Men Into Space: Moon Probe (1959)
Season 1, Episode 1
8/10
Interesting 'realist' sci-fi from the early years of the space race
22 February 2022
When the second-stage booster fails to disengage, the three astronauts on the first 'round the moon' rocket (the XMP-13, a prophetic mission number) are forced to do extra-vehicular repairs, which results in one man drifting helplessly in space. This is the pilot episode of the 'docu-drama' style futurist show 'Men into Space', which had extensive support from the Dept. Of Defense and the U. S. A. F. (note the lengthy list of technical credits at the end) who insisted on realism and, considering the budget available for a TV series, the show is quite accurate, notably the depiction of weightlessness in freefall and the complexity of manned space flight (but as usual cannot resist the inclusion sound in the vacuum of space). Conveniently, reporters occasionally ask questions that allow for the 'science' of space travel to be explained (e.g. How can McCauley stand on the outside of a spaceship moving at 25,000 mph?). The program was released in the early days of the 'space race' and well into the cold war but makes a case for international cooperation - when asking for help in locating the drifting astronaut, the Americans initially ask the "Free World" but quickly amend that to a request to the entire world, and later, when various observatories are reporting the man's position, one is Russian. William Lundigan stars as Col. Edward McCauley, the only major constant character in the series (although a couple of other officers and McCauley's son and wife (Angie Dickenson in the pilot, Joyce Taylor otherwise) appear in a number of episodes).
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed