, first of all for Earth orbit, and then precisely inserted onto the right orbit, the right trajectory, for rendezvous with the moon. [AG/Capcom] Apollo, Houston. You're right smack dab on the trajectory. Your I.U.'s doir a beautiful job. [AG/MC] I got a yaw program. [AG/CC] Trajectory's good. Thrust is good. [AG/MC] We're on our way, Houston. [Irwin] At last, I'm leaving the earth, and I'm destined for the moon. [AG/LMP] What a ride. What a ride. [AG/CC] Roger. We copy, Pete. [AG/MC] Roger. Looks good up here too. Roll's complete. [AG/LMP] This is really a rockir rollir ride. [Stuart A. Roosa] You can feel it shake. There's a real strong vibration. Of course, you're up at the end of this beauty. Here you are, going along with the G on ya. It's up to about four Gs, but you're psyched up, good shape and all that. Even liftir your arm to move switches... no problem. [AG/CC] Apollo, you are go for staging. [Roosa] Here you are comir up on staging, and when staging happens, it's, like, man! [AG/MC] We got skirt step. And that's for ignition, Houston. - [AG/CC] Thrust is go. - [AG/MC] Roger. [AG/CC] Trajectory, guidance, C.M.C. Are all go. [AG/MC] Thank you, Joe. [AG/CC] Houston, you're lookir good here, right down the center line. [PAO] That was shutdown right on the money. 17 Houston, you are go for orbit. [PAO] And we're out over the Canaries. [AG/CC] Apollo, Houston through the Canaries. How do you read? [AG/MC] Loud and clear, Houston. Over the Canaries. [AG/MC] Boy, it's just beautiful up here lookir out the window. It's just really fantastic. [AG/CC] Roger. [AG/MC] Let me tell ya a little bit about the ride. [AG/CC] Uh, John, this is Houston. If there's nothir startling to report about the ride, we'd rather hold off. [AG/MC] No, there's nothing really different to report on the ride. We'll hold off on that. [AG/MC] The sunset is just as beautiful as always in this business. [Mattingly] In Africa, there are a lot of nomads out in the desert. Clear desert nights, you see the fires from all of these... these little yellow dots that represent the fires... from all these nomads camping out. And you realize the broad area you're looking at. And each of those little dots represented people... other humans that are out there in an environment... I would consider more strange than they might think about... me. [Duke] When you get there into orbit, the engines shut down and things sorta feel sorta funny. And you sorta unbuckle your seat belt... and wiggle around in your seat or tap your toes... and all of a sudden you're just bodies everywhere in the room... and you're just doir flips and can'twheels and spins. [Eugene A. Cernan] Your first feelings of weightlessness as it hits you... is like going down a country road about 60 miles an hour, And then you get over the bump, and you get that good sensation feeling... and then, boom, you're back down again. Only when you're in space and you go into weightlessness, you go over that bump and you never come down. [AG/CC] Uh, 12 Houston, your program alarm was an integration problem. Can you give us a verb 96 to stop your integration... and we'd like you to do an E mod dump. Give us a 3-2-1 mark when you do your verb 74, and if we get it done now, we should have an answer for ya on your erasable memory... by the time you get to Guaymas. Do a verb 96 first. [Mattingly] We had a great deal of difficulty... paying attention to what our job was. Already I was getting the impression... that this is such an amazing thing that I'm gonna forget these things. I know I'm going to lose this image. It's going to be replaced with another. Each image came up, was there for a flash to be appreciated and savored... and then let go because you know it's gonna be superposed with others. [AG/LMP] And, Houston, we're beginning to see a beautiful sunrise here. [AG/CC] Okay. We're giving you a go for your E.V.A. At this time. [AG/LMP] Okay. The hatch is open. No sweat. Ah, it stayed just where I wanted it. Dave, come on out wherever you are. [Russell L. Schweickart] When you're outside in one of those spacesuits, you're really in space. There are no boundaries to what you're seeing. It's like having a goldfish bowl over your head... which gives you unlimited visibility. And then the portable life support system is just very, very quiet. You know, there's a water pump in it that's circulating water... through your underwear... you know, cooling water. And there's a fan that's pumping the oxygen through, but they're very quiet. You can't hear them at all. It's as if you're out there without anything on. [AG/LMP] Hallelujah. Hallelujah, Houston. [Schweickart] There's a total complete silence and that beautiful view... and the realization, of course, that you're going 25,000 miles an hour. You recognize that you're not there because you deserve to be there. You were just lucky. You're the representative of humanity at that point in history... having that experience, in a sense, for the rest of mankind. [AG/CC] The flight director says get back in. [PAO] Apollo Control Houston. Two hours, 25 minutes ground elapsed time. It will be during this pass that we will have the translunar injection burn. [Dean Krantz] Capcom, we're go for T.L.I. Roger. Guys, I've got the word you wanted to hear. You are go for T.L.I. You're go for the moon. [Mattingly] If there's anything to be remorseful about on going to the moon, it was you didn't get to spend as much time around the earth as you'd like... because there's an awful lot of very interesting things to see. [AG/MC] Three, two, one, ignition. [AG/CC] We confirm ignition, and the thrust is go. You guys are really haulir the mail out of there. [AG/MC] Boy, you'd better believe it. It's like we're climbing straight up. It's a fantastic sight. Just like we were shot straight up. [AG/CC] Uh, you're goir about 6,000 feet a second. [PAO] Their present altitude is now about 3,000 miles, and the spacecraft moving at nearly 35,000 feet per second. These three crew members... are traveling faster than any man has ever flown before. [James Lovell, Jr.] There's not much sensation of what's really happening... except we're looking at the computer and the computer is adding up the velocity, and suddenly we really knew that we were really traveling. And shoot, when that engine lit off, it was on for a long time. [AG/MC] Shutdown. [Lovell] But it really hit us when it stopped, and we turned around and looked at the earth. Suddenly, the earth had started to shrink. [AG/CMP] Hello, Houston. You'd have to see this planet to believe it. [AG/LMP] This is just so you guys don't get too excited... and forget what your job is down there. [AG/CC] We're ready for what we're about to receive. [Frank Sinatra On Tape] # Fly me to the moon # # Let me play among the stars # # Let me see what spring is like # # On Jupiter and Mars # # In other words # # Please be true # # In other words # # I love you ## which you could listen to music. We were allowed to carry a personal cassette so you could play the music. Mine was country music. [Man On Tape] Hi, this is Buck Owens from the Buckaroos. We came down to the studio and thought we'd put together a little thing... that you could take along with you on your trip. Now when you get back, they're probably gonna put you in the movies, so the first thing we're gonna do for ya... is to play a little song called "Act Naturally." It goes like this: # They're gonna put me in the movies # # They're gonna make a big star out of me # # Well, we'll make a scene about a man that's sad and lonely # # And all I gotta do is act naturally # # Well, I'll bet you I'm a-gonna be a big star # # You might win an Oscar You can never tell # # The movies are gonna make me a big star # # 'Cause I can play the part so well # # Well, I hope you'll come to see me in the movie # # And I know that you're gonna plainly see # # Mmm, the biggest fool that's ever hit the big time # # And all I gotta do is act naturally # By the way, you know we're makir this tape, and they're goir to the moon. They're on their way to the moon right now. Oh. [AG/CC] Hey, anybody up there read me? This is Houston. [Roosa] You don't think of it as Texas or the United States. You really think of it as Earth. The three things that I associated with Earth... were people and green trees and fresh water. [Man On Tape] This is different for me. My name is Merle Haggard, and this is my band, the Strangers. I hope we will be able to do somethir you'll enjoy on your way to the moon. And of course, we hope that you come back, but we want you to leave this tape there, okay? We want this tape to be out of sight. # Someday when our dream world finds us # # And these hard times are gone # # We'll laugh and count our blessings # # In a mansion all our own # # If we both pull together # # Tomorrow's sure to come # # Someday we'll look back # # And say # # It was fun # [Roosa] When you get ready to eat, they'll say right on there, "Command Module Pilot, day three, meal two." So you take that packet out, and you may have two drinks... and three or four different types of food in there. So you've gotta find a spot to stick these, or they're gonna float off. And then you've gotta get the water gun. You gotta mix up the drinks and mix up the food... and knead 'em around... and not let everything float off in the interim. # And someday # # We'll look back and say # # It was fun # # Someday # # When our dream world finds us # [Duke] The only bad part about zero gravity in Apollo... was goir to the bathroom. We had a very crude system. For your feces, it was a bag, and you'd put this bag in the right position. So you go, but nothir goes to the bottom of the bag in zero gravity. Everything floats. So you've got this bag and then the problem... is gettir it off and closir up the bag, makir sure everything's still in the bag. # Someday # # We'll look back and say # # We had a good time on the way to the moon, didn't we ## [AG/Command Module Pilot] Are you still planning to have TV at the scheduled time? [AG/CC] Right. You can go ahead with the TV now. We're standing by. [AG/LMP] Hello, Houston. We've got a beautiful view of the earth here... that is absolutely fantastic. [PAO] We're standing by at this time to receive... the first TV transmission from the spacecraft. [AG/CMP] Houston, we're now showing you a view of the earth... through the telephoto lens. This transmission is coming to you... approximately halfway between the moon and the earth. [AG/LMP] It makes you realize just what you have back there on Earth. The earth from here is a grand oasis in the big vastness of space. [AG/MC] I keep imagining, if I'm some lonely traveler from another planet, would I land on the blue or the brown part of the earth? [AG/CMP] Okay, world. Hold on to your hat. I'm gonna turn ya upside down. [PAO] The spacecraft at the present time... is in a slow roll as part of the passive thermal control program... to maintain temperatures. [Cernan] You have to, literally, just pinch yourself... and ask yourself the question, silently, "Do you really know where you are at this point in time and space... and in reality and in existence?" When you look out the window and you're lookir back... at the most beautiful star in the heavens... the most beautiful because it's the one we understand, and we know it... it's home, humanity, people, family, love, life. And besides that, it is beautiful. We can see from pole to pole and across oceans and continents, and you can watch it turn and there's not strings holding it up. And it's movir in a blackness that is almost beyond conception. [AG/CC] Rog, how's that tape recorder? Is the R.P.M. Up to nominal? [AG/CMP] Yeah. It works pretty good here in zero G. It works better than it does down there on the ground. We're ready for the news now. [AG/CC] Okay. Let's see. The Beatles have announced they will no longer perform as a group. The quartet is reported to have made in excess of a half billion dollars... during their short musical career. Rumors they will use this money to start their own space program are false. That's about it for news. A recap of how the top ten teams did yesterday: Ohio State beat Purdue, 42 to 14, Texas beat T.C.U., 69 to 7. Tennessee lost to Mississippi. Final score on that one was 38 to nothing. Notre Dame won over Georgia Tech last night, 38 to 20. And, of course, Purdue lost to Ohio State. [Cernan] When the sunlight shines through the blackness of space, it's black, but I was in sunlight, and I was able to look at this blackness. I mean, what are you looking at? Call it the universe, but it's the infinity of space and time. I'm looking at something called space, that had no end, and at time, that has no meaning. You can really focus on it... because you got this planet out there... this star called Earth... which itself is in this blackness, but it is lit up... because the sunlight strikes on an object... strikes on something called Earth. And it's not a hostile blackness. Maybe it's not hostile because the beauty of the earth... that sort of gives it life. [Mattingly] Throughout the flight, the times when one could sit back... and really appreciate what an amazing adventure this was... was only during those little periods of time... when you had a chance to stop and do the things you werert programmed to do. A lot of times, when there was nothing else to do... or after everybody'd gone to sleep and I couldn't, I'd open up the window and look around. One thing every spacecraft ought to have is a huge window. Looking back at the earth was a pastime that I never really got tired of. [AG/CC] Uh, who've we got up now? [AG/MC] The other two guys are pretty sleepy. They sacked out again, so I'm holdir the fort down for a while. [PAO] Biomedical data recently was monitored, and the C.M.P. Was soundly asleep... while the commander was resting... but perhaps not soundly asleep. [AG/CC] We got the black watch watchir you tonight. [AG/MC] You picked the midnight shift, I see. [AG/CC] Yeah, it's turnir out to be kind of quiet too. [AG/MC] We like it that way. [Bean] When you're out there in this little command module, you see the risk you're taking because you realize... that, if the glass breaks or the computers quit workir... or the electrical system quits workir, you're not gonna get back. And you have time to contemplate this. You have time to think about it. And you have time to run it through your mind a lot of different times. [AG/MC] How far away from Earth now, Jim... about? [AG/MC] It looks like you're approaching 150,000 miles. [AG/CC] Frank, we had a little egg nog over at Charlie Duke's tonight. Val Anders dropped by. She's lookir fine. Tell Bill she's doir real well. [AG/MC] Rog, thank you. [John L. Swigert, Jr.] Everything that I know... my family and my possessions, my friends, my country. It's all down there on that little thing, and it's so insignificant in this great big vastness of space. [PAO] Here in Mission Control, the coffee cup... has become an appliance... second only to the headset... in usefulness here. [PAO] Let's, uh, cycle through some of our consumables... and other items this morning, and I'll tell you what we see. And all this looks quite nominal. [AG/CC] Lights, camera, action. We'll show you some of the type meals that we have on Earth. Matter of fact, on this flight, we've carried along pieces of bread. And along with the bread... we have a ham spread. And I'll show you, I hope, how easy it is... to spread some ham... in the environment of zero G. I think we've discovered that it is quite easy to... [AG/CC] That's great. You all ought to set this to music. Oh, you want music? ## [Theme From 2001] This little tape recorder has been a big benefit to us... in passing for the time away in our transit onto the moon. And it's rather odd to see it floating like this, in odyssey, while it's playing... the theme from 2001. - [AG/CC] We've lost our picture. - What the... [AG/MC] Okay, Houston. We've had a problem here. I got three fuel cell lights, an A.C. Buss light, fuel cell disconnect, A.C. Buss overload one and two, main buss A and B, out. [AG/CC] This is Houston. Say again, please. [AG/MC] Gang, I don't know what happened here. We had everything in the world drop out. [AG/MC] We are venting something. [AG/CMP] I don't think this is gonna be a simple problem. [PAO] We have an apparent serious problem... with a leak in the cryogenic oxygen in the service module... which provides breathing oxygen for the crew. [AG/CC] Apollo, Houston. Try S.C.E. To auxiliary, over. [AG/CMP] N.C.E. To auxiliary. [AG/CC] S.C.E. S.C. E to auxiliary. [Krantz] Okay. Let's make sure we don't do anything... that's going to blow our C.S.M. Electrical power with the batteries... or that will cause us to lose fuel cell number two. [AG/CC] On panel 276 under instrumentation and power control, open C.B. Number three and number four. Close ascent feed one and two circuit breakers. Cycle the Parker valves, and then open the S.M.C. Circuit breakers on panel 11. [AG/CMP] Hey, it's off. It's off. [AG/CC] That sounds beautiful, troops. That's exactly what we wanted to see. [AG/CMP] Charlie, my hats off to the guys in the trench. I love 'em. [AG/CC] And, by the way, welcome to the moors sphere. You're in the influx. [Bean] One of the things different about a lunar trip... is you don't pass anyplace on the way. Going to the moon, you leave the launchpad, then you leave Earth orbit. And then a couple of days later, after passing nothing, all of a sudden, you're at the moon. And that lack of way points, to me, had an effect of making it seem a little magical and mystical getting there. [AG/CMP] This is really a rugged planet. [PAO] We're drawing close to the moon with the Apollo spacecraft. Our L.O.S. Clock, our loss of signal clock, continues to count down until that time... that the spacecraft will pass out of communications range... over the backside of the moon. On approach, the spacecraft just sort of dives towards... and behind the moon. [Michael Collins] It was a totally different moon than any moon I had ever seen before. It was in this eery shadow. No motion. Utterly silent. It sort of gave one a feeling of foreboding. It didn't seem like a very friendly or welcoming place. [AG/CC] Apollo, this is Houston. You are go for L.O.I. [AG/MC] Go ahead, Houston. [AG/CC] Jim, you are go for the burn. Go for the burn. [AG/MC] Okay. Apollo is go. [Roosa] You're going too fast to orbit the moon. You're rockir on ready. [AG/CMP] Okay. Two minutes, babe. Give it a final trim. Burn time is 15 seconds, so it's gonna go in a hurry. [Roosa] You're in the burn position. You're ready to go. [AG/CMP] Baby, let's make this one. - [Roosa] Then there it is. - [AG/CMP] Thirty-five seconds. [Roosa] It's 2001 type stuff. That old moors just growir magnificently fast, and it's just fillir up that hatch window... and you're driftir into the shadow. [AG/CMP] Okay, baby. Eight, seven, six, five, three, two, one. Burn. Burn. [AG/CC] You're burnir. Okay. Seventy-eight to go, 50 to go, 20 to go. - Standby, Tom. - [AG/CMP] Shut down. [AG/LMP] Oh, beautiful, beautiful. [AG/MC] Apollo, Houston. You got the burn off. We're in good shape. [AG/MC] Boy, I tell you. We is down among them. We is going backwards. You know that? [Roosa] You've worked so long and so hard, and finally you're here. The burn has gone well. You know you're in lunar orbit. You know the orbit is good. You're right where you wanted to be. And it just looked like you could reach out and touch it. [PAO] Apollo now traveling over the backside of the moon. The crew should be seeing the features, the rugged features, moving below them at a high rate of speed. [AG/CMP] Charlie, we just saw Earth rise and it's gotta be magnificent. Charlie, it might sound corny, but the view is really out-of-this-world. [AG/MC] Dave, you ought to start gettir your hatch closed. [AG/CMP] Say again. [AG/MC] Start gettir your hatch closed if you're not already doir it. [Gordon] I was disappointed. I wanted to go with them so bad I could taste it. As far as I was concerned, that's what it was all about... not only goir to the moon, but goir down to the surface and walking. [PAO] We're now less than two minutes away from the separation burn, which will be performed by the command module. When we next hear from them, the lunar module... should be undocked from the command and service module. [AG/CMP] You'll never know how big this thing gets... when there ain't nobody but one guy. [AG/LMP] Yeah. Don't get lonesome out there, John. [Gordon] I wish I could go down there with 'em. You may not talk about it much, but part of your training is comir back by yourself. [AG/CMP] See you later. [Gordon] I wish the damn thing would hold three people. [PAO] It's grown quiet here in Mission Control. A few moments ago, Flight Director Gene Krantz... requested that everyone sit down, get prepared for events that are coming, and he closed with, "Good luck to all of you." [AG/MC] We's go and we's down among 'em, Charlie! [AG/CC] Rog, I hear ya weavir your way up the freeway. [AG/MC] You're goir right down U.S. 1, Mike. [AG/CC] Rog, copy. Looks great. [Krantz] Okay, all flight controllers, go, no go for landing. Retro. - Go. - Econ. - Go. - Surgeon. - Go. - Fido. - Go. - Guidance. - Go. - Telcom. - Go. - G.N.C. - Go. - We're go for landing. [AG/CC] Eagle, Houston. You are go for landing, over. [AG/MC] Okay, Houston. We'll give you a countdown. Four, three, two, one. Fire. [AG/LMP] Pitch over. There it is. Oh, baby. [AG/MC] We are sure comir down to that drop. Look at that rille. That's gotta be, gotta be probably Diamondback right there. [Pete Conrad] When the pitch is over and you get your first look, you know... there's nothir but nine million craters out there. A terrible sinking feeling. I obviously didn't recognize a thing after studying all these photographs. Nothir looked right. - [Krantz] How you doir, control? - We look good here. Fine. - How about you, Telcom? - Go. - Guidance, you happy? Fido? - Go. Go. [AG/CC] You are go. You're go to continue power descent. You are go to continue power descent. Over. [Irwin] All during this power descent I kept telling myself, "This is not for real. You're back in the simulator. Just remember that." [AG/CC] Eagle, Houston. It's descent two fuel to monitor, over. Eagle, Houston. Everything's lookir good here, over. [AG/MC] Houston, I'm getting a little fluctuation in the A.C. Voltage now. [AG/CC] Roger. Stand by. [AG/CC] Lookir good to us. You're still lookir good. [AG/MC] Houston, you're lookir at our delta eight. [AG/CC] That's affirmative. Lookir good to us, over. [AG/CC] Eagle, Houston. We'll monitor your delta eight. [AG/CC] Six plus two-five throttle down. Six plus two-five throttle down. [AG/MC] Roger. Copy. Six plus two-five. [AG/MC] Let me try auto again now... see what happens. [AG/CC] We got data dropout. Roger. Stand by. [Krantz] We're go on that alarm? If it doesn't reoccur, we'll be go. [AG/CC] We are go on that alarm. [AG/MC] Roger. I understand. Go for landing. [AG/CC] Roger. We got good data. [AG/LMP] Altitude velocity lights. [AG/CC] Eagle, we got you now. It's lookir good, over. [AG/LMP] Four forward, driftir to the right a little. Comir at us 23, 21 down, 33 degrees. [AG/CC] We're go. Same type. We're go. - [AG/LMP] Kickir up dust. - [AG/MC] A couple of big boulders. [AG/LMP] Comir right. Got a good spot. [AG/MC] Not too bad. Here comes the shadow. [AG/LMP] Oh, are we comir in. - [AG/MC] Stand by for touchdown. - [AG/LMP] Stand by. [AG/LMP] Bam! [AG/MC] Houston, uh, Tranquility Base here. The eagle has landed. [PAO] There's a cheer in this room. What we're witnessing now is mars very first trip into space... with a station stop along the route. [AG/MC] We gonna stay, Houston? [AG/CC] Eagle, you are stay for T-1. [Bean] This thing came to a stop on the moon. It was kind of a letdown saying, "You know, we're gonna have to get it going fast again to get back home." [AG/CC] Neil, this is Houston. What's your status on hatch opening? [AG/MC] Okay, Houston. I'm on the porch. [AG/CC] Neil, this is Houston. Loud and clear by radio. Check and verify TV circuit breaker in. [AG/MC] Roger. TV circuit breakers in. [AG/CC] Houston, roger. We copy, and we're standing by for your T.E.D. [AG/MC] I'm gonna pull it now. Houston, the mesa came down all right. [AG/CC] And we're gettir a picture on the TV. [AG/MC] Got a good picture, huh? [AG/CC] Okay, Neil. We can see you coming down the ladder now. The surface seems to be very, very fine-grained... as you get close to it. I'm at the foot of the ladder. Okay. I'm gonna step off the LM now. That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind. [Conrad] I had a bet with somebody who didn't... Really felt that Neil spent a great deal of time... before he went figuring out his famous words, and they were not extemporaneous on the spot historical words. He actually felt that these words... might have even been written for Neil by somebody else. And I said, "Well, I'll bet you 500 bucks... "that when I get to the bottom of the ladder... "nobody ever remembers what the second person to do something does anyhow... I'm gonna say, "It may have been a small step for Neil, but it's a big step for a little fella like me." [AG/LMP] Are you ready for me to come out? [AG/MC] Okay. I want to back up and partially close the hatch, making sure not to lock it on my way out. [Conrad] So this person says, "Ah, no way you're gonna do that. They're gonna tell you what to say." I said, "Okay, a bet's a bet." So I bet this person $500, and when I got to the bottom of the ladder, I said it. And that may have been a small one for Neil, but that's a long one for me. [AG/CC] 12 Houston, we have you in blushing black and white. [AG/LMP] What happened to the color? [AG/CC] Maybe the color wheel will come up. [AG/LMP] I can feel the wheels running... because I can feel something in motion inside. [AG/CC] Why don't you put your glove in front of the lens? [AG/LMP] All right. Will do. - [AG/CC] That's comir in there now. - Got the ol' camera running. [AG/CC] Okay. What change did you make? [AG/LMP] I hit it on the top with my hammer. I figured we didn't have a thing to lose. I can't believe it. [AG/MC] I want you to watch this. [AG/LMP] I don't know if this'll work or not, Charlie. Well, in my left hand I have a feather, in my right hand, a hammer. And I guess one of the reasons we got here today... was because of a gentleman named Galileo a long time ago... who made a rather significant discovery... about falling objects in gravity fields. And we thought that where would be a better place... to confirm his findings than on the moon? And so we thought we'd try it here for ya. The feather happens to be, appropriately, a falcon feather, for our falcon. And I'll drop the two of them here, and, hopefully, they'll hit the ground at the same time. How about that? That proves that Mr. Galileo was correct in his findings. [AG/CC] We've got a beautiful picture of you guys up down here. Let me tell you, Bob. This flag is a beautiful picture. Hey, John, this is perfect, with the LM, you and the ol' flag. We really should set the flag up on a hill, Charlie, but there just ain't one. I know, John. I'll put it right here. Big rock. [Duke] I was proud for our country more than I was proud for me. And it was nothir that I did. I just happened to have gotten there at the right time. My background carried me through. But there were a lot of other qualified people that didn't go. Why my name came out, I don't know. And we very proudly deploy it on the moon... to stay for as long as it can, in honor of all those people who have worked so hard to put us here... and to make the country and mankind something different than it was. [Duke] It was like sittir in the last row of the balcony, lookir down at that play goir on. While I was in the play, it was more like I was a spectator. [AG/CC] Tranquility, this is Houston. We'd like to say, from all of us down here in Houston, and, really, from all of us... in all the countries in the entire world, we think that you've done a magnificent job up there today, over. Thank you very much. Have you had enough TV for today? [AG/CC] Yes, indeed. It's been a mighty fine presentation there. Thank you. Couldrt have enjoyed it as much as we did. [AG/CC] Get some rest there and have at it tomorrow. Okay. Signing off. See you again tomorrow. [PAO] All systems on the lunar module are in good order. We have not heard from Tranquility base since saying good night. [Duke] My mind's one that just goes constantly, so I took a sleepir pill. Slept like a baby. I had one dream that was very vivid. In my dream, we were drivir the Rover up to the north. And you didn't really feel like you were out there. It was untouched. The serenity of it... had a pristine purity about it. We crossed a hill. I felt, "Gosh, I've been here before." And there was a set of tracks out in front of us. So we asked Houston if we could follow the tracks, and they said yes. And we turned and followed the tracks. Within an hour or so we found this vehicle. It looked just like the Rover. The two people in it... they looked like me and John... had been there for thousands of years. It was not a nightmare-type situation... nothir like that. Probably one of the most real experiences in my life. [Mattingly] I'd have traded on the drop of a hat... 00:55:24,870 --> 00:55:26,7 |
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